1st Edition

Gender Balance and Gender Bias in Education International Perspectives

Edited By Deirdre Raftery, Maryann Valiulis Copyright 2011
    120 Pages
    by Routledge

    116 Pages
    by Routledge

    This book presents a compelling range of international research on the issues of gender balance and gender bias in education. The chapters draw on cutting edge work from the US, Latin America, the UK, Ireland and Africa, presenting readers with new insights into how educators and students often negotiate deeply ingrained prejudices that are expressed in gendered terms.

    The book reflects research that draws on a range of methodologies, and both historical and contemporary education contexts are examined. Drawing on historical research, the book widens our understanding of gender issues in education, and provides chapters on physical activity for girls in nineteenth century America, and on the ‘patriarchal imperative’ in mission education in Africa in the nineteenth century. Turning to research on contemporary education settings, the book explores the global phenomenon of the feminisation of teaching. It also illustrates how teachers work in classrooms in which boys’ expressions of masculinities explicitly challenge school order, and looks at the performance of both masculinities and femininities in several education contexts. The book also includes absorbing work on the practices and processes that contribute to the gendering of digital technologies, and it demonstrates ways in which parents unwittingly accept the gendered management of internet ‘risk’ for their daughters.

    This book was published as a special issue of Gender and Education.

    1. Gender Balance and Gender Bias in Education: Issues in Education Research - Deirdre Raftery and Maryann Valiulis  2. Gender Balance/Gender Bias: the teaching profession and the impact of feminisation - Sheelagh Drudy  3. A ‘marked success’: physical activity at Miss White’s School - Linda C. Morice  4. African girls, nineteenth-century mission education and the patriarchal imperative - Fiona Leach  5. Gender bias and imbalance: girls in US special education programmes - Emily Arms, Jill Bickett and Victoria Graf  6. ‘Twenty-four seven on computers’: girls, ICTs and risk - Susanne Gannon  7. Hard bargaining on the hard drive: gender bias in the music technology classroom - Victoria Armstrong  8. Exploring modes of communication among pupils in Brazil: gender issues in academic performance - Adila B. M. Teixeira, Carlos E. Villani and Silvania S. do Nascimento  9. ‘He was a bit of a delicate thing’: white middle-class boys, gender, school choice and parental anxiety - Katya Williams, Fiona Jamieson and Sumi Hollingworth

    Biography

    Deirdre Raftery is the Deputy Head of the School of Education at University College Dublin, Ireland. She has published widely in the area of women’s history and the history of education. Books include Women and Learning in English Writing, 1600-1900; Emily Davies, Collected Letters; and Female Education in Ireland, 1700-1900: Minerva or Madonna?. She is an Honorary Life Member of Girton College Cambridge.

    Maryann Valiulis is Director and Chair of the Centre for Gender and Women’s Studies, and a Fellow of Trinity College Dublin, Ireland. Her edited books include Gender and Power in Irish History; Gender and Sexuality in Modern Ireland and Women and Irish History.