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Authors
Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
This paper reports a research study of women’s experiences of receiving family
support when studying science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM)
subjects at technical institutes in Ireland and Portugal. Specifically, it reports
phenomenological analysis of 19 interviews conducted during the 2014-2015
academic years with female students studying engineering subjects at technical
institutes in Ireland and Portugal. It identifies forms of positive support received from
family as well as problematic family dynamics and concerns. Parents, uncles, and
aunts provide many positive forces, as do surrogates (i.e., adopted family and close
mentors). Cousins and brothers also provide role models and information. For our
participants, meeting family obligations and being first-generation college students
presents some challenges and stress.
Description
Comunicação apresentada na 44th SEFI Conference, 12-15 September 2016, Tampere, Finland
Keywords
gender engineering education family support student development