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Feminist Theories of Education

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Title: Feminist Theories of Education


1
Feminist Theories of Education
  • Feminist perspectives focus on gender
    inequalities in society.
  • Feminist research has revealed the extent of male
    domination and the ways in which male supremacy
    has been maintained.
  • From a feminist viewpoint, one of the main roles
    of education has been to maintain gender
    inequality.

2
Gender and education
  • From the 1960s onwards, feminist sociologists
    highlighted the following gender inequalities in
    education.
  • Gendered language
  • 2 Gendered roles
  • 3 Gender stereotypes

3
Gendered language
  • reflecting wider society, school textbooks (and
    teachers) tend to use gendered language he,
    him, his, man and men when referring to a
    person or people. This tends to downgrade women
    and make them invisible.

4
Gendered roles
  • school textbooks have tended to present males and
    females in traditional gender roles for
    example, women as mothers and housewives. This is
    particularly evident in reading schemes from the
    1960s and 1970s.
  •  

5
Gender stereotypes
  • reading schemes have also tended to present
    traditional gender stereotypes. For example an
    analysis of six reading schemes from the 1960s
    and 1970s found that
  •  
  • boys are presented as more adventurous than girls
  •  
  • as physically stronger
  •  
  • as having more choices
  •  
  • girls are presented as more caring than boys
  •  
  • as more interested in domestic matters
  •  
  • as followers rather than leaders

6
Women in the curriculum
  • in terms of whats taught in schools the
    curriculum women tend to be missing, in the
    background, or in second place. Feminists often
    argue that women have been hidden from history
    history has been the subject of men -
    http//womenshistory.about.com/library/bio/blbio_l
    ist.htm

7
Subject choice
  • traditionally, female students have tended to
    avoid maths, science and technology. Certain
    subjects were often seen as boys subjects and
    girls subjects. Often girls subjects had lower
    status and lower market value.

8
Discrimination
  • there is evidence of discrimination against
    girls in education simply because of their
    gender. For example, when the 11-plus exam was
    introduced in the 1940s, the pass mark was set
    lower for boys than for girls to make certain
    there roughly equal numbers of boys and girl sin
    grammar schools. In other words girls were
    artificially failed so boys could succeed.
  • Further and higher education traditionally the
    number of female students going on to further and
    higher education has been lower than for boys.
    There is evidence that teachers often gave boys
    more encouragement than girls to go to university
    (Stanworth, 1983).

9
Feminist perspectives an evaluation
  • Feminist perspectives have been valuable for
    exposing gender inequality in education. Partly
    as a result of sociological research, a lot has
    changed for example, much of the sexism in
    reading schemes has now disappeared.
  •  
  • Today, women have overtaken men on most measures
    of educational attainment. Their grades at GCSE
    and A level are significantly higher than those
    of male students. And more women than men are
    going on to higher education. The concern now is
    the underachievement of boys rather than
    discrimination against girls.
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