This brief paper depicts a current snapshot of an ongoing investigation that probes how students reconcile social and technical forms of identity in engineering education. While the detailed results are represented in other publications, this paper highlights the study in its current form in order to describe what will be presented at the poster session that corresponds to this paper. The outcomes of this ongoing investigation will be relevant for engineering educators who are focused on sharpening the social and technical competencies of their students. As we in engineering education seek to develop engineers that competently navigate a sociotechnical practice, this study provides a detailed snapshot of how social and technical perspectives of engineering affect the individual experience of identity development and, in turn, how an individual develops a sense of belonging and commitment to engineering.
Summary of InvestigationA growing body of scholarship has discussed how dominant cultures of engineering shape students' and professionals' understandings of social and technical dimensions of their work 4-11 . Further, engineering education research has advanced understanding of how engineering identity is formed by external, structural forces [12][13][14][15] . Yet, from a psychological perspective, we know little about how engineering students come to perceive and embody their identities as engineers, especially in relation to social and technical dimensions of these identities. Thus, we organized this study around the following research questions.