Gender inclusivity of engineering students' experiences of workplace learning : final report.

To the detriment of Australian society and people, women in Australia remain under-represented among engineering students and even more among engineers. Engineering workplaces have features that are gender non-inclusive. Therefore efforts to improve engineering education by increasing industry engag...

Cur síos iomlán

Sonraí bibleagrafaíochta
Institutions:University of Western Australia
Curtin University
University of Technology, Sydney
Príomhchruthaitheoir: Male, Sally
Foilsithe / Cruthaithe: Office for Learning and Teaching 2015
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Rochtain ar líne:/resources/SD13_3416_Male_Report_2015_0.pdf
/resources/SD13_3416_Male_Report_2015_0.doc
Cur síos
Achoimre:To the detriment of Australian society and people, women in Australia remain under-represented among engineering students and even more among engineers. Engineering workplaces have features that are gender non-inclusive. Therefore efforts to improve engineering education by increasing industry engagement might further discourage female engineering students. This is the final report from a project that contributed towards ensuring that industry engagement is gender inclusive. Focusing on personal interactions, the project investigated the workplace experiences of male and female engineering students from three universities, using an online survey and student interviews. The project used the framework of possible selves, in which students are motivated to achieve or avoid possible future selves (Bennett, forthcoming). A workshop to help prepare students for the workplace was developed, tested, and modelled.
ISBN:9781760281618 (PDF)
9781760281625 (DOCX)
9781760281632 (print ed)
9781760281618 (PDF)
9781760281625 (DOCX)
9781760281632 (print ed)