Being a female engineer: identity construction and resistance of women in engineering schools

Compared to other professions, women's representation in engineering professions is considerably lower than men's, and this particular situated-ness or locality makes women experience a unique process of identity construction. Using qualitative methods - two focus group meetings, nineteen...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Chu, Hyejin
Other Authors: Sell, Jane
Format: Others
Language:en_US
Published: Texas A&M University 2006
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/4364
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spelling ndltd-tamu.edu-oai-repository.tamu.edu-1969.1-43642013-01-08T10:38:30ZBeing a female engineer: identity construction and resistance of women in engineering schoolsChu, HyejinIdentityCultureGenderCompared to other professions, women's representation in engineering professions is considerably lower than men's, and this particular situated-ness or locality makes women experience a unique process of identity construction. Using qualitative methods - two focus group meetings, nineteen autobiographical essays, and twenty two individual interviews, this research focuses on what women learn from their experiences in engineering school, and how they respond to their perceived experiences. This study proposes to delineate (a) the dynamic interaction between women and the social structure of engineering school; (b) women's perception and conceptualization of the social structure they practice; and (c) women's strategic responses to the structure leading to identity construction. Becoming an engineer is problematic for women because the identity of "engineer" is based upon hegemonic ideas developed by previous generations of engineers - men. This research explores how women, standing in the borderline of being women and being engineers, account and construct their identities as women engineers. Sometimes women are subtly or not subtly coerced; sometimes they embrace dominant ideas; sometimes they creatively resist dominant approaches.Texas A&M UniversitySell, Jane2006-10-30T23:31:09Z2006-10-30T23:31:09Z2006-082006-10-30T23:31:09ZBookThesisElectronic Dissertationtext639400 byteselectronicapplication/pdfborn digitalhttp://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/4364en_US
collection NDLTD
language en_US
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Identity
Culture
Gender
spellingShingle Identity
Culture
Gender
Chu, Hyejin
Being a female engineer: identity construction and resistance of women in engineering schools
description Compared to other professions, women's representation in engineering professions is considerably lower than men's, and this particular situated-ness or locality makes women experience a unique process of identity construction. Using qualitative methods - two focus group meetings, nineteen autobiographical essays, and twenty two individual interviews, this research focuses on what women learn from their experiences in engineering school, and how they respond to their perceived experiences. This study proposes to delineate (a) the dynamic interaction between women and the social structure of engineering school; (b) women's perception and conceptualization of the social structure they practice; and (c) women's strategic responses to the structure leading to identity construction. Becoming an engineer is problematic for women because the identity of "engineer" is based upon hegemonic ideas developed by previous generations of engineers - men. This research explores how women, standing in the borderline of being women and being engineers, account and construct their identities as women engineers. Sometimes women are subtly or not subtly coerced; sometimes they embrace dominant ideas; sometimes they creatively resist dominant approaches.
author2 Sell, Jane
author_facet Sell, Jane
Chu, Hyejin
author Chu, Hyejin
author_sort Chu, Hyejin
title Being a female engineer: identity construction and resistance of women in engineering schools
title_short Being a female engineer: identity construction and resistance of women in engineering schools
title_full Being a female engineer: identity construction and resistance of women in engineering schools
title_fullStr Being a female engineer: identity construction and resistance of women in engineering schools
title_full_unstemmed Being a female engineer: identity construction and resistance of women in engineering schools
title_sort being a female engineer: identity construction and resistance of women in engineering schools
publisher Texas A&M University
publishDate 2006
url http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/4364
work_keys_str_mv AT chuhyejin beingafemaleengineeridentityconstructionandresistanceofwomeninengineeringschools
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