The research presented in this thesis used a mixed method approach to investigate the
attitudes of sixth-form students in two British cities, towards engineering as a career, with
the aim of finding out which factors encourage or discourage young people from becoming
engineers, and whether these differ for males and females. The study can be set in the
context of the declining popularity of engineering as a career choice for males and the
continuing under-representation of females, for whom engineering is a non-traditional
career choice. The principal research hypothesis was that negative images of engineering
discourage girls and many boys from considering it as a career, with a particular focus on
whether engineering and the school subjects closely related to it, are considered to be more
appropriate for males than for females.
The study was informed by a social science realist framework, in which 'attitudes' were
not accorded the status of fixed attributes of individuals, but were understood as indicators
of the underiying social construction of meanings and ideologies.
It was found that the students in this study had made subject and career choices that
conform to traditional gender patterns. The intention to pursue engineering as a career was
highly dependent upon sex, with males being almost seven times as likely to consider it as
a career than females. Although the students did not consciously subscribe to sexstereotyped
views of subjects and occupations, these were inadvertently reproduced
through the students' constructions of meaning.
Initiatives to increase female participation in engineering have been based on overly
voluntaristic conceptions of choice, whereby women are seen to straightforwardly reject
the masculine image of engineering. However, this research suggests that understandings
of both gender and engineering can be better understood as less intentionally constituted in
'discourses', which reinforce the association between engineering and specific forms of
masculine identity, to exclude most women and many men.
Date of Award | 2003 |
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Original language | English |
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Awarding Institution | |
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IMAGES OF ENGINEERING: AN INVESTIGATION OF GENDER AND ATTITUDES TOWARDS ENGINEERING
Hodgkinson, L. (Author). 2003
Student thesis: PhD