TY - JOUR
T1 - Marginalized engineering students' narrative construction through photo elicitation
AU - Maitra, Debalina
AU - Coley, Brooke
N1 - Funding Information: Funding: This work is supported by the National Science Foundation, #1733716. Funding Information: There is a national urgency for diversifying engineering talent, particularly from women and underrepresented groups (URGs) (; ). Despite progress in some areas, the diversity of undergraduate engineering student bodies has primarily been stagnant. Contrary to that data, there is a growing diversity where students traditionally underrepresented in engineering are overrepresented at Community Colleges, which have become the chosen pathway for many students to pursue higher education. URGs in STEM imply the intersections of multiple components of underrepresented identity; for example; first-generation status, gender, race, ethnicity, socioeconomic status, veteran, a person with a disability, LGBTQ etc (; ). However, community colleges continue to be under-researched as a means of increasing diversity in the engineering workforce. This study aims to capture the students' rich lived experience through PEI so that their struggles and challenges can be better understood beyond numbers. This research article is part of our broader study funded by the National Science Foundation. The goal of our original study was to explore the engineering experiences of the URG students in their pathway program. A greater understanding of students' experiences could elucidate early interventions and strategic opportunities to foster an awareness and desire among URG students to transfer to four-year institutions in pursuit of higher education. Publisher Copyright: © 2022, Emerald Publishing Limited.
PY - 2022/11/22
Y1 - 2022/11/22
N2 - Purpose: The goal of this study is to explore an immediate step in understanding the lived experiences of under-represented students through metaphor construction and possibly collect more in-depth data through photograph-based interviews. Design/Methodology/Approach: This article introduced photo-elicitation based narrative interviews as a qualitative methodology while interviewing fourteen undergraduate community college students mostly from underrepresented groups (URGs). At the beginning of each interview, the authors probed the participants with 8 photographs chosen by the research team to represent a diverse set of experiences in engineering. The authors conducted a thematic analysis of the interview data. Findings: The findings suggested that the inclusion of photo-elicitation often catalyzed consumption of representations, images, metaphors, and voice to stories passed unnoticed; and finally produces more detailed descriptions and complements semi-structured narrative interviews. Research Limitations/Implications: This study advances the scholarship that extends photograph driven interviews/photo elicitation methodology while interviewing marginalized population and offers a roadmap for what a multi-modal, arts-based analysis process might look like for in-depth interviews. Practical Implications: The use of photo-elicitation in our research enabled a deeper, more poignant exploration of the URG students' experience of navigating engineering. The participants were able to relate to the photographs and shared their life narratives through them; hence, use of photographs can be adapted in future research. Social Implications: Our research revealed that PEI has excellent potential to capture marginalized narratives of URGs, which is not well explored in educational research, specially, in higher education. In our research, PEI promoted more culturally inclusive approaches positioning the participants as experts of their own narratives. Originality/Value: The study presented in this paper serves as an example of qualitative research that expands methodological boundaries and centers the role of power, marginalization, and creativity in research. This work serves as a unique and important contribution to the photo-elicitation literature, offering a critical roadmap for researchers who are drawn to photo elicitation/photograph driven interviews as a method to explore their inquiry.
AB - Purpose: The goal of this study is to explore an immediate step in understanding the lived experiences of under-represented students through metaphor construction and possibly collect more in-depth data through photograph-based interviews. Design/Methodology/Approach: This article introduced photo-elicitation based narrative interviews as a qualitative methodology while interviewing fourteen undergraduate community college students mostly from underrepresented groups (URGs). At the beginning of each interview, the authors probed the participants with 8 photographs chosen by the research team to represent a diverse set of experiences in engineering. The authors conducted a thematic analysis of the interview data. Findings: The findings suggested that the inclusion of photo-elicitation often catalyzed consumption of representations, images, metaphors, and voice to stories passed unnoticed; and finally produces more detailed descriptions and complements semi-structured narrative interviews. Research Limitations/Implications: This study advances the scholarship that extends photograph driven interviews/photo elicitation methodology while interviewing marginalized population and offers a roadmap for what a multi-modal, arts-based analysis process might look like for in-depth interviews. Practical Implications: The use of photo-elicitation in our research enabled a deeper, more poignant exploration of the URG students' experience of navigating engineering. The participants were able to relate to the photographs and shared their life narratives through them; hence, use of photographs can be adapted in future research. Social Implications: Our research revealed that PEI has excellent potential to capture marginalized narratives of URGs, which is not well explored in educational research, specially, in higher education. In our research, PEI promoted more culturally inclusive approaches positioning the participants as experts of their own narratives. Originality/Value: The study presented in this paper serves as an example of qualitative research that expands methodological boundaries and centers the role of power, marginalization, and creativity in research. This work serves as a unique and important contribution to the photo-elicitation literature, offering a critical roadmap for researchers who are drawn to photo elicitation/photograph driven interviews as a method to explore their inquiry.
KW - Broadening participation in STEM
KW - Community college students
KW - Marginalized experiences in engineering
KW - Photo elicitation
KW - Photograph driven interviews
KW - Rapport building
KW - Underrepresented students
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85131835157&partnerID=8YFLogxK
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U2 - https://doi.org/10.1108/QRJ-10-2021-0110
DO - https://doi.org/10.1108/QRJ-10-2021-0110
M3 - Article
SN - 1443-9883
VL - 22
SP - 448
EP - 463
JO - Qualitative Research Journal
JF - Qualitative Research Journal
IS - 4
ER -