This article was written by Eric Iverson. Originally published on the Start Engineering website, it is reprinted here with permission.
There is no getting around it.
Engineering has a tough time with African Americans. The workplace culture can be unwelcoming. The trend lines in graduation rates point down. And the “achievement gapâ€Â among demographic groups in K-12 is large. [Related: 9 Black Women in STEM You Need To Know] During Black History Month, it’s an opportune moment to consider some of these issues and highlight what people in the field are doing to remedy them. From the time of Elijah McCoy –whose highly effective train oil has been said to lie behind the phrase, “the real McCoy‖to today, African-American contributions to the history and successes of engineering and technology fields have been legion and unique. The history An interesting new book puts the topic of African Americans in engineering into a useful historical context. Edited by all-time engineering luminary John Slaughter, Changing the Face of Engineering: The African-American Experience gathers 15 essays in a comprehensive history of African Americans working in the field. It argues that their continued underrepresentation in the field puts the country at a disadvantage on varied fronts. Slaughter, the first African American NSF Director and
the one to establish an independent engineering directorate, gave a recent interview about the book to Inside Higher Ed. Many role models to choose from There is no shortage of African American role models  who have registered great accomplishments in the field. Among them:- Guion Bluford and Mae Jemison, the first African American man (1983) and woman (1992) in space (and, in Jemison’s case, the first astronaut to appear in a guest role on Star Trek).
- Mark Dean, pioneering computer engineer at IBM who holds three of the company’s original nine patents.
- Ursula Burns, the first African American woman to become CEO of a Fortune 500 company, Xerox.Â
Non-diversity in tech Even so, the paucity of African Americans in the tech sec
tor has become a big story in the last 18 months or so. As some of the biggest employers of engineers, companies in the tech sector have come under pressure to address diversity problems as newly public data show alarmingly homogeneous workforces.- The combined black workforces of Google, Twitter, and Facebook, says Mother Jones, could fit on a single jumbo jet. If you prefer numbers, that works out to 781 African Americans out of more than 41,000 total employees.
- Twitter’s only black lead engineer says he quit the company in disappointment over its weak commitment to diversity issues.
- And Jesse Jackson has joined the fray in engaged, durable fashion.
Degrees are down A challenge for any company looking to hire African American engineers does lie in supply issues. While earning 9.65% of all 2013 undergraduate degrees, African Americans earned only 3.99% of all engineering degrees. And this rate marks a drop from the 2009 rate of 4.39%, a period during which engineering overall increased from 4.36% to 4.72% of all undergraduate degrees. Recently released, the 2016 NSF S&E Indicators overflow with authoritative data. The data behind these figures come from the National Science Foundation, publishers of the Science and Engineering Indicators and Women, Minorities, and Persons with Disabilities in Science and Engineering. Both reports offer a bounty of angles from which to analyze the demographics of engineering graduates and professionals, among many other related topics. By these measures and more, African Americans are clearly finding more compelling, accessible pathways in education than what engineering offers. Where they come from African American engineering grads come from all kinds of schools. For 2014, the schools that graduated the most were the following:
- North Carolina A&T State University, 163
- Georgia Tech, 96
- Morgan State University, 74
- University of Florida, 65
- Florida International University, 61
Of the 101 historically black colleges and universities, only 14 have engineering programs. Naturally, US News has ranked them. Within the cohort of African American engineering graduates, women in fact perform at a higher rate than their non-African American women peers in engineering. We took a long look at this phenomenon in an earlier blog post. Helpful measures People inside the engineering field have long grappled with the underrepresentation of African Americans. For decades, the National Society of Black Engineers has served as a vital hub of outreach, networking, recruiting, and publicity in support of African American engineers. The society has recently launched an ambitious program to increase the number of black engineering graduates to 10,000 by 2025, up from about 3,500 now. “Be 1 of 10,000†includes efforts such as outreach to 7th graders, an expansion of the society’s terrific Summer Engineering Experience for Kids, or SEEK Program, and efforts to build capacity in both K-12 and higher education institutions for African Americans to succeed in engineering pathways. Thousands of kids will participate in NSBE’s SEEK Program, which will run in up to 13 cities this summer and offer fun, educational engineering learning experiences. More recent efforts to promote African American engineering successes have proliferated. These include major tech companies like Dropbox and Pinterest hiring high-level diversity officers and organizations like CODE2040, a dynamic, fast-growing nonprofit working to promote opportunities in engineering and technology for both black and Latino students in the “innovation economy.†A strong theme in our own high school publication, Start Engineering: A Career Guidebook, addresses the importance of increasing diversity in the field. A difficult fix The formula for increasing the numbers of African American engineers has many elements. As a comprehensive report from the STEM business group, Change the Equation, says, “the biggest problem is scale.†Efforts have to reach, in a sustained fashion, such large numbers of students in so many different places that no one program will suffice. Understanding what kinds of changes will work in what kinds of environments has to spread widely enough for people in local environments to take the right kinds of actions with the resources available to them. Have you seen anything that’s worked to make engineering more accessible to African American students? Where do you think the key to the diversity challenges lie? Leave a comment below to share your experiences. And please share with any interested friends or colleagues. Eric Iverson is vice president for Leaning and Communications at Start Engineering. He writes and speaks widely on K-12 engineering education.