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1
Gender Bias in Curriculum
and School Practices
Dr. V. Ramadas
Associate Professor
RIE, NCERT Mysore
"Sitting in the same classroom
reading the same textbook
listening to the same teacher
boys and girls receive very
different educations."
(Sadker, 1994)
2
Gender difference:
Real/supposed?
 Observation:
Boys are generally
active, playful,
confident, bold,
demanding, loud, all
time rough,
aggressive, kicking,
and fighting.
Girls are found to be
passive, gentle,,
quiet, accepting,
often shy, timid, more
compliant, easy to
control.
3
What do you think?
 Boys and girls are born like that. The observed differences
are natural and inherent in two sexes. (common belief)
 The sexes are different, because the brain is differently
constructed in men and women. It process information in
different way, which results in different perception, priorities
and behaviour. (Anne Moir and David Jesse, 1991)
[v/s]
 These differences are result of ages of social experience of
the two sexes. Hence changeable. (Janie Whyld,1983)
 Because of the lesson we learn about ourselves and our
world, people may develop differently. As children and later
as adults, females and males are treated differently, so it
hardly is surprising that our ways of knowing and ways of
being are distinct. (Arliss and Borisoff, 1993)
4
School reproduces
prevailing gender
notions and relations
 The androcentric beliefs,
notions and values are
transmitted through the
school education
5
Gender bias in
school
Operates in almost all facets of
the school life
 Curriculum: subject matter, learning
experience, evaluation
 Educational materials Content;
Language; Illustration
 Classroom interaction
 Examination
Assessment techniques; Questions
 School organization
6
Gender bias in Content
 Subject image
• Feminine: Home science,
cookery, typing, biology,
nursing
• Masculine:Physics, chemistry,
maths, woodwork
 Thematic content
• Invisible women
• Unequal or inadequate
representation of women
• More importance to males,
men, or boys.
 Gender stereotypes
• Role stereotyping
• Character stereotyping
• Polarization of ‘male’ and
‘female’ characteristics
7
Language
Derogatory
representation
Women are presented as
objects of sex.
Generic use of terms:
‘Man’ ‘he’=both sexes
Men’= ‘people’ or ‘human’--e.g..
‘ascent of man’, ‘evolution of man’
‘He’ =Doctor, Leader, and Child etc.
‘She’=Nursery teacher, Nurse,
Housekeeper.
Common phrases:
‘Pioneers moved west
taking their wives and
children’
Farmer and his wifeMen of science
8
Illustration
Men are figured predominantly
than women;
Pictures of workers are usually of
men;
Pictures of professionals or high
earning persons are of men only,
Drawing of men and women
together show men as prominent
Line drawings of hands are male
in technical books, and female in
domestic science or needle
workbooks;
Background images- female typist
in office scene, nurses in hospital.
9
Classroom
Transaction
 Gender as an
instrument in
classroom
management
 Assumed difference in
abilities as a source
of bias
The social dynamics of
gender operate in every
classroom every day
10
Examination
 Exam syllabus
 Most of the academics who prepare the syllabus and
textbooks are men. Syllabus may reflect a male view of
life.
 Assessment techniques
 Boys perform better than girls on multiple-choice
questions. Girls perform better on essay type questions.
Both sexes perform equally on structure questions
 Questions
 Question related to ‘male’ games
E.g. Find out the batting average of famous cricketer,
Questions about football scores
11
School
Organization
 Emphasizing
the difference
Sex as the common
basis for dividing
students for various
purposes (Cleaning,
Roll call, uniform,
separate play
grounds, girls first,
boys monopoly of
games space )
12
School Organization-2
 Control of pupils
 Boys and girls are disciplined in different
ways.
 Corporal punishment reserved for boys
 Naming: Calling boys by surname and girls by
first name; Calling a boy a girl.
 Counseling and discipline: same sex staff for
discipline and counseling; emphasis gender
roles.
 Sexual harassment: generally ignored.
13
School Organization and
Gender Division-3
 Preferential
treatment
 Resource allocation:
labs, ICT, play
materials,
 Staffing: primary
teachers are mostly
female, preference for
male HM in high
schools, women
teachers not fit for
controlling boys or
managerial tasks
14
Eliminating gender bias
in education
 Education and society are
organically linked.
 Therefore complete
elimination of gender bias
in school curriculum is not
possible as long as the
society remains male
dominated.
 Then, what can we do?
15
Change in mind set
(Face off)
 We still presuppose that it is mother who
should bear final responsibility for home
and childcare.
Women are expected to work, but men are not
expected to assume responsibility for the home and
childcare.
It is time for both
Men & Women
to have equal and
interchangeable
roles at home and
at work.
16
Women in top positions
The strategy: Encourage
the girls to enter the
field that enable a
person to reach top
positions.
But ? Increased academic
achievements of and
employment opportunities
for middle class or upper
caste women have little to
improve the position of
working class and other
socially marginalized
women.
17
Change in curriculum
 Curriculum should enable every girl and every
boy to try fields where their sex at present is
a minority.
 Unless a positive attempt is made to present
alternatives no individual’s choice is ‘free’.
 Technology and economics can be made
compulsory, physical education and sex
education to be taught in mixed groups,
 Science and technology be made less male
oriented,.
18
Bias free educational
materials
 Government can lead campaign and take initiative to
eradicate gender bias from curriculum, educational
materials, textbooks and school practices through
equality programmes in schools.
 The textbook writers and those engaged in
production of teaching learning materials must be
sensitized on gender concerns in education.
 Guidelines for recognizing gender bias in educational
material and school practices should be given to all
concerned
19
Awareness of educators
 Departments of education should provide
mandatory gender-equity resource modules
to in-service teachers, and gender bias
needs to be addressed with all pre-service
teachers.
 Educators need to be made aware of the
bias they are reinforcing in their students
through socialization messages, inequitable
division of special education services, gender
biased texts and materials, and unbalanced
time and types of attention spent on boys
and girls in the classroom
20
No more division
 School hierarchy be divided more
equally between men and women.
 Let the girls and boys sit in the
classroom alternately on the same
bench (at least in the primary classes)
 Let us not divide the children into
groups based on sex for learning
activities.
 Let them also play games of all sorts in
mixed groups in the school
21
Question?
 Suppose a school or a
teacher divides the students
into groups based on caste
or religion or economic
condition. If this idea of
emphasizing social class
shocks you, why does the
emphasis on gender not
produce the same response?
22
Concluding remarks
There will never be gender
equality without a massive
shift of economic power to
women.
But, there is much that we must
do to generate awareness of
socially induced injustice and to
restore women’s confidence, so
that future generation will be
better equipped to face the
struggle.
23
Thank you

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Gender bias in curriculumand school practices

  • 1. 1 Gender Bias in Curriculum and School Practices Dr. V. Ramadas Associate Professor RIE, NCERT Mysore "Sitting in the same classroom reading the same textbook listening to the same teacher boys and girls receive very different educations." (Sadker, 1994)
  • 2. 2 Gender difference: Real/supposed?  Observation: Boys are generally active, playful, confident, bold, demanding, loud, all time rough, aggressive, kicking, and fighting. Girls are found to be passive, gentle,, quiet, accepting, often shy, timid, more compliant, easy to control.
  • 3. 3 What do you think?  Boys and girls are born like that. The observed differences are natural and inherent in two sexes. (common belief)  The sexes are different, because the brain is differently constructed in men and women. It process information in different way, which results in different perception, priorities and behaviour. (Anne Moir and David Jesse, 1991) [v/s]  These differences are result of ages of social experience of the two sexes. Hence changeable. (Janie Whyld,1983)  Because of the lesson we learn about ourselves and our world, people may develop differently. As children and later as adults, females and males are treated differently, so it hardly is surprising that our ways of knowing and ways of being are distinct. (Arliss and Borisoff, 1993)
  • 4. 4 School reproduces prevailing gender notions and relations  The androcentric beliefs, notions and values are transmitted through the school education
  • 5. 5 Gender bias in school Operates in almost all facets of the school life  Curriculum: subject matter, learning experience, evaluation  Educational materials Content; Language; Illustration  Classroom interaction  Examination Assessment techniques; Questions  School organization
  • 6. 6 Gender bias in Content  Subject image • Feminine: Home science, cookery, typing, biology, nursing • Masculine:Physics, chemistry, maths, woodwork  Thematic content • Invisible women • Unequal or inadequate representation of women • More importance to males, men, or boys.  Gender stereotypes • Role stereotyping • Character stereotyping • Polarization of ‘male’ and ‘female’ characteristics
  • 7. 7 Language Derogatory representation Women are presented as objects of sex. Generic use of terms: ‘Man’ ‘he’=both sexes Men’= ‘people’ or ‘human’--e.g.. ‘ascent of man’, ‘evolution of man’ ‘He’ =Doctor, Leader, and Child etc. ‘She’=Nursery teacher, Nurse, Housekeeper. Common phrases: ‘Pioneers moved west taking their wives and children’ Farmer and his wifeMen of science
  • 8. 8 Illustration Men are figured predominantly than women; Pictures of workers are usually of men; Pictures of professionals or high earning persons are of men only, Drawing of men and women together show men as prominent Line drawings of hands are male in technical books, and female in domestic science or needle workbooks; Background images- female typist in office scene, nurses in hospital.
  • 9. 9 Classroom Transaction  Gender as an instrument in classroom management  Assumed difference in abilities as a source of bias The social dynamics of gender operate in every classroom every day
  • 10. 10 Examination  Exam syllabus  Most of the academics who prepare the syllabus and textbooks are men. Syllabus may reflect a male view of life.  Assessment techniques  Boys perform better than girls on multiple-choice questions. Girls perform better on essay type questions. Both sexes perform equally on structure questions  Questions  Question related to ‘male’ games E.g. Find out the batting average of famous cricketer, Questions about football scores
  • 11. 11 School Organization  Emphasizing the difference Sex as the common basis for dividing students for various purposes (Cleaning, Roll call, uniform, separate play grounds, girls first, boys monopoly of games space )
  • 12. 12 School Organization-2  Control of pupils  Boys and girls are disciplined in different ways.  Corporal punishment reserved for boys  Naming: Calling boys by surname and girls by first name; Calling a boy a girl.  Counseling and discipline: same sex staff for discipline and counseling; emphasis gender roles.  Sexual harassment: generally ignored.
  • 13. 13 School Organization and Gender Division-3  Preferential treatment  Resource allocation: labs, ICT, play materials,  Staffing: primary teachers are mostly female, preference for male HM in high schools, women teachers not fit for controlling boys or managerial tasks
  • 14. 14 Eliminating gender bias in education  Education and society are organically linked.  Therefore complete elimination of gender bias in school curriculum is not possible as long as the society remains male dominated.  Then, what can we do?
  • 15. 15 Change in mind set (Face off)  We still presuppose that it is mother who should bear final responsibility for home and childcare. Women are expected to work, but men are not expected to assume responsibility for the home and childcare. It is time for both Men & Women to have equal and interchangeable roles at home and at work.
  • 16. 16 Women in top positions The strategy: Encourage the girls to enter the field that enable a person to reach top positions. But ? Increased academic achievements of and employment opportunities for middle class or upper caste women have little to improve the position of working class and other socially marginalized women.
  • 17. 17 Change in curriculum  Curriculum should enable every girl and every boy to try fields where their sex at present is a minority.  Unless a positive attempt is made to present alternatives no individual’s choice is ‘free’.  Technology and economics can be made compulsory, physical education and sex education to be taught in mixed groups,  Science and technology be made less male oriented,.
  • 18. 18 Bias free educational materials  Government can lead campaign and take initiative to eradicate gender bias from curriculum, educational materials, textbooks and school practices through equality programmes in schools.  The textbook writers and those engaged in production of teaching learning materials must be sensitized on gender concerns in education.  Guidelines for recognizing gender bias in educational material and school practices should be given to all concerned
  • 19. 19 Awareness of educators  Departments of education should provide mandatory gender-equity resource modules to in-service teachers, and gender bias needs to be addressed with all pre-service teachers.  Educators need to be made aware of the bias they are reinforcing in their students through socialization messages, inequitable division of special education services, gender biased texts and materials, and unbalanced time and types of attention spent on boys and girls in the classroom
  • 20. 20 No more division  School hierarchy be divided more equally between men and women.  Let the girls and boys sit in the classroom alternately on the same bench (at least in the primary classes)  Let us not divide the children into groups based on sex for learning activities.  Let them also play games of all sorts in mixed groups in the school
  • 21. 21 Question?  Suppose a school or a teacher divides the students into groups based on caste or religion or economic condition. If this idea of emphasizing social class shocks you, why does the emphasis on gender not produce the same response?
  • 22. 22 Concluding remarks There will never be gender equality without a massive shift of economic power to women. But, there is much that we must do to generate awareness of socially induced injustice and to restore women’s confidence, so that future generation will be better equipped to face the struggle.