But after reading Hess’s piece, I am conflicted in believing whether all of this is possible. He points out that there is institutionalized racism and discrimination for women and people of color with the glass ceiling. He also discusses the importance of providing a more diverse staff to “provide diverse role models for the students” (Hess 252). Beyond that I also wonder if it would be better to hire younger professors who have had experiences with a slightly more diverse group of engineers or diverse undergraduate program rather than retain older professors who most likely only had most, if not all, White males in their undergraduate program. From interviewing a woman of color in engineering, I have learned this to be true. She stated that the younger professors were more engaged with students and more willing to help rather the older professors who tend to maintain a distance to her (this may not be true for all professors but for some). I think this may help create a more comfortable atmosphere by having a new generation of staff coming in who may have new goals in mind.
I believe that the goal of diversifying engineering is a great goal, but I really doubt that it will become diverse in 2020. I believe we are still far away in creating equality and equal opportunities, like in recruitment. We see this in Cal Poly where most of the students are from good high schools and from higher income homes, which do provide more opportunities and courses (such as AP courses) to excel. I do not know when this goal will actually be achieve, but I do have hope that we are progressing by focusing more on this problem and trying to do something about it.
Works Cited:
National Academy of Engineering (2004), “Chapter 3: Aspirations for the Engineer of 2020” (pp. 47-52) (in The Engineer of 2020: Visions of Engineering in the New Century).
Hess (1995), “Conclusions: Science, Technology & Multicultural Education”.
I totally identify with your sense of disbelief and skepticism, about whether if this is all possible. It feels so right to wish so much good and progress, and then to learn of so many disheartening stats and stories, sometimes it seems realistic to be a little pessimistic about the situation. But in times when I feel weighed down about the "impossibility" of moving forward, we have to acknowledge what progress has been made. Look for example to women's suffrage, or homosexuality no longer being regarded a mental disorder by the American Psychological Association, or that we have a President who is a person of color. I know that this is repeated time and again, but the first step to change is awareness. I feel like the biggest challenge is making EVERYONE aware, but knowledge is spread in an exponential manner: we should all commit to spreading the truth, such as with something as simple and as misunderstood as race being a social construct and not a scientific fact. Let us all take the responsibility for disseminating and propagating this concise yet extremely powerful idea, and we will see a change for the better.
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