This document discusses how gender impacts education. It outlines how education historically privileged men and excluded women through formal curriculum and informal social norms. While women now have access to education, gender biases persist in areas like curriculum, teacher expectations, career tracking, and faculty representation. The document argues knowledge itself is socially constructed and shaped by these gendered systems and experiences. Feminist theories like standpoint theory suggest considering women's perspectives can lead to more inclusive knowledge production. Overall, the document examines how gender influences all aspects of education and the construction of knowledge.
This document discusses how gender impacts education. It outlines how education historically privileged men and excluded women through formal curriculum and informal social norms. While women now have access to education, gender biases persist in areas like curriculum, teacher expectations, career tracking, and faculty representation. The document argues knowledge itself is socially constructed and shaped by these gendered systems and experiences. Feminist theories like standpoint theory suggest considering women's perspectives can lead to more inclusive knowledge production. Overall, the document examines how gender influences all aspects of education and the construction of knowledge.
This document discusses how gender impacts education. It outlines how education historically privileged men and excluded women through formal curriculum and informal social norms. While women now have access to education, gender biases persist in areas like curriculum, teacher expectations, career tracking, and faculty representation. The document argues knowledge itself is socially constructed and shaped by these gendered systems and experiences. Feminist theories like standpoint theory suggest considering women's perspectives can lead to more inclusive knowledge production. Overall, the document examines how gender influences all aspects of education and the construction of knowledge.
This document discusses how gender impacts education. It outlines how education historically privileged men and excluded women through formal curriculum and informal social norms. While women now have access to education, gender biases persist in areas like curriculum, teacher expectations, career tracking, and faculty representation. The document argues knowledge itself is socially constructed and shaped by these gendered systems and experiences. Feminist theories like standpoint theory suggest considering women's perspectives can lead to more inclusive knowledge production. Overall, the document examines how gender influences all aspects of education and the construction of knowledge.
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The key takeaways are that education fulfills functions like knowledge transmission, preparation for adulthood and new roles, and it does so through both formal and hidden curriculums. Gender plays a role in both curriculums and can produce inequalities.
The passage discusses that education fulfills key social functions such as transmission of knowledge, preparation of young people for adulthood, and preparation of adults for new roles. It does this through both formal curriculum which is officially taught and hidden curriculum which are informal social norms learned.
Formal curriculum refers to officially taught topics while hidden curriculum refers to informal social norms learned from education. The passage discusses how students acquire their education through "gendered classrooms" where both the formal and hidden curriculums can produce gender inequalities.
Gender and
Education Gender and Education Education as a social institution fulfills a number of key functions among which are:
Transmission of knowledge
Preparation of young people for adulthood
Preparation of adults for new roles.
It does so through formal curriculum and informal
curriculum Gender and Education Formal Curriculum - A set of educational topics officially and explicitly taught to students.
Hidden Curriculum The informal subtle social norms
that students learn from education.
Students acquire their education in gendered
classrooms, where official curriculum, e.g. textbooks, assignments, projects and the hidden curriculum, e.g. informal interactions with teachers and students, produce gender inequalities. Gender and Education Women and the Herstory of Education.
As many feminist scholars have stated, since 18 th
century in the U.S. pursuit of education and acquisition of knowledge was considered a masculine pursuit and reserved for wealthy boys and men, therefore, some male educators utilized biological determinist arguments to exclude women. Gender and Education Edward Clark, a Harvard professor who published several articles and books in the 1870s warning of the dangers of educating women and educated women.
He cited examples of pale, weak, neuralgic,
hysterical, demininated educated women.
Thus, he advised young women to study one-
third of young men and not to study at all during menstruation. Gender and Education One opponent of co-education at the University of California at Berkeley in the 1890s argued that teaching women and men in the same classrooms could be disastrous; and when the University of Michigan first debated coeducation in 1858, its president opposed it because men will lose as women advance, we shall have a community of defeminated women and demasculated men. Gender and Education Women are no longer formally barred from pursuing education and a number of reforms and educational policies, e.g. Title IX of Educational Amendments of 1972, has significantly impacted womens education constructively. However, gender bias in education persists and women and men are taught in gendered classrooms gendered curricula.
How are students taught
The contents of educational materials
Gender and Education Self-fulfilling prophecy Expectations of teachers, counselors, etc.
Tracking or Streaming - Grouping students
based on their perceived intellectual abilities contributes to self-fulfilling prophecy.
Stereotype Threat (Steele and Anderson) The
influence of gender, class, race, ethnicity Gender and Education Studies have demonstrated that girls and women are often either completely ignored or are depicted in stereotypical positions in formal curricula. Some feminist scholars assert that events like the Black History month in February or Womens History Month in March, intended to rectify the exclusion and omission and highlight the accomplishments and contributions of people long overlooked in educational curricula, in fact, marginalize and segregate. Gender and Education In one study, when faculty were asked whether they incorporate womens experiences and perspectives into their courses, majority said only when they are relevant (Renzetti and Curran).
Beyond the formal curriculum, extracurricular
activities also reproduce gender inequalities, e.g. boys and mens sports typically receive greater attention and the highest school budgets. Gender and Education Women in Higher Education
Women, as stated previously, are no longer formally
excluded from participation in higher education. At present, a majority of college students are women, however, the number of women declines, as you move up the educational hierarchy.
As the next table demonstrates, the number of women
at each educational level has increased, however, as faculty, women are concentrated in the lower ranks. Gender and Education
Furthermore, as the institutional prestige
goes up, the smaller the likelihood that women will be found in the highest faculty ranks. Of extreme importance is to note how gender intersects with race and ethnicity in the ranks of faculty in higher education. Gender and Education Elementary education has become feminized as womens specific appropriateness with younger students;
The number of women teachers decreases as
students move up through educational ranks;
Today, women at all ranks receive lower
salaries than do men at the same rank, in the same field, in the same department. Gender and Education As feminist sociologists assert, the status of women and people of color in educational institutions has important ramifications for how academic knowledge is constructed (Anderson 2009).
Epistemology is defined as the ways of
knowing that form systems of social thought. Gender and Education Feminist Epistemology postulates that knowledge is socially constructed and how gender relations shape the production of thought. Feminist Epistemology focused on two key concerns, the systems of thinking that have been derived form andocentric ways of knowing and new ways of constructing knowledge to be more inclusive of and centered in womens experiences (Anderson, Van Den Daele). Gender and Education Feminist Standpoint Theory suggests that the specific social location of the knower shapes what is known and that not all perspectives are equally valid or complete.
In her study analyzing the discussion of
reproduction in contemporary biology textbooks, Emily Martin, an anthropologist, has found that sperms are still described as active, aggressive agents, while eggs are portrayed as passive. Gender and Education Citing text authors, Martin writes that texts liken the eggs role to that of the Sleeping Beauty: a dormant bride awaiting her mates magic kiss, which instills the spirit that brings her back to life. Sperm, by contrast, have a mission, which is to move through the female genital tract in quest of the ovum. The sperm carry out a perilous journey into the warm darkness where some fell exhausted. Survivors assault the egg, the successful candidates surrounding the prize. Gender and Education
The fact of the matter is that sperm do not
merely penetrate a passive egg; rather, the sperm and egg stick together because of the adhesive molecule on the surface of each. Therefore, despite the knowledge to the contrary, metaphorical descriptions of the biological reproductive process make the event seem like a contemporary soap opera or moral fable. Gender and Education
According to Martin, the description
provided by scientists have prevented them from seeing how eggs and sperm interact, thus, cultural values influence the discovery of scientific facts. This bias can also impact choice of topic, research methods, definitions of concepts, and of course, interpretation of data and applications of findings. Gender and Education Feminist Standpoint Theory argues that womens specific location in patriarchal societies is actually a resource in construction of new knowledge (Harding and Collins).
We should also note that much of the gender
difference in college attendance and completion, is what sociologist Cynthia Epstein calls a deceptive distinction. Gender and Education
Overall the number of males enrolled in
college rose by 33% from 1970 to 2,000. However, female enrollments rose much faster-143%. Many top colleges and universities have higher male enrollments, e.g. Princeton, 53%, Yale 51%, MIT 52%. Gender and Education
Furthermore, there are gender disparities
in nursing, social work, or education, traditionally far lower paid occupations than those professions where men still predominate, such as engineering and computer sciences. Gender and Education The shortage of male college students is actually, as Sociologist Michael Kimmel points out, appears to be about gender but is actually about class and race. The gender gap between college-age white males and white females is rather small. However, only 36% of low income black college students are male and only 39% of low-income Hispanic students are male. Gender and Education
There are various studies that have
investigated the effect of gender composition of a college has on men and women. Linda Sax, a UCLA professor of higher education has examined data from 17,000 students at 204 four-year colleges. Gender and Education
Her preliminary findings show that on
campuses that were predominantly female, both men and women got higher grades. Predominantly female campuses also let a significant increase in mens commitment to promotion of racial understanding and led males to more liberal views on abortion, homosexuality, and other social issues. Gender and Education
As Kimmel asserts, gender inequalities in
education produces the gender differences we assume, with deleterious consequences for both genders; it impairs both boys and girls, mens and womens efforts to find their voices, discipline their minds, and prepare them for their futures.