Montreal, Canada
June 16, 2002
June 16, 2002
June 19, 2002
2153-5965
9
7.585.1 - 7.585.9
10.18260/1-2--10816
https://peer.asee.org/10816
563
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Session 3592
Gender Equity and Engineering: A Review of Education Policy And Research Since 1964
Sheryl Greenwood Gowen, Alisha A. Waller
Georgia State University
Abstract
The civil rights and women’s movements have created profound and lasting changes in the education and employment opportunities of many United States citizens. Yet despite these changes, equality for marginalized groups has yet to be fully realized. In this paper, we will examine how the passage of civil rights legislation has defined the direction and scope of subsequent education policy and research in terms of gender equity. In 1964, Congress passed the Civil Rights Act, which, among other things, prohibited racial discrimination in education. As a part of this Act, Congress also commissioned a national study to determine the extent of racial inequality in terms of access to educational opportunity. With the passage of Title IX, in 1972, discrimination on the basis of sex in educational institutions and programs was also prohibited, but, unlike the 1964 Civil Rights Act, no research to examine sex discrimination was included in the legislation. In the early 1980’s, national concern about the growing shortage of scientists and engineers gave rise to policy initiatives designed to increase the numbers of women in science and engineering. Yet women’s presence in engineering education programs remains low. A review of the research literature suggests that this persistent under representation is not simply the result of poor academic preparation or gender-specific patterns of socialization, but is also embedded in the habits of mind that have shaped education research and public policy since 1964.
I. Introduction
This paper reviews education policy and research efforts to enhance gender equity in engineering education. Efforts to increase the numbers of women in engineering have resulted in a range of education and co-curricular programs designed to encourage women to major in engineering and to seek employment in the field of engineering. The results of many of these programs have been presented to the scholarly community in the form of refereed journal articles and papers presented at professional meetings. Yet despite these initiatives and the knowledge they have contributed to our collective understanding of the problem, women’s representation in engineering remains quite low. In reviewing both education policy and the research literature,
Proceedings of the 2002 American Society for Engineering Education & Exposition Copyright © 2002, American Society for Engineering Education
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Gowen, S., & Waller, A. (2002, June), Gender Equity And Engineering: A Review Of Education Policy And Research Since 1964 Paper presented at 2002 Annual Conference, Montreal, Canada. 10.18260/1-2--10816
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