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[WIP] Baseline Results for The Impact of the Liberal Arts on the Ethical Development of Engineers

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Conference

2025 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition

Location

Montreal, Quebec, Canada

Publication Date

June 22, 2025

Start Date

June 22, 2025

End Date

August 15, 2025

Conference Session

Engineering Ethics Division (ETHICS) Technical Session - Ethics education methodologies and interventions

Tagged Division

Engineering Ethics Division (ETHICS)

Tagged Topic

Diversity

Page Count

12

Permanent URL

https://peer.asee.org/55330

Paper Authors

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Joel R. TerMaat Doane University

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Joel R. TerMaat is an Associate Professor of Engineering and Chair of the Department of Engineering and Physics at Doane University.

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Christopher D. Wentworth Doane University Orcid 16x16 orcid.org/0000-0002-5395-5906

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Dr. Chris Wentworth is Professor Emeritus of Physics at Doane University with research interests in physics education, engineering education, and biological physics.

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Kristopher Williams Doane University

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Professor Williams holds a Ph.D. in Mathematics from the University of Iowa. He currently serves as an Associate Professor of Mathematics and Data Analytics and Director of Institutional Effectiveness at Doane University.

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Abstract

Previous research suggests that liberal arts institutions provide improved moral reasoning development in students compared with other types of institutions, but the reasons are not well understood. This work-in-progress paper presents initial data on a longitudinal study of moral reasoning development of both engineering and non-engineering students at a liberal arts institution.

We present the results of administering the Defining-Issues-Test Version 2 (DIT2) to engineering and non-engineering first-year students at a liberal arts institution. Descriptive statistics from the surveys are compared with national norms. Subpopulations of the survey respondents defined by demographic variables are compared and investigated for statistically significant differences. The variables explored include sex, political orientation, intended major, and co/extra-curricular activity participation. A regression analysis is used to examine relationships between DIT2 scores and selected variables.

Future work on this project will include a repetition of the DIT2 survey for the same respondents at the end of their second year in college, coupled with qualitative surveys and institutional data in a mixed-methods approach to facilitate identifying components of a liberal arts education that influence changes in the ethical reasoning scores over the course of their college experience.

TerMaat, J. R., & Wentworth, C. D., & Williams, K. (2025, June), [WIP] Baseline Results for The Impact of the Liberal Arts on the Ethical Development of Engineers Paper presented at 2025 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition , Montreal, Quebec, Canada . https://peer.asee.org/55330

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