Topic 4 Gender Flashcards

(48 cards)

1
Q

What are the 4 external factors that impact girls achievement?

A
  • impact of feminism
  • changes in the family
  • changes in women’s employment
  • changing girls ambitions
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2
Q

How has the external factor, impact of feminism, impacted girls achievement?

A
  • Women’s rights and opportunities have improved, which was raised women’s expectations and self-esteem.
  • McRobbie did content analysis and found there was a shift in focus in magazines to women being strong and independent. Girls now have female role models outside of school
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3
Q

How has the external factor changes in the family, impacted girls achievement?

A
  • There has been changes like increase in divorce rates, increase in cohabitation, increase in single parents
  • Women are now less dependent on men and have to support themselves and take on the breadwinner role. This creates a new adult role model for girls - the financially independent women
  • To achieve this, women need well paid jobs and qualifications.
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4
Q

How has the external factor, changes in women’s employment, impacted girls achievement?

A
  • 1970 equal pay act
  • 1975 sex discrimination act
  • tradition men’s jobs have declined
  • women are breaking through the glass ceiling
  • Margaret Posser argued many changes in women’s economic participation and achievement. This has encouraged girls to see their future in terms of paid work rather than housewives, girls now work harder and want to do better
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5
Q

How has the change in girls ambitions impact their achievement?

A
  • Sue Sharpe interviewed girls in the 1970s and 1990s
  • She found that their ambitions have shifted from love and marriage to a career and independence. In the 1970s, they had low aspirations and felt educational success was unfeminine.
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6
Q

How have changes in the family meant that girls achieve better than boys?

A
  • nuclear family is no longer dominant
  • girls are self sufficient
  • relationships are now fragmented and no longer need to rely on a man economically so work harder for themselves
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7
Q

What are the 5 internal factors that impact achievement in gender?

A
  • Equal opportunity policies (GIST and WISE)
  • Positive role models in school
  • GCSE and Coursework
  • Teacher attention
  • Challenging stereotypes in the curriculum
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8
Q

How have equal opportunity policies impacted girls achievement ?

A
  • Jo Boaler argues that equal opportunity policies are a key factor in the improvement of girls performance
  • Schools have become more meritocratic meaning that because girls work harder than boys, they achieve more
  • stereotypes in education are changing
  • GIST and WISE have been introduced to encourage girls into science, technology and engineering.
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9
Q

How have positive role models in school impacted girls achievement?

A
  • Proportion of female teachers and head teachers has increased
  • school is a female dominated environment
  • Women are breaking through the glass ceiling in terms of head teacher roles, meaning girls have more role models in school
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10
Q

How has coursework impacted girls achievement, according to mists and browne?

A
  • Mitsos and Browne argue that girls are more successful in coursework because they are better organised and more conscientious than boys
  • They found girls tend to spend more time on their work, take more care in presentation and are better at keeping to deadlines.
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11
Q

How has teacher attention impacted girls achievement?

A
  • girls are positively labelled and are closer to the ideal pupil. Whereas boys are labelled negatively
  • Becky Francis argues boys get more attention but are disciplined more harshly and feel picked on by teachers who have lower expectations of them
  • Joan Swann found boys dominate whole class discussion and girls prefer group work and listening
  • This may explain why teachers respond more positively to girls, whom they see as cooperative, than to boys, who they see as disruptive
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12
Q

What did Swann find out teacher attention?

A

Swann found boys dominate whole class discussion and girls prefer group work and listening

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13
Q

What did Becky Francis find out teacher attention?

A

Becky Francis argues boys get more attention but are disciplined more harshly and feel picked on by teachers

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14
Q

How has stereotypes being challenged in the curriculum raised girls achievement?

A
  • Weiner argues sexist images have been removed from teaching materials has helped raise girls achievement by presenting more positive images of what women are capable of.
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15
Q

How has selection and league tables improved girls achievement?

A
  • Marketisation policies and greater use of selection have created a competitive climate among schools
  • Girls are seen as more desirable recruits as they achieve better exams results. (David Jackson)
  • Boys are seen as ‘liability students’ who are barriers to efforts by schools to climb the league tables.
  • This tends to produce a self fulfilling prophecy which girls are more likely to be recruited by good schools and more likely to do well.
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16
Q

who discusses girls being seen as more appealing for league tables

A

David Jackson, girls seen more appealing

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17
Q

What are the radical feminist views on education?

A

-reinforces patriarchal ideas
- objections women and girls
- sex typing of subjects
- glass ceiling of male headteachers
- sports is not feminine
- male gaze/ double standards
- sexual harassment

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18
Q

What statistics show that class differences impact girls achievement?

A

-In 2013, only 40.6% of girls from poorer families achieved 5 A* - C grades at GCSE

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19
Q

Why are boys underachieving?

A
  • decline in males jobs due to globalisation
  • less male role models in school
  • boys don’t respond well to female teachers due to lack of disciplinary discourse
  • boys have lower literacy due to it being seen as a girl thing
  • peer group pressure
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20
Q

Define hyper hetero sexual feminine identities

A

idea by archer
working class girls invest time in looking good which is in opposition to the school
- gets them symbolic capital from friends but symbolic violence from school

21
Q

What did Sharpe discuss?

A

She compared interviews with girls in the 1970s and 1990s. She found that in the 1970s girls had a priority of love and marriage and thought education was unfeminine. Whereas, in the 1990s, girls’ ambitions had changed, and they were more career focused and independent.

22
Q
  1. How have equal opportunities impacted gender differences in achievement?
A

It has meant girls and boys now have the same opportunity to succeed. Policies like GIST and WISE have been introduced to encourage girls into subjects like science, engineering, and tech.
- discussed by jo boaler

23
Q
  1. What did Spender discuss?
A

Spender argues teachers spend more time interacting with boys than with girls.

24
Q
  1. Why have boys fallen behind girls in education?
A

They are disciplined more harshly and feel picked on by teachers who have lower expectations of them. These teachers aren’t encouraging boys, whilst they do girls.

25
8. What are the main trends in gender and subject choice?
In GCSE, girls tend to choose subjects like food technology and health and social care, whereas boys choose graphics and resistant materials. In A level, boys tend to opt for maths and physics, whereas girls choose Psychology and sociology.
26
9. Why do boys and girls choose different subjects?
- Oakley discusses that early socialisation and canalisation leads to boys and girls being encouraged to take part in different activities and are channelled into pathways by parents. - They are dressed differently, and they are taught to pay attention to different details. - Subjects have gendered images - Peer pressure leads to girls feeling pressured to pick or not pick certain subjects because they contradict the conventional female stereotype (Paetcher)
27
How do pupil’s experiences in school reinforce their gender and sexual identities?
- Mairtin Mac an Ghaill’s study examines how working-class macho lads were dismissive of other working-class boys who worked hard, referring to them as ‘dickhead achievers’. - Also found that male teachers told boys off for ‘behaving like girls’ and teased them if they got lower marks than girls.
28
Why do working class girls not achieve as well as middle class girls?
- working class girls have fatalistic attitudes - more concerned about makeup and boys - hyper heterosexual feminine identity - Archer - traditional aspirations of family - face the labour market negatively so motherhood is the only option - Biggart
29
Who discusses the male gaze?
Mac an Ghail
30
who talks about peer pressure within subject choice?
paetcher
31
Who argues that changes in women's employments has raised girls achievement?
Margaret Posser
32
What does Margaret Posser argue about girls achievement?
Margert Posser argues changes in employments laws (1975 Sex discrimination Act), has enoucrages girls to see their future as paid work so they work harder
33
Which employments laws have encourages girls achievement?
- sex discrimination act - equal pay act
34
what does Weiner argue has encourages girls achievement?
Weiner argues teacher have challenged stereotypes, removed sexist images and encouraged positive images of women within in the curriculum
35
who discusses challenging stereotypes in the curriculum?
weiner
36
who discusses the hegemonic masculinity identity?
Connell
37
What did Mac and Ghail discuss about working class boys?
Mac an Ghail discussed that working class macho boys were dismissive of working class boys who worked hard
38
who discusses double standards in education?
Sue Lees - boys boast about their sexual experiences but call girls slags
39
According to Mac an Ghail, what is the teacher attention like towards boys?
Mac an Ghail argues male teachers tell boys off for behaving like girls and blame girls for attracting verbal abuse
40
What does Kelly argue about gendered subject images?
kelly argues science subjects are seen as boys subjects because science teachers are more likely to be male
41
who argues that feminisation of education leads to boys underachievement?
Sewell - schools no longer celebrate masculine traits and instead celebrate feminine qualities
42
why is a shortage of male teachers leading to boys underachievement?
only 14% of primary teachers are male female teachers are unable to control boys behaviour as they lack a disciplinarian discourse
43
who discusses the hyper heterosexual feminine identity?
Archer
44
what does Biggart argue about working class girls with low aspirations?
working class face a precarious position in the labour market and see motherhood as the only viable option
45
what is the strongest external factors as to why girls achieve higher?
impact of feminism - evident in the shift in media - girls now more independent and aspiring to be rich themselves
46
who discusses equal oppurtunity policies for girls achievement?
Boaler
47
how can the idea that feminisation of education leading to boys underachievement be criticised?
Franic argues that 2/3 of 7-8 year olds believe gender of teacher did not matter
48
give a conclusion of boys and girls achievement?
McVeigh argues the class and ethnicity gap is far grater than gender gap