公共话语中关于工程的故事的叙事分析:对工程公平和包容的影响

Nicola W. Sochacka, Joachim Walther, Jennifer R Rich, Michael A. Brewer
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引用次数: 6

摘要

背景:故事是人类理解复杂情况的一种自然而有力的方式。先前的研究表明,当人们面临复杂的问题时,比如工程领域的代表性不足,他们会构建并遵循故事,有时甚至面对相互矛盾的证据,作为决策和行动的基础。目的/假设:我们研究了公众话语,以确定工程学中代表性不足的故事,以及更广泛的工程学故事,这些故事为解决工程职业普遍缺乏兴趣和工程毕业生和专业人员缺乏多样性的双重问题提供了信息和支持。设计/方法:利用叙事政策分析(NPA)的框架理论和概念,我们定性分析了一年中(2011年8月至2012年8月)来自工程教育工作者新闻简报服务的在线新闻文章。结果:我们描述了五个关于工程的主要故事,它们分别从数学和科学、建造东西、对社会欣赏的需求、多样性驱动的创新和来之不易的职业回报等方面定义了这个领域。这些故事都有一个共同的前提——工程师的长期短缺威胁着美国的经济增长和国际竞争力。每个故事都包括对该领域的低兴趣水平的解释和解决这个问题的建议。我们注意到,与吸引更多女性或增加对工程职业感兴趣的年轻人的总数相比,增加来自不同种族背景的群体的参与并不是我们分析的话语中的一个突出主题。与NPA一致,我们还描述了一种非故事,批评主导故事的前提。结论:我们讨论了主导故事如何反映了一套特定的价值观和实践,以竞争、经济收益和技术人工制品的设计为中心,进而塑造了吸引、教育和留住学生的努力。我们进一步讨论了另类叙事如何为工程教育的系统性文化变革开辟新的机会,并对该领域的多元化产生重要影响。
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A Narrative Analysis of Stories Told about Engineering in the Public Discourse: Implications for Equity and Inclusion in Engineering
Background: Stories are a natural and powerful way for humans to make sense of complex situations. Prior research suggests that when people are faced with complex problems, like underrepresentation in engineering, they construct and defer to stories, sometimes even in the face of contradicting evidence, as a basis for decision making and action. Purpose/Hypothesis: We examined the public discourse to identify stories about underrepresentation in engineering, and about engineering more broadly, that inform and underwrite efforts to address the dual problem of a general lack of interest in engineering careers and a lack of diversity in engineering graduates and professionals. Design/Method: Drawing on the theory of framing and concepts from narrative policy analysis (NPA), we qualitatively analyzed one year of online news articles (from August 2011 to August 2012) sourced from a news briefing service for engineering educators. Results: We describe five dominant stories about engineering that define the field in terms of math and science, building things, the need for societal appreciation, diversity-driven innovation, and hard-earned career rewards, respectively. These stories share a common premise—that a chronic shortage of engineers threatens the economic growth and international competitiveness of the United States. Each story includes explanations for perceived low levels of interest in the field and recommendations to address this problem. We note that increasing the participation of groups from diverse ethnic backgrounds was not a prominent theme in the discourse we analyzed compared to, for example, attracting more women or increasing the overall number of young people who are interested in engineering careers. Consistent with NPA, we also describe a nonstory that critiques the premise of the dominant stories. Conclusions: We discuss how the dominant stories reflect a particular set of values and practices, centered on competition, economic gain, and the design of technological artifacts that, in turn, shape efforts to attract, educate, and retain students. We further discuss how alternative narratives may open up new opportunities for systemic, cultural change in engineering education with important implications for diversifying the field.
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