by Denise Wilson and Jennifer VanAntwerp, February 8, 2025
A square peg in a round hole.
Most of us have felt like that square peg at some point. In a college class. In a high school club. Meeting up again with that group of friends who has stayed close over the past years while you have drifted away. The oldest person in the room. The youngest. We tried to enter that space but discovered that we were not going to make it in through that round hole unless someone whacked us very hard on top of our square peg head to cram us inside. If we do make it inside, we will be a bit bruised – or maybe even find that some of our edges have been shaved off. And so, we debate…how much do we really want to be in that room? Is it worth it?
To support more productive and more nourishing engineering workplaces in the future, we want to know more about how that sense of belonging comes alongside feelings of being competent and having some say-so in our daily work lives (autonomy). Hence the name of our study, Engineering CAReS: Engineering Competence Autonomy Relatedness (a.k.a. Belonging) Study.
The U.S. has spent decades trying to increase the diversity of people in engineering. Of course, most of those efforts focus on the pegs - how engineering can do a better job of shaving those square pegs into round ones. Our research team wants to flip that question around. How can we carve out engineering fields so that they form a new shape, one that allows more people to enter – and to stay – without needing to change their own shape?
Thanks for joining us in this journey to a new, and better, engineering future.
Here is the link to your Phase 2 online research survey: Engineering CAReS Survey
No comments:
Post a Comment
Thanks for your comments. Posts will be visible after approved by the moderator.