Impact of COVID‐19 on sense of belonging: Experiences of engineering students, faculty, and staff at Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs)

Author:

Fletcher Trina L.1ORCID,Jefferson Jay P.2ORCID,Boyd Brittany3,Park Sung Eun4,Crumpton‐Young Lesia5

Affiliation:

1. School of Universal Computing, Construction and Engineering Education (SUCCEED) STEM Transformation Institute and STEM READi Lab at Florida International University Miami Florida USA

2. Division of Diversity Equity and Inclusion at Florida International University Miami Florida USA

3. American Institutes for Research Arlington Virginia USA

4. School of Universal Computing, Construction and Engineering Education (SUCCEED) Florida International University Miami Florida USA

5. Texas Southern University Houston Texas USA

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundCOVID‐19 has spurred a global crisis that has disrupted everyday lives and impacted the traditional methods, experiences, and abilities of higher education institutions' students, faculty, and staff, especially at Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs).Purpose/HypothesisGiven the pressing need demonstrated by the National Academies to advance the utilization of science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) education at HBCUs, this study aimed to explore the abrupt transition to remote teaching and learning at HBCUs guided by the following research question: How has COVID‐19 impacted the success and persistence of engineering students, faculty, and staff at HBCUs?Design/MethodsThree surveys were developed, tested, piloted, and sent to HBCU stakeholders using a snowball sampling approach via email and social media outreach.ResultsOf the 171 student respondents (126 engineering majors), 79% agreed that not being able to access faculty in person affected their academic performance. Additionally, across all HBCU stakeholders' surveys, students had a statistically significant higher response when asked if the transition to virtual learning increased their overall levels of stress and anxiety.ConclusionsDuring a global pandemic, HBCUs continue to provide a culture of support and inclusion for students, faculty, and staff in engineering. Increased stress levels experienced by students indicate that a safe and adequate transition back to campus is essential for their social and academic persistence. Due to the well‐documented inequities HBCUs faced before the pandemic, the impact of this unprecedented on their continued contributions toward broadening participation in engineering for students should be further explored.

Funder

National Science Foundation

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Engineering,Education

Reference89 articles.

1. ABET. (2016).2016 ABET Annual Report.https://www.abet.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/02/2016-ABET-Annual-Report.pdf

2. The Color of Success: African-American College Student Outcomes at Predominantly White and Historically Black Public Colleges and Universities

3. The Education of Blacks in the South, 1860-1935

4. Blevins E. R.(2002).Proposed study of job satisfaction of HBCU engineering faculty based on Herzberg's motivation‐hygiene theory. Paper presented at the ASEE Gulf‐Southwest Annual Conference.

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