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“Emotions can hinder Professional Experiences:” Emotional states of first-generation engineering students when introduced to hidden curriculum

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Conference

2023 Collaborative Network for Computing and Engineering Diversity (CoNECD)

Location

New Orleans , Louisiana

Publication Date

February 26, 2023

Start Date

February 26, 2023

End Date

February 28, 2023

Conference Session

Session 11 - Track 1: "Emotions can hinder Professional Experiences:" Emotional states of first-generation engineering students when introduced to hidden curriculum

Tagged Topics

Diversity and CoNECD Paper Sessions

Page Count

11

DOI

10.18260/1-2--44782

Permanent URL

https://peer.asee.org/44782

Download Count

202

Paper Authors

biography

R. Jamaal Downey University of Florida

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Dr. Downey has been a postdoctoral research associate in the Department of Engineering Education at the University of Florida since 2021. His current research is focused on determining how engineering students respond to hidden curriculum as well as how Latinx contingent faculty experience workplace inequities in engineering. He received his Ph.D. in Language, Literacy, and Culture in Education from the University of Massachusetts-Amherst. Dr. Downey focuses on critical qualitative inquiry with a discerning eye toward humanizing and culturally sustaining pedagogies.

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biography

Idalis Villanueva Alarcón University of Florida Orcid 16x16 orcid.org/0000-0002-8767-2576

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Dr. Villanueva Alarcón is an Associate Professor in the Engineering Education Department at the University of Florida. Her multiple roles as an engineer, engineering educator, engineering educational researcher, and professional development mentor for underrepresented populations has aided her in the design and integration of educational and physiological technologies to research 'best practices' for student professional development and training. In addition, she has developed methodologies around hidden curriculum, academic emotions and physiology, and engineering makerspaces.

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biography

Victoria Beth Sellers

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Dr. Victoria Sellers is a postdoctoral research associate in the Department of Engineering Education at the University of Florida. Her current research is focused on determining how engineering students respond to hidden curriculum. Victoria has previousl

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Abstract

This paper seeks to understand the emotional state of underrepresented first-generation (FG) engineering students when asked about their previous experiences and perceptions with hidden curriculum in engineering. Hidden curriculum (HC) has been viewed as the unwritten, unofficial, and often unintended messages (e.g., assumptions, lessons, values, beliefs, attitudes, and perspectives) that are not openly acknowledged in a given environment. HC often consists of positive (inclusive) or negative (exclusionary) systemic messages that are structurally supported and sustained. The U.S. Department of Education classifies first-generation college students as those who came from families where neither parent obtained a four-year college degree. First-generation students are disproportionally people of color (POC). The literature suggests that FG students lack the important social and institutional capital to navigate their learning and working environments which they may not have obtained at home. The thread of this paper focused on the intersection of first-generation status, gender, and race or ethnicity (specifically Latiné/a/o/x, Black, and white participants). A mixed-method survey instrument (UPHEME) was disseminated between 2018/19 to explore the perceptions of engineering undergraduate students, graduate students and faculty about HC, how it is defined, received and responded to. More specifically, the analysis focused on the second factor of the UPHEME instrument, emotions. In general, people cannot process an environment without feeling it first. In this instance, and factoring through the lens of HC, emotions serve to whittle down “infinite range of variables that underpin the choices we make.” We chose to focus on positive and negative emotions to establish what emotions propel us to engage (or not) with whatever HC might be present. These factors could have significant importance for retention purposes of women and POC. The preliminary results suggest that of those participants answered the short-answer question and through the lens of the intersection of FG and gender, 41% (n = 49) of self-identified undergraduate women and 29% (n=64) of self-identified undergraduate men recalled negative emotions related to HC in engineering. Furthermore, for those FG participants who did not recall any personal experiences connected to HC, 18% (n=21) were self-identified women and 23% (n=50) were self-identified men. At the intersection of FG and race or ethnicity, 32% (n = 53) of white participants had negative emotions about their experiences with HC compared to 27% (n = 39) of Latinx and 28%(n = 10) of Black participants. Additionally, 24% (n=40) of FG white participants did not identify any experiences compared to 6% of Latino and 25% of Black participants. Finally, at the intersection of FG with gender and race, we found that 42% (n = 22) white women experienced HC with reported negative emotions vs 44% (n = 17) of Latinas and 40% (n = 6) Black women. Of the first gen White men, 27% (n = 31) had negative emotions compared to 37% (n = 22) of Latino and 20% (n = 4) Black men. Overall, the findings suggest that intersectional women and men recall negative HC experiences, which suggests potential detrimental consequences to their mental health and well-being.

Downey, R. J., & Villanueva Alarcón, I., & Sellers, V. B. (2023, February), “Emotions can hinder Professional Experiences:” Emotional states of first-generation engineering students when introduced to hidden curriculum Paper presented at 2023 Collaborative Network for Computing and Engineering Diversity (CoNECD), New Orleans , Louisiana. 10.18260/1-2--44782

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