Women’s Reasons for Leaving the Engineering Field

Among the different Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math fields, engineering continues to have one of the highest rates of attrition (Hewlett et al., 2008). The turnover rate for women engineers from engineering fields is even higher than for men (Frehill, 2010). Despite increased efforts from...

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Main Authors: Nadya A. Fouad, Wen-Hsin Chang, Min Wan, Romila Singh
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2017-06-01
Series:Frontiers in Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpsyg.2017.00875/full
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spelling doaj-a1f61a14f249403a8b99a18e47b0f6012020-11-24T21:32:20ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Psychology1664-10782017-06-01810.3389/fpsyg.2017.00875254941Women’s Reasons for Leaving the Engineering FieldNadya A. Fouad0Wen-Hsin Chang1Min Wan2Romila Singh3Department of Educational Psychology, University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee, MilwaukeeWI, United StatesDepartment of Educational Psychology, University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee, MilwaukeeWI, United StatesDepartment of Management, McCoy College of Business, Texas State University, San MarcosTX, United StatesLubar School of Business, University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee, MilwaukeeWI, United StatesAmong the different Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math fields, engineering continues to have one of the highest rates of attrition (Hewlett et al., 2008). The turnover rate for women engineers from engineering fields is even higher than for men (Frehill, 2010). Despite increased efforts from researchers, there are still large gaps in our understanding of the reasons that women leave engineering. This study aims to address this gap by examining the reasons why women leave engineering. Specifically, we analyze the reasons for departure given by national sample of 1,464 women engineers who left the profession after having worked in the engineering field. We applied a person-environment fit theoretical lens, in particular, the Theory of Work Adjustment (TWA) (Dawis and Lofquist, 1984) to understand and categorize the reasons for leaving the engineering field. According to the TWA, occupations have different “reinforcer patterns,” reflected in six occupational values, and a mismatch between the reinforcers provided by the work environment and individuals’ needs may trigger departure from the environment. Given the paucity of literature in this area, we posed research questions to explore the reinforcer pattern of values implicated in women’s decisions to leave the engineering field. We used qualitative analyses to understand, categorize, and code the 1,863 statements that offered a glimpse into the myriad reasons that women offered in describing their decisions to leave the engineering profession. Our results revealed the top three sets of reasons underlying women’s decision to leave the jobs and engineering field were related to: first, poor and/or inequitable compensation, poor working conditions, inflexible and demanding work environment that made work-family balance difficult; second, unmet achievement needs that reflected a dissatisfaction with effective utilization of their math and science skills, and third, unmet needs with regard to lack of recognition at work and adequate opportunities for advancement. Implications of these results for future research as well as the design of effective intervention programs aimed at women engineers’ retention and engagement in engineering are discussed.http://journal.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpsyg.2017.00875/fullwomen engineersattrition decisionsreasons for attritionperson-environment fitoccupational turnoverwomen’s career development
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Nadya A. Fouad
Wen-Hsin Chang
Min Wan
Romila Singh
spellingShingle Nadya A. Fouad
Wen-Hsin Chang
Min Wan
Romila Singh
Women’s Reasons for Leaving the Engineering Field
Frontiers in Psychology
women engineers
attrition decisions
reasons for attrition
person-environment fit
occupational turnover
women’s career development
author_facet Nadya A. Fouad
Wen-Hsin Chang
Min Wan
Romila Singh
author_sort Nadya A. Fouad
title Women’s Reasons for Leaving the Engineering Field
title_short Women’s Reasons for Leaving the Engineering Field
title_full Women’s Reasons for Leaving the Engineering Field
title_fullStr Women’s Reasons for Leaving the Engineering Field
title_full_unstemmed Women’s Reasons for Leaving the Engineering Field
title_sort women’s reasons for leaving the engineering field
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Psychology
issn 1664-1078
publishDate 2017-06-01
description Among the different Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math fields, engineering continues to have one of the highest rates of attrition (Hewlett et al., 2008). The turnover rate for women engineers from engineering fields is even higher than for men (Frehill, 2010). Despite increased efforts from researchers, there are still large gaps in our understanding of the reasons that women leave engineering. This study aims to address this gap by examining the reasons why women leave engineering. Specifically, we analyze the reasons for departure given by national sample of 1,464 women engineers who left the profession after having worked in the engineering field. We applied a person-environment fit theoretical lens, in particular, the Theory of Work Adjustment (TWA) (Dawis and Lofquist, 1984) to understand and categorize the reasons for leaving the engineering field. According to the TWA, occupations have different “reinforcer patterns,” reflected in six occupational values, and a mismatch between the reinforcers provided by the work environment and individuals’ needs may trigger departure from the environment. Given the paucity of literature in this area, we posed research questions to explore the reinforcer pattern of values implicated in women’s decisions to leave the engineering field. We used qualitative analyses to understand, categorize, and code the 1,863 statements that offered a glimpse into the myriad reasons that women offered in describing their decisions to leave the engineering profession. Our results revealed the top three sets of reasons underlying women’s decision to leave the jobs and engineering field were related to: first, poor and/or inequitable compensation, poor working conditions, inflexible and demanding work environment that made work-family balance difficult; second, unmet achievement needs that reflected a dissatisfaction with effective utilization of their math and science skills, and third, unmet needs with regard to lack of recognition at work and adequate opportunities for advancement. Implications of these results for future research as well as the design of effective intervention programs aimed at women engineers’ retention and engagement in engineering are discussed.
topic women engineers
attrition decisions
reasons for attrition
person-environment fit
occupational turnover
women’s career development
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpsyg.2017.00875/full
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