“…Theories of gender role socialization posit that traditionally gendered social roles influence the recruitment to and retention of men and women in different careers and professions (e.g., Cech, ; Correll, ; Hartman & Hartman, ; Settles, ), and research has found that personal beliefs and attitudes about work and family have important relationships with professional identity (e.g., Amelink & Creamer, ; Cech, Rubineau, Silbey, & Seron, ; Coyle, Van Leer, Schroeder, & Fulcher, ; Hawks & Spade, ; Jackson, Gardner, & Sullivan, ). Specific to the STEM fields, “engineering has always occupied a central position in the debate about recruitment and retention practices, especially for women” (Dutta, , p. 326) because substantially fewer women than men enroll in engineering programs (Cech, ; Lerdpornkulrat, Koul, & Sujivorakul, ).…”