Participants in this study were student interns and mentors taking part in the 2012, 10- week Langley Aerospace Research Student Scholars (LARSS) summer internship program in Hampton, Virginia. The study examined mentors and student interns' ratings of their preparedness in basic knowledge and skills. The study focused on three primary areas: 1) overall evaluation of knowledge and skills by mentors and interns; 2) male and female interns' perceptions of their own skills in these key areas; and 3) mentors' perceptions of their student interns' knowledge and skills in the same areas by gender. Overall mentors were more positive about their interns' improvement in 12 of 17 areas assessed than were the student interns. There were no significant gender differences in how mentors rated their male and female interns' abilities in these workforce skills, but there were four key areas where female interns rated their own abilities lower than did their male peers: Analytical thinking, computational skills, computer skills and technical skills. Implications of these findings are discussed. ©American Society for Engineering education, 2013.
CITATION STYLE
Pinelli, T. E., Hall, C. W., Brush, K. M., & Perry, J. B. (2013). Are there gender differences in how male and female interns and their mentors rateworkforce skills in stem fields? In ASEE Annual Conference and Exposition, Conference Proceedings. https://doi.org/10.18260/1-2--19220
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