explanations of gender differences in subject choice Flashcards
explanations of gender differences in subject choice
early socialisation and gender domains
gendered subject images
peer pressure
gendered career opportunities
vocational subjects
gender domain - browne and ross
children’s beliefs about gender domains are shaped by their early experiences and the expectations of adults
murphy and elwood
boys read hobby books and info texts, while girls are more likely to read stories about people
- - - helps explain why boys prefer science subjects and girls prefer subjects such as english
murphy
boys and girls pay attention to different details of the same task- helps to explain why girls choose humanities and boys choose science
kelly
science is seen as a boys subject:
- science teachers more likely to be men
- examples teachers use and in textbooks often draw on boys interests rather than girls
colley
computer science seen as masculine:
- involves working with machines- part of male gender domain
- way it’s taught is off putting to girls. tasks tend to be abstract and teaching styles formal, few opps for group work
single sex schooling - leonard
analysis of 13000 individuals.
- girls in girls schools more likely to take maths and science Alevels, while boys in boys schools more likely to take english and languages.
- girls from singlesex schools also more likely to study male dominated subjects at uni
peer pressure - paechter
pupils see sport as mainly within the male gender domain, girls who are ‘sporty’ have to cope with an image that contradicts the conventional female stereotype
peer pressure - dewar
male students would call girls ‘lesbian’ or ‘butch’ if they appeared to be interested in sport
peer pressure - institute of physics
doing sciences in mixed schools is off putting.
peers police one anothers subject choices so that girls and boys adopt an appropriate gender identity, with girls pressured to avoid subjects such as physics
gendered career opportunities
- sex typing of occupations affect boys’ and girls’ ideas about what kinds of jobs are possible or acceptable
- also help to explain why vocational courses are much more gender-specific than academic courses, since vocational studies are by definition more closely linked to students’ career plans
vocational subjects - fuller
most WC girls have ambitions to go into jobs such as childcare or hair and beauty- reflects their WC habitus and their realistic expectation for ‘people like us’
- these ambitions may arise out of work experience placements which are often gendered and classed e.g Fuller found that placements in feminine WC jobs e.g nursery nursing were overwhelmingly the norm for the girls in her study
- fuller concludes that school was implicitly steering girls towards certain types of jobs- and hence the certain types of vocational course