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Work In Progress: Understanding Servingness for Minoritized Students in Introductory Computing Courses at a Hispanic Serving Community College

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Conference

2025 Collaborative Network for Engineering & Computing Diversity (CoNECD)

Location

San Antonio, Texas

Publication Date

February 9, 2025

Start Date

February 9, 2025

End Date

February 11, 2025

Conference Session

Track 3: Technical Session 5: Work In Progress: Understanding Servingness for Minoritized Students in Introductory Computing Courses at a Hispanic Serving Community College

Tagged Topics

Diversity and 2025 CoNECD Paper Submissions

Page Count

35

DOI

10.18260/1-2--54131

Permanent URL

https://peer.asee.org/54131

Download Count

18

Paper Authors

biography

Sarah L Rodriguez Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Orcid 16x16 orcid.org/0000-0002-3409-7096

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Sarah L. Rodriguez is an Associate Professor of Engineering Education and an affiliate faculty member with the Higher Education Program at Virginia Tech. Her engineering education research agenda centers upon engineering and computing identity development of historically marginalized populations at higher education institutions. Currently, Dr. Rodriguez is involved with several large-scale interdisciplinary research projects focused on institutional environments and STEM identity development are sponsored by the National Science Foundation (NSF) and the Kapor Center. In recent years, she was selected as an Early Career Awardee and Faculty Fellow with the American Association of Hispanics in Higher Education (AAHHE) and a NASPA Emerging Faculty Leader. She also received the Barbara Townsend Early Career Scholar Award by the Council for the Study of Community Colleges (CSCC) and gave the distinguished ASHE-CAHEP Barbara Townsend Lecture. To learn more about her current projects, visit http://sarahlrodriguez.com/

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Antarjot Kaur Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University

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Antarjot Kaur is currently a Ph.D. student situated in the Engineering Education Department at Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University. Antarjot has received her B.S. and M.S. in Bioengineering from George Mason University with specialization in Medical Imaging and Devices. Her research interests include broadening participation in engineering, engineering pedagogy, and developing career pathways for engineering students.

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Paul Charles Bigby Jr. Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University

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Paul C. Bigby is a graduate student at Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University pursuing a Ph.D. in Engineering Education, where he serves as a graduate research assistant. Paul also earned his Bachelor’s from Virginia Tech in Mechanical Engineering, and Master's degrees from both the University of Michigan and Indiana University. His research interests are in broadening participation in engineering with a systemic or institutional focus.

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Taylor Johnson Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Orcid 16x16 orcid.org/0000-0001-9998-721X

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Taylor Y. Johnson is a graduate student at Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University (Virginia Tech) pursuing a Ph.D. in Engineering Education, where she serves as a graduate research assistant. Taylor earned her Bachelor’s degree from The University of Texas at Austin in Biomedical Engineering. Taylor previously served as a member of the student support staff for the Virginia Tech Center for the Enhancement of Engineering Diversity (CEED) where she served as an instructor for the first-year professional development seminar and as coordinator for the summer bridge program. Her research interests include equity in engineering education, middle-years of engineering, and engineering student support for post-traditional students.

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Abstract

The computing workforce struggles with hiring a diverse body of people and continues to perpetuate a culture that is saturated in white male toxicity. Increasingly, industry looks to higher education institutions as key access points for recruiting minoritized students (e.g., women, racial/ethnic, low-income). In particular, Hispanic-serving Community Colleges (HSCCs) are key points of entry to higher education for Latinx and other minoritized students and represent an ideal place from which industry might find a diverse pool of computing graduates. HSCCs often seek to provide culturally relevant experiences, both inside and outside of the classroom as well as may invoke “servingness” in their mission and student structures (Garcia et al., 2019). However, servingness may not flow from the larger HSCC administration institutional computing learning contexts.

Introductory HSCC computing classes represent a crucial point in which minoritized students come to see themselves in computing roles and may, ultimately, decide to remain or leave computing. To fully serve minoritized students in HSCC introductory computing courses, practitioners and scholars must understand more about how students experience servingness. Thus, we ask the research question: How do minoritized students in introductory computing classes at an HSCC experience elements of servingness? Part of a larger NSF-funded project, our qualitative, phenomenological study (n=19) utilized the Multidimensional Conceptual Framework of Servingness (Garcia et. al, 2019), to explore the presence of servingness within student experiences. The framework has 7 components to explore including (1) External Influences on Serving (2) Structures for Serving (3) White supremacy (4) Validating Experiences Within the Structures (5) Racialized Experiences (6) Academic Outcomes and (7) Nonacademic Outcomes. Students participated in a 60-minute semi-structured interview that was then recorded, transcribed, coded, and analyzed through a phenomenological method. We went through examining our positionalities and engaging with Moustakas’ (1994) four-step phenomenological process to establish rigor and trustworthiness. Preliminary findings indicate that students in introductory computing courses experienced some structures for serving, including the presence of programs and services for minoritized students and validating experiences within the structures, including positive interactions with faculty members. However, there were difficulties in finding specific cultural and group- oriented elements within the HSCC. While students acknowledged the presence of a diverse student body, and at times referred to some elements of racial identity, their introductory computing course experiences were largely identity-neutral, lacking any culturally responsive pedagogy, cultural validation, or interactions with same-race/ethnicity peers. Despite the fact that the larger project was funded by the HSI program, servingness structures were not immediately salient to the introductory computing student experiences.

This study demonstrates the nuance and complexity of serving within introductory courses at an HSCC. Although the larger NSF-funded project fell under the HSI program, it was unclear how elements of servingness were present in that funded work. Exploring servingness ensures that NSF-HSI Program funding is used to implement servingness in ways that elevate the computing experiences of minoritized students and prepare them for the computing workforce.

Rodriguez, S. L., & Kaur, A., & Bigby, P. C., & Johnson, T. (2025, February), Work In Progress: Understanding Servingness for Minoritized Students in Introductory Computing Courses at a Hispanic Serving Community College Paper presented at 2025 Collaborative Network for Engineering & Computing Diversity (CoNECD), San Antonio, Texas. 10.18260/1-2--54131

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