Study: Group
dynamics of teamwork and internships deter many women in the profession.
Peter Dizikes | MIT News Office June 15, 2016
Women
who go to college intending to become engineers stay in the profession less
often than men. Why is this? While multiple reasons have been offered in the
past, a new study co-authored by an MIT sociologist develops a novel
explanation: The negative group dynamics women tend to experience during
team-based work projects makes the profession less appealing.
More
specifically, the study finds, women often feel marginalized, especially during
internships, other summer work opportunities, or team-based educational
activities. In those situations, gender dynamics seem to generate more
opportunities for men to work on the most challenging problems, while women
tend to be assigned routine tasks or simple managerial duties.
In
such settings, “It turns out gender makes a big difference,” says Susan Silbey,
the Leon
and Anne Goldberg Professor of Humanities, Sociology, and Anthropology at MIT,
and co-author of a newly-published paper detailing the study.
As
a result of their experiences at these moments, women who have developed high
expectations for their profession — expecting to make a positive social impact
as engineers — can become disillusioned with their career prospects.
“It’s
a cultural phenomenon,” adds Silbey, regarding the way this group-dynamics
problem crops up at a variety of key points during students’ training.
The
paper, titled “Persistence is Cultural: Professional Socialization and the
Reproduction of Sex Segregation,” appears in the latest print issue of the
journal Work and Occupations.
The co-authors are Silbey, who is the corresponding author; Carroll Seron, a
professor at the University of California at Irvine; Erin Cech, an assistant
professor at the University of Michigan; and Brian Rubineau, an associate
professor at McGill University.
“Menial tasks” instead of “all the fun”
Overall,
about 20 percent of undergraduate engineering degrees are awarded to women, but
only 13 percent of the engineering workforce is female. Numerous explanations
have been offered for this discrepancy, including a lack of mentorship for
women in the field; a variety of factors that produce less confidence for
female engineers; and the demands for women of maintaining a balance between
work and family life.
The
current study does not necessarily preclude some of those other explanations,
but it adds an additional element to the larger discussion.
To
conduct the study, the researchers asked more than 40 undergraduate engineering
students to keep twice-monthly diaries. The students attended four institutions
in Massachusetts : MIT, the Franklin W. Olin
College of Engineering, Smith College , and the University
of Massachusetts at Amherst . That generated more than 3,000
individual diary entries that the scholars systematically examined.
What
emerges is a picture in which female engineering students are negatively
affected at particular moments of their educational terms — especially when
they engage in team-based activities outside the classroom, where, in a less
structured environment, older gender roles re-emerge.
This
crops up frequently in the diary entries. To take an example, one student named
Kimberly described an episode in a design class in which “two girls in a group
had been working on the robot we were building in that class for hours, and the
guys in their group came in and within minutes had sentenced them to doing
menial tasks while the guys went and had all the fun in the machine shop. We
heard the girls complaining about it. … ”
Or,
as the paper puts it, “Informal interactions with peers and everyday sexism in
teams and internships are particularly salient building blocks of [gender]
segregation.” The researchers add: “For many women, their first encounter with
collaboration is to be treated in gender stereotypical ways.” And by contrast,
as the researchers note in the paper, “Almost without exception, we find that
the men interpret the experience of internships and summer jobs as a positive
experience.”
Such
experiences lead to a problem involving what the researchers call “anticipatory
socialization.” The women in the study, Silbey and her colleagues observed, are
more likely than men to say they are entering the field of engineering with the
explicit idea that it will be a “socially responsible” profession that will
“make a difference in people’s lives.” But group dynamics seem to affect this
specific expectation in two ways: by leading women to question whether other
professions could be a better vehicle for affecting positive social change, and
by leading them to question if their field has a “commitment to a socially
conscious agenda that … was a key motivator for them in the first place.”
Changes beyond the classroom
As
Silbey observes, the findings suggest that engineering’s gender gap is not
precisely rooted in the engineering curriculum or the classroom, which have
often been the focus of past scrutiny in this area.
“We
think engineering education is quite successful by its own standards,” Silbey
says. Moreover, she adds, “The teaching environment is for the most part very
successful.”
That
means some new kinds of remedies could be explored, which might have a positive
impact on women’s experiences as engineers in training. For instance, as Silbey
has previously recommended, institutions could develop “directed internship
seminars,” in which student internship experiences could be dissected to help
many people grasp and learn from the problems women face.
In
this vein, Silbey adds, whatever other components education may have, it is
useful to remember that “education is a process of socialization.”
Funding
for the study was provided by the National Science Foundation.
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