Title: GIRLS%20AND%20BOYS%20AND%20EQUITY%20IN%20MATHEMATICS:%20TEACHERS
1GIRLS AND BOYS AND EQUITY IN MATHEMATICS
TEACHERS BELIEFS
2 3THE ABC of NUMERACYriitta_at_soro.fi
4A basic belief underlying this presentation is
that females social learning and beliefs about
themselves with regard to mathematicsare
different from those of males. The entire field
of mathematics might be enriched if more young
females were given the opportunity to grow into
mathematical scholars and give their unique
contribution.
5University of TurkuDepartment of Mathematics
Male Female
Professors 6
Docents 22
Lecturers 8
Senior Assistants 6
Assistants 2
Total 44 5
- retrieved from http//www.math.utu.fi/henkilokunt
a/
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6Females have not elected to participate in
advanced mathematics courses or in
mathematics-related careers at the same level as
males have. Girls tend to underestimate their
math ability in school, even though their actual
performance is as good as or better than that of
the boys. Mathematics has been and continues to
be a critical filter to careers and occupations,
which are interesting, challenging, have high
status, and are usually well-paid.
7 Elizabeth Fennema Mathematics is a unique
product of human culture. Permitting females to
understand this culture is important both for
their own appreciation of the beauty of
mathematics and the transmission of this culture
to future generations. Fennema, E. 1995.
Mathematics, Gender and Research. In B. Grevholm
G. Hanna (eds.) Gender and Mathematics
Education. Lund Lund University Press, 21-38.
8Defining Equity
9In this presentation the word equity is used
instead of equality. In some aspects "equality"
is not synonymous with "equity. Thus, rather
than striving for equality in the meaning of
sameness amongst girls and boys, teachers
should promote equity which reflects the needs
and strengths of both groups. Merriam-Webster
On-Line Dictionary
equity justice according to natural law or
right specifically freedom from bias or
favouritism
equality equal (1) of the same measure,
quantity, amount, or number as another 2)
identical in mathematical value or logical
denotation
10What is gender equity (equality)? Council of
Europe defines
- Gender equality means an equal visibility,
empowerment and participation of both sexes in
all spheres of public and private life. -
- Gender equality is the opposite of gender
inequality, not of gender difference.
11Gender equity in mathematics education
- Judgements on educational equity have been based
on three different definitions of equality - equal opportunity
- equal treatment
- equal outcome.
12(1) equal opportunity
Many teachers believe that equity has been
reached since there are no formal borders and
the co-educational school system provides equal
opportunity to elect mathematics. However there
are far more boys than girls in advanced math
classrooms.
13(2) equal treatment
- This second definition is also problematic.
Teachers may believe that they treat boys and
girls the same way. Classroom observations show
that this does not prevail. - Males interact more frequently with their
teachers. Teachers have different achievement
expectations and they vary their explanations for
success and failures depending on the sex of the
student. - Even, if the teacher strives to equal treatment
of girls and boys, girls and boys may perceive it
differently.
14(3) equity as equal outcome
- If equity in mathematics is defined as equal
educational outcome, there should not be gender
differences in achievement or participation or in
how males and females feel about themselves and
mathematics. - This third definition is consistent with the
definition of equality Council of Europe has
given i. e. to require equal visibility,
empowerment and participation of both sexes. - Equity in this sense has not been reached.
15The Gender Problem in Mathematics
- There are widely differing perceptions of what
constitutes the so-called gender and mathematics
problem. The starting point and the assumptions
behind it are questionable. - Ernest has listed five views of gender and maths
problem. Each of the views is connected to a
different educational ideology and to a different
socially located interest group. - Ernest, P. 1998. Changing Views of The
Gender Problem in Mathematics. In V.
Walkerdine, Counting girls out Girls and
Mathematics (new edition) pp. 1-14. London Virago
.
16Five views of gender and maths problem
- Fixed biological differences
- Society needs workforce
- The ablest women to be encouraged
- Girls/women lack confidence
- Distorted social construction of gender roles
171. Fixed biological differences
- Fixed biological differences make males better at
maths. - Attempts at equal opportunities are undesirable
political interventions in the natural state of
affairs.
182. Society needs workforceThe situation of
female under-participation should be improved for
benefit of society. Well-educated workforce of
both men and women is needed, even if, as many in
this group believe, females are inferior at
mathematics.
- 3. The ablest women to be encouraged
- Maths ability is inherited and primarily male. In
the interest of mathematics this group want also
the ablest women to be encouraged to progress as
far as their nature will allow them.
194. Girls/women lack confidence
- The gender and mathematics problem is due to the
lack of confidence and poor mathematical
attitudes of girls and women, i. e. - it is an individual problem.
- The solution is to encourage and support girls
and women more in mathematics.
205. Distorted social construction of gender roles
Gender inequity is due to underlying sexism and
stereotyping in society in maths. Gendered
identities, gender roles, are socially
constructed and mathematics is stereotyped as
male and femininity as non mathematical.
21- If mathematics is understood to be
stereotypically male and unfeminine, it means
that girls must choose to be feminine or to
choose to be successful at mathematics. - For some women it is possible to opt for both,
especially for those, who have been encouraged to
develop their mathematical talents by significant
male others (like their fathers) during the
formative adolescent years, but for many others
it is a strong barrier and an inhibiting force.
22A problem of the views of the utility of
mathematics?
- If we want more women to choose math-based
careers it's not enough to try to raise girls'
confidence levels. Their career choices are often
based on human values. Girls, also boys, should
be demonstrated how mathematically based sciences
can improve the world.
23GIRLS AND BOYS AND EQUITY IN MATHEMATICS
TEACHERS BELIEFS
Some results of my study
24- The focus of my doctoral dissertation was to
examine - (1) teachers beliefs about differences of boys
and girls as learners of mathematics, and - (2) teachers beliefs about gender equity in
mathematics education and how it could be
reached. - Finnish secondary school (13-15 year olds)
teachers of mathematics, 110 female and 94 male,
answered to a questionnaire. One year later ten
of the respondents were interviewed.
25GIRLS BOYS
Boys and girls essential differences as math
learners
- 145 characterizations in total 105
characterizations in total - conscientious 35 idle
17diligent, hard-working 34 reasoning,
intellectual 13rote-learner 12
careless 11 - lack of selfconfidence 12 insight,
creative 9 routin-doer 10 selfconfident
8 rule-follower, copies 8 venturous
7 exercising 5 problemsolver 5
persistent 4 not persistent
5
26What are girls and boys essential differences
as math learners?
- The most prominent difference concerned working.
Girls are painstaking and diligent and boys are
idle. - Secondly cognitive skills were emphazised, girls
tend to routines and boys use their power of
reason. - The third difference was found in attitudes, boys
are venturous but girls lack self-confidence. - 14 of the teachers did not believe in essential
differences.
27Describe in a few words a girl / a boy who is
achieving high in mathematics
- 30 of the teachers described a high achieving
girl and a high achieving boy with same or nearly
same words. - But the great majority of teachers mentioned
different factors for girls and boys high
achievement. The factors for boys were more
varied and many-sided than those of girls.
28A HIGH ACHIEVING GIRL A HIGH ACHIEVING
BOYdescriptions (tot. 320)
descriptions (tot. 250)
- diligent 82 diligent 23
- conscientious 66 conscientious 20
- (somewhat) talented 15 (naturally) talented 20
- quiet 11 perceiving 15
- careful 11 intellectual 19
- bright 11 bright 14
-
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31Teachers beliefs about gender equityQuestion
1. What is the best way to treat boys and girls
equitably?(hintsno attention to gender, equal
treatment, girls and boys needs, favour the
weaker) Question 2. Is it necessary to bring
up gender equity in math class and how do you do
it?
32Teachers were categorized under three labels
according to their answer on addressing gender
equity
- (1) students have no gender (41 )
- (2) equal treatment (38 )
- (3) girls and boys needs (21 )
- (4) favour the weaker (0 )
33Students have no gender
- Approximately 41 of the teachers actively
denied the existence of gender equity issues or
tried to behave as if they were gender blind.
They gave responses such as - I dont bother about gender, I just teach.
- I treat a student as a person not as a boy or a
girl. - I try to overlook gender.
- Mathematics and teaching mathematics is gender
free.
34Equal treatment
- 38 of the teachers defined equity as equal
treatment. This category differs from the former
one, of negative awareness, in that the students
of these teachers were girls and boys. These
teachers did not actively reject the possibility
of inequity. - The teachers did not usually define what they
meant with equal treatment. They addressed equity
by paying attention to all students and they
avoided emphasizing differences. - I require the same performance from girls and
boys. Nowadays also girls dare, there is not so
big difference.
35Girls and boys needs
- 21 of the responses were classified as
reflecting teachers aims to care about gender or
individual differences. Teachers starting point
was that both genders have special needs or that
there are gender differences in cognitive
abilities, attitudes or learning styles. - I vary my teaching methods and exercises
- I take into account the different learning
abilities of them both.
36Favour the weaker
- The teachers of this study did not accept this
principle and no one chose the alternative of
favouring the weaker one in the questionnaire.
Also in the interviews this idea of compensation
was rejected. - The Finnish law on gender equity says that it is
possible to deviate from equal treatment
especially in the favour of females, if it
strives to realize the aims of the law for
equality. This compensation is not regarded as
discrimination. (In Finland we have the quota
principle in political decision making, every
committee must have at least 40 of either
sex.)
37Is it necessary to bring up gender equity in
math class and how do you do it?
- Only one third of the teachers regarded the
equity issue necessary to be brought up. The
great majority of the teachers regarded gender
equity self-evident. - Gender equity is self-evident, its no need to
make any fuss about it. - Mathematics and gender are in no contact
whatsoever.
38Results
- Even though many of the teachers did not express
very stereotyped beliefs, a great majority held
different beliefs about girls and boys and those
differences favoured boys. The most emergent was
the belief in girls employing inferior cognitive
skills. - Gender equity was not considered a problem, but
equity between those who were motivated to learn
and those who were not, and heterogeneous groups
and disturbance. - Some of the teachers were concerned about boys,
who were underachieving or might fall aside, but
girls were supposed to manage thanks to their
consciousness.
39- Boys attained most of teacher attention. But this
situation was not seen to violate equity. - Gender equity was considered self-evident and
mathematics gender-free. Most teachers did not
pay any attention to the issue, they believed
that they treated a student as an individual and
not as a girl or a boy. - No differences were found between the beliefs of
female and male teachers.
40- Valerie Walkerdine published 1989 Counting Girls
Out, a book that changed perceptions about the
gender problem. The mainstream analyses of the
problem had located one or other lack in girls
and women as the root of the problem. - In the new edition (1998) Walkerdine writes in
the afterword - Considerable concern is now being expressed
about the relatively poor school performance of
boys related to girls....Girls attainment in
school is not celebrated as an index of
cleverness, brains or intellectuality.
41Rather those very factors that year 1976 were
considered a problem in relation to Mathematics,
namely rule-following, rote-learning, neatness,
good behaviour and so forth, are presented as the
keys to female success, downgrading that success,
while suggesting that classrooms are too feminine
and that masculinity is downgraded and
discouraged.The ideal child it seems is still a
boy, a boy indeed with potential, whose success
is being thwarted by women and girls, indeed by
the very notion of female success. (Walkerdine
1998, p. 168).
42Lucina Hagman (1897) My experience on
co-education
43Lucina Hagman wrote in 1897
- A girls diffidence and lack of self-confidence
makes her to distrust the competence of her
knowledge in solving problems. It is astonishing
that this conscientious and diligent girl is
often unwilling to use her intellect. The teacher
must urge and force her to think independently
and if he does this, he will find the girl more
capable than her outward appearance might
suggest. - Such as a woman is on her present stage of
evolution, she seldom possesses such confidence
in her talent needed for scientific research.
44- I barely need to mention that these
characteristics are a result from the prevailing
perceptions and fostering traditions during
centuries. - It often happens in class, when you ask for
reasoning and conclusions, that the boys raise
their hands up sooner and more densely than
girls, but when asked, you get nonsense for an
answer from the former. As girls lack
self-confidence, boys have got it too much.
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