Engineering remains one of Canada’s most stable and high-demand career paths. Yet despite strong employment rates and above-average salaries, many capable students still do not see themselves reflected in the profession.
For high school counsellors, this represents both a challenge and an opportunity.
Non-traditional students — including young women, Indigenous students, Black and racialized students, first-generation learners, newcomers to Canada, rural students, mature learners, and students from lower-income households — remain underrepresented in engineering programs across the country. Expanding participation is not only an equity issue; it is an economic necessity.
Canada’s labour projections from Employment and Social Development Canada indicate continued demand for engineers over the coming decade. Supporting diverse pathways into engineering strengthens both student outcomes and national competitiveness.
Understanding the Barriers
Counsellors must understand the systemic barriers many non-traditional students face:
Stereotypes About Who “Belongs” in Engineering: Engineering is often perceived as:
- Male-dominated
- Math-exclusive
- Socially isolated
- Culturally homogeneous
These perceptions discourage capable students long before course selection in Grades 11 and 12.
Limited Exposure and Role Models: Students without family members in STEM fields may lack:
- Awareness of engineering career diversity
- Knowledge of college vs. university pathways
- Access to mentors who can demystify the field
Academic Confidence Gaps: Research consistently shows that some students — particularly young women and first-generation students — underestimate their math and science capabilities despite strong performance.
Financial and Structural Barriers: Tuition costs, relocation requirements, and lack of information about scholarships can deter students from even applying.
The Role of Counsellors: Five Practical Strategies
1. Reframe What Engineering Is
Engineering is not just calculus and circuits. It is:
- Climate solutions
- Infrastructure renewal
- Clean energy innovation
- Biomedical technologies
- Community design
- Software systems shaping daily life
When counsellors frame engineering as problem-solving that improves lives, it becomes more accessible and socially relevant.
Highlighting employment outcomes can also increase perceived value. Data from Statistics Canada shows that post-secondary graduates — particularly in STEM fields — experience employment rates around 90% within three years of graduation. Engineering salaries frequently start between $60,000 and $80,000 and rise substantially with experience.
For students concerned about financial stability, this context matters.
2. Normalize Multiple Entry Pathways
Engineering is not a single, narrow route.
Counsellors can highlight:
- University engineering degrees
- College engineering technician diplomas and technologist programs
- Bridging programs between colleges and universities
- Mature student access routes
College-based applied programs often provide smaller class sizes and hands-on training, which may better suit students who thrive in experiential environments.
When students understand that engineering education is flexible — not one-size-fits-all — participation broadens.
3. Encourage Early Academic Positioning (Without Gatekeeping)
Students do not need to be “math prodigies” to succeed.
Counsellors can:
- Encourage Grade 9 and 10 math confidence-building
- Recommend tutoring proactively (not reactively)
- Connect students with summer STEM programs
- Support course planning that keeps options open
Avoid language that frames advanced math as a filter. Instead, frame it as a skill that can be developed with support.
4. Connect Students to Mentorship and Representation
Representation transforms aspiration into possibility.
Counsellors can:
- Invite diverse engineers for career talks
- Share profiles of Canadian engineers from varied backgrounds
- Promote mentorship initiatives through professional bodies
Organizations such as Engineers Canada and provincial regulators often support outreach and inclusion initiatives.
Students are far more likely to pursue engineering when they can see someone like themselves succeeding in the field.
5. Address Financial Concerns Directly
Many non-traditional students quietly eliminate engineering because they assume it is financially inaccessible.
Counsellors need to address those concerns by:
- Proactively discussing scholarships and bursaries
- Highlighting co-op programs that provide paid work terms
- Explaining long-term earning potential
- Encouraging early financial planning conversations
Engineering co-op programs are especially powerful equity tools, allowing students to earn income during their studies while building networks.
Supporting Specific Student Groups
For young women, emphasizing collaborative and impact-driven aspects of engineering is necessary. It is also critical to highlight growing initiatives promoting gender equity to counter myths about workplace culture.
Connecting engineering to community infrastructure, water systems, housing and sustainable land stewardship will resonate with Indigenous students. Familiarity with Indigenous STEM support programs and services available to Indigenous learners at post-secondary institutions will make this a realistic option, and a more attractive pursuit for them.
For many first-generation and low-income students, post-secondary education seems unattainable. However, breaking down admission requirements into manageable stages, where counsellors provide step-by-step guidance through the application process, and offer application fee support (where possible), can make the opportunity more realistic.
Beyond Access: Supporting Persistence
Getting students into engineering is only half the work.
Success also depends on:
- Strong first-year transition support
- Study skills development
- Peer networks
- Mental health resources
- Encouragement to seek academic help early
Be sure to prepare students by emphasizing that struggle in first-year calculus or physics is common — and survivable. Normalizing the challenge reduces attrition.
Why Inclusion in Engineering Matters for Canada
Canada’s economic future depends on innovation, infrastructure resilience, clean technology, and digital transformation. Expanding participation in engineering strengthens workforce capacity, community representation, equity in higher-paying professions and social mobility.
When non-traditional students succeed in engineering, the benefits ripple beyond individuals to families, communities, and the national economy.
Final Thoughts
Engineering is not reserved for a narrow demographic profile. It is a field built on curiosity, persistence, and problem-solving — qualities found in students from every background.
By reframing engineering, broadening awareness of pathways, addressing financial concerns, and actively countering stereotypes, counsellors can help ensure that Canada’s next generation of engineers reflects the full diversity of its population. The opportunity is not only to guide students toward high-demand careers — but to expand who gets to build Canada’s future.
By: Lindsay Taylor





