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Introduction
Gender
Inequalities in Education
Gender,
Computing, and Kids
The
Gender Gap in the Computing Field
Apple
Classrooms of Tomorrow
Whitmore
High School: A Case Study of Computer Usage
Boys
Muscle Girls Out
Girls
Need Space
Bennet
School
Computer
Projects for Mother and Daughter
Expanding
Your Horizons in Math and Science
Computers
and Technology: Differences In Gender
Gender
Bias In Educational Software
Educational
Software For Girls
Computers
In the Classroom: What is the Effect on the Gender
Gap?
Beyond
Equal Access
Last
Words
About
the Authors
References
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Gender
Inequalities in Education
WHY ARE GENDER ISSUES IMPORTANT IN
EDUCATION?
Equity for girls means equity for everyone.
By following gender equity guidelines to improve
education, it is improved for boys as well as
for girls. The goal of better serving girls does
not entail neglecting or suppressing boys. By
putting boys and girls on an equal plane, the
relatively increased valuing of girls will also
benefit boys by informing them of the strengths,
capabilities and contributions of girls and
women. This, in turn, may help decrease the
pressure many boys feel to conform to the
traditional roles, behaviors and ways of
thinking. Eventually, the stereotypes may be
counteracted and eliminated, so education may
begin to be more gender balanced.
Focusing on girls' educational achievements
and career aspirations allows society to ensure
women economic security, a better quality of
life, and more career choices. As a result, the
need for social welfare will decrease, since
most families in poverty are headed by women
with inadequate education. Thus, targeting more
equitable educational techniques will not only
improve the lives of individual women, but will
also advance the community as a whole as having
that many more worthwhile contributors.
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WHAT'S BEEN DONE
In 1972 the US Department of Education passed
Title
IX, a set of amendments aimed at reforming
gender inequality in schools. The amendment
stated that "no person in the US shall, on the
basis of sex be excluded from participation in,
or denied the benefits of, or be subjected to
discrimination under any program or activity
receiving federal aid." This amendment was
applied heavily to education as official
legislation to ensure equality for girls and
boys in schools. The most well-known result, and
thus also the misconceived sole purpose, of
Title IX was the encouragement and support of
many girls' sports teams in public schools,
though the amendment did improve upon gender
disparities in other areas as well. However,
twenty-five years later, few problems have been
solved. The Report
Card on Gender Equity released by the
National Coalition for Women and Girls in
Education in June 1997 states that "too many
girls and women still confront 'No Trespassing'
signs throughout educational institutions. Women
remain underrepresented in critical areas such
as math and science..." citing statistics of the
unchanged presence of male-sport favoritism as
well as discrimination in the workplace. "We owe
it to our daughters to improve our performance
on Title IX by removing these obstacles." In
1995, Unicef
launched a worldwide campaign to promote
education for girls. Like Title IX, this
campaign has yet to significantly affect the
status quo. Although these initiative
demonstrate some awareness of the disparity of
gender in the classroom, the current state of
education still does not approach gender
equality.
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GENDER-BIASED TEACHING STYLE
The school system itself plays a significant
role in creating and maintaining gender
differences. For example, textbooks often
represent the gender bias present in society's
view of the technical fields. Teaching style
also perpetuates the gender difference. A study
conducted by the American
Association of University Women revealed
that teachers tend to focus more attention on
boys, directing more encouragement to them,
while girls are often overlooked in class. In
light of these results, teachers are apparently
unaware of their biased actions. Traditional
teacher training tends to cater to boys'
interests and behaviors as a means of keeping
classroom order. Boys generally act out their
frustrations in a manner often disruptive to the
classroom. In contrast, girls predominantly
repress their frustrations by withdrawing.
Teachers' methods of controlling boys included
making them contribute often. Thus, teachers
have inadvertently favored boys to girls in the
traditional classroom setting.
As a result of cultural bias, adults'
expectations vary with respect to boys and
girls. Even teachers often see a difference in
potential between boys and girls, especially in
technical areas. In problem situations where
students appear stumped, adults tend to rescue
girls by giving them either easy clues or by
blatantly revealing the answer. With boys,
however, the general practice is to force them
to figure it out themselves. Research shows that
this kind of "help" undermines girls' confidence
in their abilities. Because of different
self-esteem levels, boys and girls come to very
different conclusions about themselves, even
when the data on which they base their decisions
are the same. Studies have demonstrated that
boys accept success and take credit for their
accomplishments more readily than girls. The
combination of the facts that girls are given
less chance to independently solve problems, and
that girls are harsher in judging their own
achievements, has serious effects on the
self-confidence of girls. Thus, any differences
in achievement may be rooted in these culturally
different expectations.
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GENDER-ROLES THAT GIRLS ARE PREPARED FOR BY
SCHOOL
While increasingly many women pursue higher
education and careers, society still raises its
girls with the option not to work for a living.
However, current demographic statistics point
out that nine times as many women as men are
single parents, thus forcing more women than
before to make a living. Because women have not
been directed on career paths from the start,
they often must settle for lower lever jobs.
Thus, women continue to be funneled into
traditionally female occupations. In order to
keep up with recent technological trends, girls
must be introduced at a young age to scientific
and engineering fields, else they may enter too
late, leaving them only to be trained for more
clerical and secretarial aspects of the new
technology, for example data entry and low-level
programming. If this is the case, women will
remain at the low end of the service-oriented
pay scale. The traditional roles of men and
women dictate the focus of that which boys and
girls learn in school. Thus, if girls continue
to be bypassed when considering technical work,
women will never have a stronghold in the
technical fields and the traditional views will
never be changed. In order to rectify the cycle,
these stereotypical roles must be reevaluated,
and girls must be encouraged to pursue more
technical careers.
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