2021
DOI: 10.1002/jee.20381
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Unpacking professional shame: Patterns of White male engineering students living in and out of threats to their identities

Abstract: Background: Although prior research has provided robust descriptions of engineering students' identity development, a gap in the literature exists related to students' emotional experiences of shame, which undergird the socially constructed expectations of their professional formation.Purpose: We examined the lived experiences of professional shame among White male engineering students in the United States. We conceptualize professional shame to be a painful emotional state that occurs when one perceives they … Show more

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Cited by 33 publications
(51 citation statements)
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“…Like most educational emotion research, most of the existing studies in engineering education take their theoretical departure in individual and cognitivist perspectives (Lönngren, Adawi, Bellocchi, et al, forthcoming;. Specific emotions have been studied from such a perspective in engineering education, such as empathy (Hess et al, 2020;Walther et al, 2017), frustration (Estrada & Atwood, 2012), and shame (Huff et al, 2021). Kellam et al (2018), on the other hand, focus on a variety of emotions in engineering students' emotional trajectories.…”
Section: Theory and Research On Emotions In Educationmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Like most educational emotion research, most of the existing studies in engineering education take their theoretical departure in individual and cognitivist perspectives (Lönngren, Adawi, Bellocchi, et al, forthcoming;. Specific emotions have been studied from such a perspective in engineering education, such as empathy (Hess et al, 2020;Walther et al, 2017), frustration (Estrada & Atwood, 2012), and shame (Huff et al, 2021). Kellam et al (2018), on the other hand, focus on a variety of emotions in engineering students' emotional trajectories.…”
Section: Theory and Research On Emotions In Educationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Most of the existing studies on emotions in engineering education take their theoretical departure in individual and cognitivist perspectives on emotions (Kellam, Constantino, Walther, & Sochacka, 2011;. The focus of that research is on emotions as individual competencies or experiences, such as empathy (Hess, Miller, Higbee, Fore, & Wallace, 2020;Walther, Miller, & Sochacka, 2017), shame (Huff, Okai, Shanachilubwa, Sochacka, & Walther, 2021), and frustration (Estrada & Atwood, 2012). In the broader social science literature, however, there is an emerging body of research that uses discourse analysis to study emotions as social and cultural phenomena expressed in social interaction (Wetherell, 2013).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…That project proposed the following three research questions: RQ1: How do students psychologically experience shame in the context of engineering education? Huff et al (2021) investigated RQ1. RQ2: How are these experiences located and socially constructed within the institutional cultures of engineering programs?…”
Section: Context Of the Studymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…(1) Individuals perceive themselves to have failed to meet socially constructed expectations that are relevant to their identities in a professional domain; (2) individuals experience a painful emotional state amid such perceived failure; (3) individuals attribute the failure to meet expectations to an inadequate whole, or global, self rather than a domain-specific feature of a certain identity; and (4) individuals within professional domains not only experience the emotional state of shame but also contribute to expectations that establish the conditions for professional shame to occur (Huff et al, 2021).…”
Section: Context Of the Studymentioning
confidence: 99%
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