Title :
Student demographics and outcomes in Electrical and Mechanical Engineering
Author :
Lord, S.M. ; Layton, Richard A. ; Ohland, Matthew W. ; Orr, Marisa K.
Author_Institution :
Univ. of San Diego, San Diego, CA, USA
Abstract :
Using longitudinal data from eleven institutions in the U.S., this study explores the persistence of students in the two largest engineering disciplines: Electrical (EE) and Mechanical (ME). These programs have large enrollments of students but small percentages of women. Despite these similarities, enrollment and persistence in these majors is qualitatively different. In this research, we adopt an intersectional framework and consider both race/ethnicity and gender. Our results show that ME attracts more White students while EE attracts more Black and Asian students. Hispanic men and women are attracted in similar numbers to EE and ME. Overall, ME has higher graduation rates than EE and women have higher rates than men in both disciplines. Transfer students of nearly all race/gender groups are more likely to persist to graduation than starters in the same disciplines. Black and Hispanic female transfer students are particularly successful in EE and ME, which suggests enhancing the transfer pathway as a strategy to improve diversity. The success of ME starters causes a shift in the demographic profile between starters and graduates. ME could learn from EE how to diversify its enrollment and EE could learn from ME strategies to retain its diverse students. These findings suggest that program factors affect each race-gender group differently. Therefore, the success of recruitment and retention strategies may depend on considering both the target population and the discipline.
Keywords :
demography; electrical engineering education; mechanical engineering; electrical engineering; mechanical engineering; program factors; race gender group; student demographics; target population; Aggregates; Databases; Educational institutions; Mechanical engineering; Sociology; Statistics; Trajectory; electrical engineering; graduation rate; mechanical engineering; persistence; retention; stickiness; transfer students;
Conference_Titel :
Frontiers in Education Conference, 2013 IEEE
Conference_Location :
Oklahoma City, OK
DOI :
10.1109/FIE.2013.6684788