Engineer identity and degree completion intentions in doctoral study

Author:

Bahnson Matthew1ORCID,Satterfield Derrick2ORCID,Perkins Heather3ORCID,Parker Mackenzie2ORCID,Tsugawa Marissa4ORCID,Cass Cheryl5,Kirn Adam2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Mechanical Engineering Pennsylvania State University University Park Pennsylvania USA

2. Department of Electrical and Biomedical Engineering University of Nevada Reno Nevada USA

3. Department of Psychology Indiana University Bloomington Indiana USA

4. Department of Engineering Education University of Utah Logan Utah USA

5. SAS Institute Cary North Carolina USA

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundDegree completion rates for doctoral engineering students remain stagnant at levels lower than necessary to meet national and global workforce needs. Increasing degree completion can improve opportunities for individuals and provide the human resources needed to address engineering challenges.Purpose/HypothesisIn this work, we measure the association of engineering identity variables with degree completion intentions for students who have persisted in doctoral study. We add to existing literature that suggests the importance of advisor and peer relationships, and the number of years in the doctoral program.Design/MethodWe use data collected via a national cross‐sectional survey of doctoral engineering students, which included measures of social and professional identities, graduate school experiences, and demographics. Surveys were collected from 1754 participants at 98 US universities between late 2017 and early 2018. The analyses reported here use multiple regression to measure associations with engineering doctoral degree completion intentions.ResultsResearch interest and scientist performance/competence are individually associated with degree completion intentions in students who are persisting in doctoral study. Overall, graduate engineering identity explains significant portions of variation in degree completion intentions (9.5%) beyond advisor and peer relationship variables and the number of years in graduate programs.ConclusionsResearcher interest and scientist performance/competence may be key opportunities to engage doctoral student engineering identity to improve degree completion rates. Accordingly, institutions can foster students' interest in research and build their confidence in their scientific competence to support students as they complete the doctoral degree.

Funder

National Science Foundation

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Engineering,Education

Reference73 articles.

1. ASEE (American Society for Engineering Education). (2015).Engineering by the numbers.https://ira.asee.org/by-the-numbers/engineering-graduate-students/

2. Bahnson M. Perkins H. Satterfield D. Parker M. Tsugawa M. Kirn A. &Cass C.(2019).Variance in engineering identity in master's degree‐seeking engineering students. Paper presented at the Frontiers in Education Conference Covington KY USA.https://doi.org/10.1109/FIE43999.2019.9028414

3. Bahnson M. Perkins H. Tsugawa‐Nieves M. A. Kirn A. &Cass C.(2018).Engineering identity and academic relationships. Paper presented at the North Carolina State University Office of Faculty Development Teaching and Learning Symposium: Inspiring Student Success Raleigh NC.

4. Inequity in graduate engineering identity: Disciplinary differences and opportunity structures

5. Dropouts and turnover: The synthesis and test of a causal model of student attrition

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