This article examines processes of doing gender during the initiation of students into engineering programs at university level in Sweden. The article draws on interviews with students, focusing on their understandings of gender. The aim is to explore difficulties with and challenges to traditional gender roles in an academic male dominated arena, by using theories of doing and undoing gender. The empirical material reveals the initiation period or ‘reception’ as a phenomenon both reinforcing and challenging traditional orders. The attempts to challenge norms meet resistance, revealing two paradoxes and one dilemma. In the first paradox the formal purpose of the reception (inclusion) is partly at odds with its informal consequence (exclusio...
With a focus on technological practice, this paper detects and discusses changes that arose-or did n...
In this article we draw broadly on two different research traditions, Gender and Technology Studies ...
Commonly, there are more men than women seeking engineering courses, even though, with some common e...
This article examines processes of doing gender during the initiation of students into engineering p...
This article explores how female university students’ abilities to present themselves as ‘authentic’...
The image of engineering as a masculine profession has reproduced the perception that engineering is...
Udgivelsesdato: MarchThis article examines the learning experiences of engineering students of both ...
This thesis examines the impact of the engineering culture on women engineering students’ gendered a...
The aim of this master’s thesis is to examine how gender is produced in a contemporary technological...
On the initial problem the gender gap in enrollment in engineering careers, this paper analyzes the ...
This Full - Research paper presents the results and analysis of a study conducted at three different...
Abstract—Previous research on gender and engineering education has often tended to work with limited...
This paper is based on a study of the meaning of gender in teaching and learning at a newly started ...
Abstract — For both females and males, the decision to become engineers rests upon academic interest...
It is widely argued that engineering education needs to change in order to attract new groups of stu...
With a focus on technological practice, this paper detects and discusses changes that arose-or did n...
In this article we draw broadly on two different research traditions, Gender and Technology Studies ...
Commonly, there are more men than women seeking engineering courses, even though, with some common e...
This article examines processes of doing gender during the initiation of students into engineering p...
This article explores how female university students’ abilities to present themselves as ‘authentic’...
The image of engineering as a masculine profession has reproduced the perception that engineering is...
Udgivelsesdato: MarchThis article examines the learning experiences of engineering students of both ...
This thesis examines the impact of the engineering culture on women engineering students’ gendered a...
The aim of this master’s thesis is to examine how gender is produced in a contemporary technological...
On the initial problem the gender gap in enrollment in engineering careers, this paper analyzes the ...
This Full - Research paper presents the results and analysis of a study conducted at three different...
Abstract—Previous research on gender and engineering education has often tended to work with limited...
This paper is based on a study of the meaning of gender in teaching and learning at a newly started ...
Abstract — For both females and males, the decision to become engineers rests upon academic interest...
It is widely argued that engineering education needs to change in order to attract new groups of stu...
With a focus on technological practice, this paper detects and discusses changes that arose-or did n...
In this article we draw broadly on two different research traditions, Gender and Technology Studies ...
Commonly, there are more men than women seeking engineering courses, even though, with some common e...