Title: Gendered Lives, Eighth Edition
1Gendered Lives,Eighth Edition
- Chapter 8
- Gendered Education Communication in Schools
2Gendered Education Communication in Schools
- Historically, girls had less educational
opportunity - Now much discrimination eliminated
- Schools still marked by gendered dynamics
3Academics
- Males and females encounter gendered expectations
in schools - Boys developmentally disadvantaged in early
school environment - Feminine environments
- Adult females outnumber adult males
- Boys have less impulse control difficulty
adjusting to school
4Academics
- Time of frustration and failure
- Males lag behind females in all levels of
schooling - Biology contributes to males slower development
of verbal skills - Males more likely to drop out of high school
5Academics
- Females success reflects cognitive ability and
good study skills and habits - Gap expands after high school
- Females likely to attend college
- Race and socio-economic class also linked to
success in higher education
6Academics
- Personal choices affect academic performance
- Studying or engaging in recreation
7Academics
- Schooling reproduces gender stereotypes
- Men not encouraged to enter feminine fields
- Sex combines with race to further disadvantage
males - African American males targets of teacher
disapproval drop out in higher numbers
8Academics
- Females perform better at all levels of education
- Earn more and higher degrees than males
9Academics
- Belief females have less ability in math helped
erect barriers - Females drop out of math
- Encounter faculty and peers who believe women are
less able - Affect self-confidence and how perform on tasks
10Academics
- Women may face gender-related barriers in fields
such as engineering - Social disapproval
- Assertiveness needed in field may be counter to
social prescriptions for femininity
11Academics
- Sex-related differences in brains and hormones
give males edge in math and science - Higher mean averages for males come from a few
males - Innate differences less important than social
influences in the U.S. - Not true in all cultures
12Academics
- African American girls are encouraged to be more
active - May encounter stereotypes and be encouraged to be
less assertive and autonomous when in school
13Gendered-Stereotyped Curricula
- Curriculum content is less biased than in past
- But gender stereotypes persist
- Accounts of war focus on battles and leaders
- Womens contributions on home front seldom noted
14Gendered-Stereotyped Curricula
- Women highlighted in curricula
- Women who fit traditional stereotypes
- Betsy Ross
- Women who distinguished self on mens terms
- Ella Baker
15Gendered-Stereotyped Curricula
- Epochs taught in terms of effects on men
- Neglect impact on women and minorities
16Gendered-Stereotyped Curricula
- Science has gender stereotypes that distort how
taught - Sexism in education intersects with other forms
of discrimination - Minorities underrepresented in educational
materials
17Gendered-Stereotyped Curricula
- Curriculum diminishes education
- Students deprived of understanding how half the
population experiences the world - Encourages men to see themselves as able to
fulfill ambitions and women not able to
18Athletics
- Female students have unprecedented athletic
opportunities - Due in part to Title IX
- Playing field not even
- Number of female athletes in college has not
increased proportionately
19Athletics
- Prior to Title IX, most coaches of womens sports
were women - Today fewer womens sports coached by women
- Division I colleges pay male coaches more than
women coaches - Only 37 percent of expenses for athletics
allocated to women
20Athletics
- 2005 Supreme Court ruling regarding Title IX
- All colleges required to send students survey
about athletic interests and abilities - If dont reply, may assume satisfied with policies
21Gender Socialization in Peer Cultures
- Males more insistent boys do boy things than
females are that girls do girl things - Gender socialization more rigid for boys
22Gender Socialization in Peer Cultures
- Male bonding in peer groups reinforces masculine
identification - Often engage in drinking and sexual activity
23Gender Socialization in Peer Cultures
- Fraternities encourage brothers to embody extreme
versions of masculinity - Desire to be accepted overshadows values and
sense of decency
24Gender Socialization in Peer Cultures
- Faculty treat women students in
gender-stereotyped ways - These actions tell women students they are not
taken seriously
25Gender Socialization in Peer Cultures
- Women in college feel two sets of pressures
- Be successful as feminine woman
- Be smart and academically successful
26Gender Socialization in Peer Cultures
- Relentless pressure to achieve effortless
perfection - Undergraduate women feel overwhelmed by
expectations
27Single-Sex Educational Programs
- Single-sex schools may solve some of these
problems - Heterosexual males more likely to make academics
priority in single-sex schools
28Single-Sex Educational Programs
- Disproportionate number of women in Congress and
running top businesses graduated from womens
colleges
29Single-Sex Educational Programs
- Critics argue sex-segregated education isnt
answer - Better solution is make sure teachers in all
schools treat students equally - Single-sex schools tend to be private and charge
tuition
30Gendered Expectations Pressures Facing Faculty
- Gender stereotypes also affect faculty members
- Gender biases and barriers greater for women
faculty than for women students
31Gendered Hierarchies
- Proportion of male and female faculty affect
students - Women and minority students have fewer role
models - If more men in administrative roles, students may
infer its normal for men to hold positions of
status
32Gender Bias in Evaluations
- Women and minorities more likely to be hired when
blind selection process - Predominantly male hiring committees hire fewer
female faculty
33Gender Bias in Evaluations
- Once hired, women continue to face bias
- Performance more closely scrutinized
- Judged by stricter standards
- Hard to be perceived as competent
34Gender Bias in Evaluations
- Men have to give more convincing demonstrations
of incompetence - Male candidates judged on promise
- Female candidates judged by accomplishments
35Gender Bias in Evaluations
- Invisible hand discrimination unwitting
discrimination in applying policies that are not
inherently biased - Largely unconscious makes it difficult to
eliminate
36Gender Bias in Evaluations
- Womens achievements - luck
- Mens achievements - competence
- Assertiveness in males taken as brilliance
- Assertiveness in females judged negatively
37Gender Bias in Evaluations
- Gender bias in evaluations has material
consequences - Discrepancies between salaries
38Gendered Policies Expectations
- Institutions based on outdated family model
- Assume faculty committed to job dont have to
worry about domestic life
39Gendered Policies Expectations
- Early years require long hours
- These years usually coincide with ideal years for
bearing children - Women faculty find it challenging to be
professionals and parents
40Gendered Policies Expectations
- Faculty member who has child loses work time
- Tenure clock penalizes women
- Males penalized if career is not primary focus
- No paternity leave
41Gendered Policies Expectations
- Due to small numbers, excessive service and
mentoring responsibilities for women - Contribute to overload on female faculty