Gender Differences in Student Satisfaction Surveys
Paper in proceeding, 2019
courses in its Mechanical, Automation, and Industrial Design Engineering programs. This study is a continuation of previous work on variations of student satisfaction between CDIO project courses and “traditional” courses (Malmqvist et al. 2018) with the addition of an analysis of gender aspects. The present study will use the same methodology, namely a mixed methods approach and investigate both closed-form questionnaire responses and free text answers in course surveys. Quantitative methods for comparing means of survey questions and qualitative analyses of free text answers for selected courses are chosen to shed light on patterns of different gender’s perceptions. Aspects of different course characteristics such as traditional, lecture-based vs. project-based and theoretical vs. applied are considered.The results demonstrate that statistically significant differences exist in how male and female students perceive some of their courses and how involved they are in answering course surveys, with this difference being more substantial at bachelor’s level than at master’s level. Possible reasons on why those differences exist and what measures, if any, should be taken to close the gap are discussed.
CDIO Standard 5
Gender Studies
CDIO Standard 4
CDIO Standard 10
CDIO Standard 12
Student Satisfaction
Author
Panagiota Papadopoulou
Chalmers, Industrial and Materials Science, Product Development
Mattias Bingerud
Chalmers
Utbildningsstöd
Erik Hulthén
Chalmers, Industrial and Materials Science, Product Development
Mikael Enelund
Chalmers, Mechanics and Maritime Sciences (M2), Dynamics
Proceedings of the International CDIO Conference
20021593 (eISSN)
834-845978-87-7507-459-4 (ISBN)
Aarhus, Denmark,
Subject Categories
Didactics
Gender Studies
Learning
Learning and teaching
Pedagogical work
DOI
10.7146/aul.347