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Work in Progress: Bridging the Gap in Doctoral Engineering Education—Critically Investigating Factors Influencing Performance Outcomes on First Doctoral Degree Milestones

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Conference

2023 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition

Location

Baltimore , Maryland

Publication Date

June 25, 2023

Start Date

June 25, 2023

End Date

June 28, 2023

Conference Session

Student Division (STDT) Technical Session 6: Underserved Student Experiences

Tagged Division

Student Division (STDT)

Tagged Topic

Diversity

Page Count

11

DOI

10.18260/1-2--44179

Permanent URL

https://peer.asee.org/44179

Download Count

106

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Paper Authors

biography

Nicole Adia Jefferson Virginia Tech

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My name is Nicole Jefferson (she/her/ma'am). I am a second-year Ph.D. student studying Engineering Education. Because of a GRA appointment where I research exemplary engineering colleges and their production of successful Black and brown engineers, I am currently interested in the preparedness of underrepresented students from undergraduate and master's engineering programs to doctoral engineering programs. I am excited about having the opportunity to become a better ENGR/ENGE researcher. In the future, I aspire to be an engineering education policy advocate and have plans to develop a research preparation consortium.

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biography

Jeremi S. London Virginia Tech

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Dr. Jeremi London is an Associate Professor in the Engineering Education Department at Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University. London is a mixed methods researcher with interests in research impact, broadening participation and instructional change.

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Abstract

This is a work-in-progress paper. It is well documented that Black students tend to enroll and complete engineering Ph.D.s at disproportionately lower rates than their peers. What is less understood are the most critical factors influencing their success at critical junctures in the Ph.D. program. Existing scholarship on the socialization processes embedded in pursuing a graduate degree are based on the premise that transitioning into a hyper-specialized area is challenging. One of the most challenging aspects of pursuing a Ph.D. are the academic milestones that are unique to degree completion (e.g., qualifying/comprehensive exam, proposal/preliminary exam, dissertation defense). The creation of the Dissertation Institute is one example of a program for engineering students hoping to succeed in the latter milestones. However, the focus of this study is the first milestone – the qualifying/comprehensive exam based on a robust understanding of foundational concepts introduced in core courses. There are multiple reasons why success on milestones may be challenging. Unlike course assessments of an isolated concept or skill that may have been the norm in prior degrees, successful completion of program-level degree milestones embedded in pursuing a Ph.D. require students to integrate ideas, skills, and ways of being learned across courses to accomplish a unique task that comes with being a scholar in the discipline. The purpose of this preliminary mapping review is to outline the major categories of scholarship on salient factors that influence Black engineering Ph.D. students’ successful completion of their first academic milestone. The findings of this study will provide the basis of a future study that will have implications for Black graduate students hoping to excel in their Ph.D. program and the faculty involved in preparing Ph.D. students with diverse lived experiences to pass their first of many academic milestones.

Jefferson, N. A., & London, J. S. (2023, June), Work in Progress: Bridging the Gap in Doctoral Engineering Education—Critically Investigating Factors Influencing Performance Outcomes on First Doctoral Degree Milestones Paper presented at 2023 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition, Baltimore , Maryland. 10.18260/1-2--44179

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