Three-dimensional spatial skills have been shown to be critical to success in variety of STEM fields. In particular, spatial skills have been linked to success in engineering and in learning to program in computer science. Unfortunately, of all cognitive processes, 3-D spatial skills exhibit some of the most robust gender differences, favoring males, which could have serious implications as we attempt to increase gender diversity in our engineering programs. Spatial skills are not usually a part of the formal instruction in the pre-college classroom, meaning that many of our students enroll in our engineering programmes deficient in these skills. A course for developing 3-D spatial skills has been offered at various universities in the US over the past two decades. Outcomes for this course include improved grades and graduation rates for the students who participate in it, particularly for the women. Based on these successes at the university level, attempts are being made to incorporate spatial skills training into pre-college classrooms. The authors are involved in a collaborative study regarding the impact of spatial skills training at the pre-college level. This paper describes the study and also outlines key findings to date. The implications for engineering access and success will be discussed.
I lecture and co-ordinate initial teacher engineering education modules and initial engineering modules. My origins in engineering education and my later research within experimental psychology provide a multidisciplinary platform that allows me to examine the realm of engineering education from multiple perspectives. My current research focuses on self-efficacy relative to multiple different engineering associated domains including spatial capabilities and academic performance.
Dr. Sheryl Sorby is currently a Professor of STEM Education at the University of Cincinnati and was recently a Fulbright Scholar at the Dublin Institute of Technology in Dublin, Ireland. She is a professor emerita of Mechanical Engineering-Engineering Mec
Norma Veurink is a Senior Lecturer in the Engineering Fundamentals Department at Michigan Technological University where she teaches introductory engineering courses and a spatial visualization course designed for engineering students with poorly develope
Kinnari Atit is a postdoctoral researcher in the Department of Psychology at Northwestern University. Her areas of research include the intersection of spatial thinking and science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM) education. Her work focuses on understanding the role of spatial thinking skills in STEM domains, and also how to bolster and develop STEM-relevant spatial thinking skills in students. Prior to Northwestern, Kinnari was a postdoctoral researcher at the Johns Hopkins University Center for Talented Youth where she investigated alternative methods of identifying academic talent in historically underrepresented students. Kinnari received her PhD in Psychology at Temple University in 2014 where she studied the role of spatial thinking in one specific STEM domain – the geosciences . Her current research questions include understanding the role of spatial thinking skills in learning computer programming, and examining whether improving middle school students’ spatial thinking skills effects their math achievement.
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