514 mod3 - Reading
1. Watch the movie, Hidden Figures about African American womens involvement in NASA. It is available on Amazon Prime for, I think, $3.99 two-day rental. Maybe other places have it too. Pay particular attention to references in the film to the womens educational background, and those of their families and neighbors.
2. Prompt for Discussion Notes: When you think about the family environments of these women, it is easy to see how they ended up as well-educated, especially in a science field, as they did. Most African American girls, though, dont grow up on that type of environment. What could be done to provide such support for girls of color and girls from lower socio-economic circumstances in the U.S. so they can more easily visualize their own success in school and in science-based/math-based career fields? What will YOU as a father, or uncle or grandfather tell your daughters, nieces, granddaughters about their math abilities? What other areas in their educational paths will you want to make sure they are able to develop confidence and how can you help them in those other areas?
3. 3Review this article from SIDA. (attached)
Prompt for Discussion Notes: There are nine Issues to Consider on pages 3 and 4. Talk about issues 7, 8, and 9. Just take a few notes about what that particular items makes you think about gender and education. Well link these issues to a bigger picture of the society including government, religion, and other institutions.
GENDER TOOL BOX [ BRIEF ] GENDER AND EDUCATIONAL AT TAINMENT / AUGUST 2017
[ BRIEF ]
Gender and Educational attainment
Gender often influences whether or not chil-
dren attend or remain in school. Across the
world, girls are more likely than boys to be out
of school, and the poorest girls/women from
the most disadvantaged rural areas tend to
have the lowest educational attainment levels.
The reasons why girls are more likely than
boys to be out of school relate to social power
structures and socially-constructed norms that
define the roles that boys/men and girls/women
should play. These gender roles affect their
rights, responsibilities, opportunities and capa-
bilities, including their access to and treatment
in school. While educational exclusion based on
gender disproportionately affects girls/women,
it also affects boys/men. This brief provides an
overview of the relationship between gender
and educational attainment and suggests ways
of mainstreaming gender to improve school
access and retention.1
In today’s complex globalised environment, a secondary
education is widely regarded as the minimum level re-
quired for securing and maintaining productive employ-
ment, which is the main route for escaping poverty and
contributing meaningfully to the economy and society.
A failure to complete secondary education can affect
individuals’ long-term capabilities and earnings potential.
This is especially the case for girls/women, who receive
1 This brief is based on the findings of two Sida policy papers, titled “Gender perspectives on
causes and effects of school dropouts from primary and secondary education in developing
countries” and “Mainstreaming gender to improve school access and retention in developing
countries”, both written by Gita Subrahmanyam (2016)
the greatest returns to their schooling investment from
secondary education.2 Yet, mainly because of gendered
perceptions of adolescent girls’ roles and responsibilities,
in most developing countries girls’ enrolment rates fall
when they reach lower secondary school age and then
decline further when they reach upper secondary school
age.3 Moreover, many children never enter school or leave
without acquiring basic skills, such as reading, writing and
simple arithmetic. 4
GENDERED CAUSES AND EFFECTS OF LOW
EDUCATIONAL ATTAINMENT
The main gendered barriers that children and young peo-
ple in developing countries face in accessing or remaining
in education stem from issues, practices and policies at
individual/household, school/community and policy/
system level, including:
• Individual/household level: poverty; low perceived value of
girls’ education; gendered traditional practices; early
marriage; early pregnancy; lack of parental support
for education; death or illness of parents; and lack of
interest in school (which is linked to other factors).
• School/community level: high cost of schooling/corruption;
lack of a nearby school; school-related gender-based
violence (SRGBV); inadequate school facilities for girls/
women; unequal learning environments; and lack of
female teachers and other powerful female role models.
• Policy/system level: inadequate or weakly enforced policies
on access to school for pregnant girls/young mothers;
inadequate or weakly enforced legislation on school-
related gender-based violence; and inadequate or weakly
enforced legislation on harmful traditional practices.
2 Psacharopoulos, George and Patrinos, Harry: Returns to investment in education: A further
update, Education Economics, vol. 12, no. 2 (2004)
3 Findings based on an analysis of UIS data
4 UIS and UNICEF: Fixing the Broken Promise of Education for All – Findings from the
Global Initiative on Out-of-School Children (2015)
The Gender Tool Box gathers knowledge material
and method support on gender equality in the form
of Tools, Briefs and Thematic Overviews.
Gender equality is
achieved when women
and men, girls and
boys, have equal
rights, life prospects
and opportunities, and
the power to shape
their own lives and
contribute to society.
2
GENDER TOOL BOX [ BRIEF ] GENDER AND EDUCATIONAL AT TAINMENT / AUGUST 2017
The ways in which gender relates to educational exclusion
are complex, and affect males and females differently. For
example, when poverty forces children out of school, boys
are often sent to work, while girls are kept at home to
help with domestic chores. In some cases, young people’s
gendered perceptions of their own roles and responsibil-
ities may lead them to regard school as unmasculine or
irrelevant. In some cases, the intersectionality between
sex and other factors collectively determine gender norms
and expectations and lead to educational exclusion. For
example, poverty and lack of lucrative employment oppor-
tunities for women may cause some families to prioritise
boys’ education over girls’. Similarly, gendered traditional
practices – such as rites of passage or female genital mu-
tilation – may take place during the school term and pre-
vent boys or girls from going to school. In many countries,
rural girls are more affected by the lack of a nearby school
than rural boys or urban students, because of concerns for
girls’ safety while travelling to school.
In terms of impacts, research suggests that low
educational attainment can lead to the entrenchment
of unequal power structures as well as discriminatory
gender norms and attitudes at individual or household
level, which may then be replicated and perpetuated at
community level through unequal practices within schools
and unequal opportunities in the workplace. Breaking
the cycle of gender inequality and its detrimental impacts
requires ending state patriarchy and overturning une-
qual power relations at governmental level. Yet women’s
subordinate position in society and low educational
levels relative to men’s block their equal representation
in key decision-making fora, which in turn prevents
gender-equalising reforms from being implemented
– thus preserving the status quo.
KEY INTERVENTIONS FOR IMPROVING
EDUCATIONAL ATTAINMENT FROM A GENDER
PERSPECTIVE
To overcome these issues and make faster progress in
achieving development goals, developing countries need
to put in place policies that simultaneously improve
educational access and retention while reducing gender
inequality. To do this, they need to implement measures
that address the root causes of exclusion by:
• engendering a more even gender balance of power
at each level of aggregation (individual/household,
school/community, and policy/system level);
• challenging commonly-held norms and perceptions
regarding females and/or males, including their roles
and responsibilities;
• ending harmful traditional practices;
• strengthening the rights of and/or improving oppor-
tunities for groups that are disadvantaged based on
gender;
• improving the capabilities, status and/or conditions of
groups that are disadvantaged based on gender;
• providing an alternative and empowered vision of
women’s role in society; and/or
• overcoming the opportunity cost of education for the
poor.
These are key to substantive change and for progress to
be sustained in the longer term.
In addition, to have the greatest impact on the greatest
number of out-of-school children and youth, policies
should be tightly targeted to the groups most in need of
support. This means gaining a better understanding of
the intersectionality between sex and other factors, which
together determine gender norms and attitudes and can
lead to exclusion from school. The level of aggregation
at which interventions take place may also differ, and in
some cases multiple coordinated efforts at different levels
of aggregation may be required to achieve an intended
outcome.
Examples of interventions that have been implemented
in developing countries to overcome the main gendered
causes of educational exclusion include:
1) Legal measures: compulsory education laws, child labour
laws, laws preventing SRGBV, laws prohibiting child
marriage or setting a legal minimum age for marriage,
and laws allowing pregnant girls and young mothers
to continue their education.
2) Financial measures: stipends/conditional cash transfers
tied to education, tuition-free education, free bicycle
schemes for rural students, school feeding, and subsi-
dised childcare.
3) Flexible school schedules: that target children and young
people (including mothers and fathers) who work or
have family commitments.
4) Sensitisation campaigns: programmes for raising aware-
ness of the benefits of educating girls and/or the
detrimental impacts of gendered traditional practices
or SRGBV.
5) Equal opportunities policies: policies to improve the gen-
der balance in schools, increase the number of women
in school management positions, improve women’s
access to well-paid jobs, or introduce political gender
quotas.
6) Empowerment programmes: offering training to build
individuals’ capacity to recognise and uphold their
rights, including their right to education, or provid-
ing sexual education, access to contraception and/or
youth-friendly sexual and reproductive health services
in schools.
7) Governance and accountability mechanisms: establishing and
enforcing codes of conduct for school staff, collecting
and disseminating information on educational quality
and equality, involving students, parents and commu-
nity leaders in school management committees, and
creating a safe environment for students to report
harmful, unfair or corrupt practices.
3
GENDER TOOL BOX [ BRIEF ] GENDER AND EDUCATIONAL AT TAINMENT / AUGUST 2017
8) Capacity-building schemes: equipping teachers and school
managers with the knowledge, skills and capacity to
exercise control over school resources, respond to the
learning needs of girls as well as boys, use positive and
non-violent forms of discipline, and recognise sexual
harassment and abuse of power.
9) Infrastructural investments: school construction pro-
grammes, transportation investments, and upgrading
the school infrastructure and learning materials to make
them more gender-sensitive and gender-responsive.
FAWE gender-responsive schools in Africa1
The Forum for African Women Educationalists (FAWE), a
pan-African non-government organisation, has published
a handbook on gender responsive pedagogy for creating
more equal learning environments. The FAWE model is
based on a ‘whole school’ approach and is the product of
a series of consultations, discussions, research and work-
shops on gender. The handbook covers: gender issues in
teaching and learning; gender equality in the governance
and operations of schools, including the school infra-
structure; promoting the participation of girls in science,
mathematics and technology subjects; tracking student
and staff performance and welfare; bursaries for under-
privileged girls; empowerment training for girls and boys;
and community involvement in school management.
FAWE Centres of Excellence boast impressive results in
improving gender equality as well as educational attain-
ment. For example, implementation of the FAWE model
in Gisozi, Rwanda is reported to have resulted in: 100\%
improvement in girls’ enrolment rates; 99\% improve-
ment in girls’ retention rates; 100\% improvement in girls’
completion rates; 93\% improvement in end-of-year school
exam scores; and 99\% reduction in sexual harassment
and pregnancies.2
ISSUES TO CONSIDER
1) Legal measures: by themselves may not lead to greater
gender equality or improved educational access and
retention, as they may be resisted by families and com-
munities owing to financial exigencies and/or deeply
entrenched gender norms. Therefore, legislation should
be paired with sensitisation campaigns to raise aware-
ness and help communities to challenge their gender
perceptions and practices. Making communities the
agents of change can also reduce the costs of enforcing
legislation and lead to more sustainable outcomes.
2) Financial measures: can be effective in improving school
access and retention, especially if programme benefits
cover the direct, indirect and opportunity costs of
education for poor families. However, financial
measures will not by themselves alter gender norms,
attitudes and practices. They also will not raise school
1 FAWE: Gender Responsive Pedagogy: A Teacher’s Handbook (2005)
2 http://fawe.org/activities/interventions/COEs/rwanda/index.php
quality or improve the opportunities available to girls/
women at the end of school. Therefore, financial
measures should be complemented by policies that
raise awareness of gender issues, improve school
quality and relevance, and/or enhance the opportuni-
ties available to girls/women after school completion.
3) Flexible school schedules: can improve school access and
retention by allowing boys/men and girls/women
to fit school around their work and domestic com-
mitments. However, flexible schooling arrangements
accommodate rather than challenge gender norms,
attitudes and practices.
4) Sensitisation campaigns: constitute a powerful but low-
cost means of challenging gender norms, attitudes
and practices and can be effective in improving school
access and retention. Ensuring that sensitisation cam-
paigns target groups at more than one level of aggre-
gation (household, community/school and state) could
ensure that gains made are preserved over time. How-
ever, not all groups will be amenable to participating in
these campaigns; hence, the recommended action is to
work with groups that are willing to participate to build
the momentum for wider change at a later stage.
5) Equal opportunities policies: can improve girls’ school
access, retention and performance by providing girls
with positive role models and challenging gender
norms and attitudes. They can also raise social
perceptions regarding women’s capabilities, particu-
larly if the women given these opportunities perform
well in their new role. Moreover, equal opportunities
policies that result in women being able to accumulate
economic assets can protect women from domestic
violence and improve their bargaining power in the
home, which in turn could permanently alter house-
hold power structures.
6) Empowerment programmes: can lower the incidence of
harmful gendered practices, such as child marriage
and SRGBV, and thereby improve school access and
retention. Engaging community leaders and other key
stakeholders as gatekeepers of these programmes can
significantly increase their positive impacts and lead to
more rapid and sustainable progress. To have a substan-
tial and sustainable impact in challenging gender norms
and assumptions, empowerment programmes should
target both weak and powerful groups (for example,
girls as well as boys, and teachers as well as students).
7) Governance and accountability mechanisms: establishing and
enforcing codes of conduct in schools can improve
school access and retention by reducing school-based
corruption and gender-based violence in schools.
Collecting and disseminating information on staff con-
duct and educational provision can improve transpar-
ency and thereby strengthen accountability. Involving
students in developing and enforcing codes of conduct
in schools can improve staff compliance, since students
gain knowledge of their rights. Involving parents and
http://fawe.org/activities/interventions/COEs/rwanda/index.php
GENDER TOOL BOX [ BRIEF ] GENDER AND EDUCATIONAL AT TAINMENT / AUGUST 2017
SWEDISH INTERNATIONAL DE V ELOPMENT COOPER ATION AGENCY
Address: S-105 25 Stockholm, Sweden. Office: Valhallavägen 199, Stockholm
Telephone: +46 (0)8-698 50 00. Telefax: +46 (0)8-20 88 64
E-mail: [email protected] Homepage: http://www.sida.se
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community leaders in school governance structures
can further strengthen accountability and, through
communicating expected standards of behaviour, have
positive spillover effects on gender norms and practices
in households.
8) Capacity-building schemes: can increase school access and
retention by lowering propensities for school-based
corruption and violence and improve gender equality
in educational outcomes. However, in some cases,
sensitisation measures may be needed prior to offering
capacity-building to convince school staff of the need
for change.
9) Infrastructural investments: that reduce the time and/or
distance that it takes to get to school have been shown
to increase school enrolments as well as secure greater
gender parity in enrolments. However, the specific
mechanisms by which this takes place are not clear.
Tostan Community Empowerment Programme1
Tostan, an international NGO based in Senegal, runs
a non-formal education programme in rural villages,
providing basic training in hygiene, problem solving,
women’s health and human rights, as well as the detri-
mental effects of harmful traditional practices, such as
child marriage and female genital mutilation and cutting
(FGM/C). Programme participants – mainly women, but
also village leaders – are encouraged to pass on their
new knowledge to others, both inside and outside the
community, through inter-village meetings. By placing
women in positions of power as authority figures dispens-
ing knowledge, the programme has had a positive impact
on both educational attainment and gender equality. In
the communities where the programme has been run,
girls’ school enrolments have risen, either because of
role model effects or improved perceptions of the benefits
of educating girls. Women’s economic engagement and
decision-making power in their household and community
have also increased. The programme has also led to dec-
larations against child marriage and FGM/C in more than
300 villages, with evidence that the villages have actually
abandoned the practices.
ENTRY POINTS FOR SIDA
The main message of this brief is that measures aimed at
overcoming the gendered barriers to educational access
and retention should:
• address the root (that is, gendered) causes of education-
al exclusion or dropout; and
1 Population Council Evaluation of the Long-term Impact of the TOSTAN Programme on the
Abandonment of FGM/C and Early Marriage (2008)
• produce the greatest benefits for the greatest number of
out-of-school children and youth.
After all, the end goal is to achieve the greatest impact
in reaching educational goals and ensure that progress is
sustained.
To achieve these aims, measures should:
• tightly target the groups most at risk of being out of
school based on gender, as well as the specific issues
contributing to their exclusion;
• involve families, community leaders, school staff, boys/
men and girls/women in the design and implementa-
tion of policies/programmes;
• seek to effect change at different levels of aggregation to
more firmly embed progress;
• focus on educational quality and effectiveness, not just
enrolments and completion; and
• link education to other areas (for example, health, human
rights and social protection) to address cross-cutting issues.
In line with these aims, evaluations of policies and pro-
grammes should:
• report impacts separately for males versus females;
• take into account and reflect the intersectionality of
identities that individuals possess, which shapes gender
– most importantly, sex, wealth and location; and
• assess the gender impacts of measures on groups at
different levels of aggregation.
FURTHER READING
Subrahmanyam, Gita (2016) Gender perspectives on causes and
effects of school dropouts in developing countries (Stockholm: Sida).
Subrahmanyam, Gita (2016) Mainstreaming gender to improve
school access and retention in developing countries (Stockholm:
Sida).
Stromquist, Nelly (2014) Out-of-school children: Why
gender matters, Background paper prepared for Fixing
the Broken Promise of Education for All: Findings from the Global
Initiative on Out-of-School Children (Montreal: UIS).
UIS and UNICEF (2015) Fixing the Broken Promise of Edu-
cation for All: Findings from the Global Initiative on Out-of-School
Children.
UNESCO (2016) Gender Review – Creating Sustainable Futures
for All: EFA Global Monitoring Report (Paris: UNESCO).
World Bank (2012) World Development Report 2012: Gender
equality and development.
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