Engineering culture under stress: A comparative case study of undergraduate mechanical engineering student experiences

Author:

Deters Jessica R.1ORCID,Leydens Jon A.2ORCID,Case Jennifer34ORCID,Cowell Margaret5ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Mechanical & Materials Engineering University of Nebraska—Lincoln Lincoln Nebraska USA

2. Department of Humanities, Arts, & Social Sciences Colorado School of Mines Golden Colorado USA

3. Department of Engineering Education Virginia Tech Blacksburg Virginia USA

4. Department of Chemical Engineering University of Cape Town Cape Town South Africa

5. Department of Urban Affairs and Planning Virginia Tech Arlington, Virginia USA

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundEngineering culture research to date has described the culture as rigid, chilly, and posing many barriers to entry. However, the COVID‐19 pandemic provided an important opportunity to explore how engineering culture responds to a major disruption.PurposeThe purposes of this study are to understand how elements of engineering culture emerged in mechanical engineering students' perceptions of their classroom experiences during the pandemic and how their experiences varied across two national contexts.MethodThis qualitative comparative case study examines undergraduate mechanical engineering students' perceptions of their experiences taking courses during the pandemic at two universities—one in the United States and one in South Africa. Semistructured interviews were conducted across both sites with 21 students and contextualized with 3 faculty member interviews. Student interviews were analyzed using an iterative process of deductive coding, inductive coding, and pattern coding.ResultsWe identified two key themes that characterized participants' experiences during the pandemic: hardness and access to resources. We found that students at both sites experienced two types of hardness—intrinsic and constructed—and were more critical of constructed forms of hardness. We found that the South African university's response to facilitating student access to resources was viewed by students as more effective when compared with the US university.ConclusionsWe found that hardness remained a central feature of engineering culture, based on student perceptions, and found that students expressed awareness of resource‐related differences. A key distinction emerged between intrinsic and constructed hardness.

Funder

National Science Foundation

Publisher

Wiley

Reference63 articles.

1. Agrawal A. Groen C. J. Hermundstad Nave A. L. McNair L. D. Martin T. &Paretti M. C.(2018).Overriding tradition? An initial exploration of the intersection of institutional and disciplinary cultures from student perspectives. Paper presented at the ASEE Annual Conference and Exposition Salt Lake City UT.https://www.jee.org/30853

2. Towards a definition of disciplinary cultures

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1. Engineering professor perceptions of undergraduate engineering student stress;European Journal of Engineering Education;2024-07-15

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