How do we combat the “culture of disengagement” [1] in engineering education? How do we effectively prepare students for the sociotechnical nature of engineering practice? As engineering educators, our responses to these questions often emphasize contextualization. Efforts to encourage engagement with public welfare, sociotechnical thinking, or social justice among engineering students often begin - and sometimes end - with illuminating the broader context of engineering practice and problems. For socially minded engineering educators, contextualization is nearly always a virtue. This paper analyzes and critiques practices of contextualizing engineering. Based on a qualitative content review of recent engineering education literature, we first describe and classify different modes of contextualization. In some cases, contextualizing means adding personal context or alternative perspectives to cultivate empathy with users or stakeholders (e.g. [2]). In others, contextualization is part of integrating sociotechnical thinking into engineering curriculum (e.g. [3]). This takes a variety of forms, but often includes examination of the sociocultural contexts of engineering problems and foregrounding the social aspects of engineering problem definition (e.g.[4]). A third mode of contextualization is found in social justice-centered approaches to engineering, which contextualize by emphasizing the often obscured power relations that engineering contains and upholds [5]. The first two approaches take contextualization as their primary end. Adding additional context is intended to deepen students' understanding of a problem, but not necessarily to suggest how they ought to solve it. The third approach, social justice-oriented engineering, takes a stronger normative stance. Contextualization here is a means to help students identify social injustices that engineers can then help to ameliorate [6]. We interpret the results of our content review through our personal experiences as researchers and educators in science and technology studies (STS) and engineering education. We, like many engineering educators, are wary of overly prescriptive ethics instruction which elides power dynamics and places too much onus on individual actors [7]. Contextualization as an end is a tempting solution; however, we also recognize the risks of illuminating complexity without providing direction [8]. We see flaws in our own balancing act, often defaulting to more contextualization in an effort to render content more acceptable to students and engineering colleagues, or to avoid charges of bias. Ultimately, we argue for a balance of contextualization and normativity. We support alternative approaches to contextualizing engineering that emphasize engineers' civic responsibilities and, crucially, the integration of their intersectional roles as citizens and professionals. These modes of contextualization embrace the idea of sociotechnical thinking, but also encourage engineers to work towards public welfare as engaged citizens.
CITATION STYLE
Kleine, M. S., Zacharias, K., & Ozkan, D. S. (2021). Contextualization as Virtue in Engineering Education. In ASEE Annual Conference and Exposition, Conference Proceedings. American Society for Engineering Education. https://doi.org/10.18260/1-2--36844
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