Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Gender & Achievement: Girls
- Patterns of achievement
- Historically, females have tended to achieve less well than
males at higher levels in the British education system.
- Early 1990s = boys more likely to gain A-level
qualifications & went on to study in higher education.
- During the 1990s, girls overtook boys at all
levels in the education system.
- 2007: 66% of girls achieved 5+ GCSEs at
grades A* - C compared with 57% of boys.
- Proportion of females in the UK achieving 2+ A-levels or
equivalent increased from 20% in 1990 to 42% in 2006
- Over the same period, proportion of males achieving the
same level increased from 18% to 33%.
- 2006: 30% of 17 year old males & 37% of
females went on to higher education.
- On average, women now get
better degrees than men.
- Gender & subject choice
- A-level
- Males more likely to do
business studies, economics,
politics, sciences (apart from
biology) & technical subjects.
- Females more likely to do
all other subjects & for
English, modern languages,
psychology, sociology they
are the big majority of
candidates.
- Degree level
- Men more likely to graduate in
physical sciences, maths,
engineering, technology,
architecture, building & planning.
- Women more likely to graduate in
all other subjects & have overtaken
males in medicine, dentistry &
business & financial studies.
- Feminst perspective - female
underachievement & gendered
curriculum choice
- Feminists generally believe that the education
system is patriarchal/ male-dominated.
- Miriam David (2008) points out that women
are more likely to attend new, post -1992
unis than more prestigious institutions.
- Female disadvantage may still have
an effect on subject choices, &
particularly the under-representation
of women in most science subjects.
- Feminist Michelle Stanworth (1983) studied
A-level classes in a further education college.
- She found the following bias against girls: teachers found it difficult to
remember the girls in their class, teachers did not expect even the most able
girls to go into high-status jobs, pupils believed that boys received more
attention than girls, & boys were more likely to join classroom discussions &
to be asked ?s by the teachers & girls underestimated their own ability.
- Stanworth's research has been criticized by Randall (1987)
for being based on interviews rather than direct observation
of classroom interaction. Randall's own research failed to
find the same bias against girls.
- Francis (2000) - girls & achievement
- Studies found by Francis suggest that there continues to
be some disadvantages for girls in the education system.
- Research in London schools found
that males still dominate classrooms.
- Boys disciplined more harshly than girls; this
leads to girls getting less attention than boys.
- Gender divisons in subject choice are getting stronger,
with fewer women taking IT & pure science degrees.
- Colley (1998) - gender inequalities in subject choice
- Explains the continuing
differences in subject
choice by gender.
- Traditional definitions
in masculinity &
femininity are still
widspread.
- Subjects continue to have different
images. For instance, computer
studies still retains a masculine image.
- Girls tend to feel comfortable with
scientific & technical subjects only
when taught in single-sex schools or
single-sex classes.
- Norman et al. (1988) - Socialization
- Argues that sex stereotyping
starts from a very young age.
- Girls are given dolls which emphasize a caring role;
this can affect career aspirations & subject choice.
- Boys are more likely to be given constructional toys that
help develop a scientific & mathematical skills & concept
- Gender sterotypes are continually
reinforced through the media.