Black males have long been underrepresented in engineering programs and the engineering workforce. Despite attempts to increase Black and other underrepresented student representation, these efforts are limited and have yet to create transformational change. There is little research that has sought to reveal and understand the factors that influence Black males to pursue engineering graduate degrees, and to discover what strengths Black males who have persisted through these programs possess. In this study, we sought to understand the factors that influenced 26 Black male engineering faculty to pursue engineering graduate degrees and the capital that they engaged to persist. Using a grounded theory approach, we developed the “STEP Forward...
Engineering Technology serves as a potential pathway for African Americans into engineering. Yet res...
BackgroundFamilies and community networks serve as sources of cultural capital and provide resources...
Prior to the 1970s, African Americans were essentially invisible in the science and engineering acad...
Due to low persistence and representation of Black males in engineering we conducted a study that to...
The United States is competing on a global level for jobs in the STEM fields but retention and gradu...
Black men, underrepresented in engineering, constitute a missing segment of the population who could...
Diverse socio-cultural experiences lead children in Black communities towards engineering careers. R...
Perceptions of African American Male College Students With Technical Majors on the Successful Pursui...
Despite a growing body of work on the experiences of Black collegians, the higher education knowledg...
Exploration of Factors Affecting Success of Undergraduate Engineering Majors at a Historically Black...
Prior research has examined underrepresented students in engineering from a deficit-oriented perspec...
The transfer pathway, particularly from two- to four-year colleges, is often seen as a vehicle to ex...
Prior research has examined underrepresented students in engineering from a deficit-oriented perspec...
The transfer pathway, particularly from two- to four-year colleges, is often seen as a vehicle to ex...
Minority-Serving Institutions (MSIs) are leading the way in producing a large percentage of those un...
Engineering Technology serves as a potential pathway for African Americans into engineering. Yet res...
BackgroundFamilies and community networks serve as sources of cultural capital and provide resources...
Prior to the 1970s, African Americans were essentially invisible in the science and engineering acad...
Due to low persistence and representation of Black males in engineering we conducted a study that to...
The United States is competing on a global level for jobs in the STEM fields but retention and gradu...
Black men, underrepresented in engineering, constitute a missing segment of the population who could...
Diverse socio-cultural experiences lead children in Black communities towards engineering careers. R...
Perceptions of African American Male College Students With Technical Majors on the Successful Pursui...
Despite a growing body of work on the experiences of Black collegians, the higher education knowledg...
Exploration of Factors Affecting Success of Undergraduate Engineering Majors at a Historically Black...
Prior research has examined underrepresented students in engineering from a deficit-oriented perspec...
The transfer pathway, particularly from two- to four-year colleges, is often seen as a vehicle to ex...
Prior research has examined underrepresented students in engineering from a deficit-oriented perspec...
The transfer pathway, particularly from two- to four-year colleges, is often seen as a vehicle to ex...
Minority-Serving Institutions (MSIs) are leading the way in producing a large percentage of those un...
Engineering Technology serves as a potential pathway for African Americans into engineering. Yet res...
BackgroundFamilies and community networks serve as sources of cultural capital and provide resources...
Prior to the 1970s, African Americans were essentially invisible in the science and engineering acad...