TY - JOUR
T1 - Are You Feeling Me? An Exploration of Empathy Development in Engineering Design Education
AU - Alzayed, Mohammad Alsager
AU - McComb, Christopher
AU - Menold, Jessica
AU - Huff, Jacquelyn
AU - Miller, Scarlett R.
N1 - Funding Information:
We thank Kuwait University for funding the doctoral fellowship of Mohammad Alsager Alzayed. The authors are grateful to Dr. Daryl Cameron for his help on the project. We would also like to thank undergraduate research assistant Abby O’Connell for help on this project.
Publisher Copyright:
Copyright © 2021 by ASME.
PY - 2021/11
Y1 - 2021/11
N2 - Having empathy in the design process can help engineers relate to the end-user by identifying what and why certain experiences are meaningful. While there have been efforts to identify the factors that impact empathic tendencies in engineering, there has been limited evidence on how a students’ trait empathy or empathic self-efficacy develops over a design project or what factors impact this development. The current study was developed to explore the development of students’ trait empathy and empathic self-efficacy development and identify the underlying impact of the design project’s context and course instructor through a study with 103 engineering students. Students’ trait empathy and empathic self-efficacy were measured across each of the four design stages (problem formulation, concept generation, concept selection, and final conceptual design) during an 8-week project. The results highlight that students’ trait empathy and empathic self-efficacy did not increase across design stages and the context of the design problem did not impact students’ empathy development. Meanwhile, students displayed lower empathic self-efficacy in one of the course sections, and interviews with the course instructors revealed that the lack of accessibility to the end-user might have constricted students from developing empathy. These insights call for future research that could empirically assess the impact of trait empathy and empathic self-efficacy in driving design outcomes in the later design stages, which could increase engineering educators’ awareness of the role of empathy in the engineering classroom.
AB - Having empathy in the design process can help engineers relate to the end-user by identifying what and why certain experiences are meaningful. While there have been efforts to identify the factors that impact empathic tendencies in engineering, there has been limited evidence on how a students’ trait empathy or empathic self-efficacy develops over a design project or what factors impact this development. The current study was developed to explore the development of students’ trait empathy and empathic self-efficacy development and identify the underlying impact of the design project’s context and course instructor through a study with 103 engineering students. Students’ trait empathy and empathic self-efficacy were measured across each of the four design stages (problem formulation, concept generation, concept selection, and final conceptual design) during an 8-week project. The results highlight that students’ trait empathy and empathic self-efficacy did not increase across design stages and the context of the design problem did not impact students’ empathy development. Meanwhile, students displayed lower empathic self-efficacy in one of the course sections, and interviews with the course instructors revealed that the lack of accessibility to the end-user might have constricted students from developing empathy. These insights call for future research that could empirically assess the impact of trait empathy and empathic self-efficacy in driving design outcomes in the later design stages, which could increase engineering educators’ awareness of the role of empathy in the engineering classroom.
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U2 - 10.1115/1.4048624
DO - 10.1115/1.4048624
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85127032787
SN - 1050-0472
VL - 143
JO - Journal of Mechanical Design - Transactions of the ASME
JF - Journal of Mechanical Design - Transactions of the ASME
IS - 11
M1 - 112301
ER -