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Do you believe that gender impacts greatly
  or not at all on the notions of students
   success and achievement in schools?




   The Human Continuum
Ashman & Elkin
 (2009) recognise
   gender to be
    “ the social
formation of roles
    that society
imposes on males
   and females”.
Kitchenham, (2002).
“What can we do within
 our classroom to avoid
    creating gender
limitations in regards to
  student educational
 success, and ensure an
   equitable learning
  environment for all”.
The Problem Solving Model
Possible Model
1. What am I trying to accomplish? What is my goal?
2. What are the limits or barriers
   that are in the way?
3. What are some solutions for
   overcoming the limits or barriers?
4. Which solution will I try?
5. Try out the solution that appears to
   be the best.
6. How well did it work? Should I try
   another solution.
Step One of the Problem Solving Model.
What are we trying to accomplish?

What is our goal?

• To break down the barriers that gender stereotypes
  create to ensure an equitable learning environment
  for all learners
Step Two of the Problem Solving Model.
                                     Neurological
                                       Makeup
                        Biological
                         Factors                            Behaviour
                                      Nature and
                                       Nurture

                                     Teacher/Peer
                                     relationships
    What are the         School             Teacher
   limits/barriers       Factors      ideals/expectations
standing in the way?
                                     Assessment
                                     techniques

                                      Traditionalist
                                     perspectives on
                         Gender       gender roles
                       Stereotypes
                                     Socio-cultural      Childhood
                                     perspectives       Socialisation
“ There is almost nothing we do with
  our brains that is hard wired. Every
 skill, attribute and personality trait is
         moulded by experience”
              (McKie, 2010).
GENDER STEREOTYPES
THE SOCIALISATION OF CHILDREN INTO GENDER

“Research confirms that children do not learn how to
       be female and male in passive ways rather
 individuals actively develop a sense of themselves as
  gendered people by interacting with the myriad of
    messages and practices which they encounter”.

 “As girls and boys develop a sense of self as gender
   beings they may come to actively desire ways of
   being that can be potentially limiting rather than
                       liberating”.
                 Clark & Page (1997)
Teacher: “Now I need some
big strong boys to come
and help me lift this desk.”
Text

                                    Assessment techniques




       Teacher/Peer relationships

                                         Teacher expectations
GENDER DIFFERENCES

  The following graph shows that in
 Spelling, Writing and Grammar and
     Punctuation the girls’ results
 were better than the boys’ with the
   girls generally performing at the
    national average except at the
Year 3 level. The gap in reading is not
 nearly as significant, while the boys
          have a slight edge in
numeracy overall and are close to the
       national average at Year 9
(NAPLAN Performance Report, 2008).
Do you believe that gender impacts upon
   learning, and student success? If so elaborate.
• “Yes especially in the early years. Girls are often able to concentrate
  and focus on text. Boys can be more active and hands on.” Teacher A

• “Yes it can in the area of behaviour management, where sometimes
  a make teacher can have better control of a class and therefore
  enhanced learning; particularly with boys in education.
  Conversely, girls may have problems relating to a ale teacher which
  could lead to learning problems. Teacher B

• “No.” Teacher C

• “I believe gender has a limited impact upon earning and student
  success. As an effective learning manager you need to take into
  account individual differences and preferences among learners.
  Whilst gender sometimes effects this {eg. Boys may need more
  outside time) it is not the rule. Teacher D
“In school you are taught
     things that you will
  supposedly use later in
    life, but you have no
   understanding of how
    they are going to be
            useful”
  (Stated by a male student).
Step Three What are some solutions
 for overcoming the limits or barriers
                          Authentic                PD to develop
                        Assessment to              an awareness
      Differentiated    make learning
       assessment                                    of gender
                         relevant to
                           students
                                                    stereotypes




 Single sex and                                            Gender
co-ed schooling                                           inclusive
                       SOLUTIONS                         curriculum
                                                        and content

                                        Development
       Critical
                                        via biology /
       audits
                                         experience
As identified by Davis &
     Dargusch (2010)
  “the research found
     around authentic
  assessment indicates
that students are more
   likely to learn when
 they need to use their
knowledge and skills in
    meaningful ways”.
• “Adjustments are always made at the
  individual level”. Teacher A

• “I think that besides being male or
  female, there are so many individual needs
  providing assessment that allows choice and
  freedom, brings out the best in students”.
  Teacher B
Ryan & Cooper (2010)
        discuss how
  “the messages of the
  hidden curriculum are
usually conveyed indirectly
       and deal with
 attitudes, values, beliefs
  and behaviour. These
   messages can either
support or undermine the
    formal curriculum”.
What kind of values
and masculinity and
 femininity do you
  think this kind of
 teacher response
   could be giving
      students?
The Inclusive Education Statement (2005) believes that an inclusive education
   in Queensland is one that,

• “Maximises the educational and social outcomes of all students through
  the identification and reduction of barriers to learning, especially for those
  who are vulnerable to marginalisation and exclusion.”

The Inclusive Education Statement (2005) suggests the following indicators
   can be used initially as guidelines to review current practices, promote
   dialogue, plan for change and implement reform. Later, they can also be
   used to help evaluate outcomes.

• Professional learning opportunities are provided to enhance
  understanding of the recognition of difference and the factors that
  contribute to educational disadvantage, especially an appreciation of
  factors such as: poverty; gender; disability; cultural and linguistic diversity;
  and sexuality.

• Plans reflect an ethos, organisation, culture and values underpinned by
  principles of social justice and by democratic processes.
“Unless teachers
    engage in critical
 reflection and ongoing
   discovery they stay
trapped in unexamined
judgments, interpretati
  ons, assumptions and
       expectations”
     (Larrivee, 2000).
The Boys Literacy and Schooling Report (2002)
  refers to the “explicit considerations of how
        both popular and curricular texts
 may, whatever else they may do, reinforce the
  already heavily patrolled gender borders of
               daily social justice”.
“Transformative remedies would focus on
     recognising diversity and difference, through
   promoting multiple ways of being masculine and
  feminine but within an affirmative and discerning
    critical framework that seeks to promblematise
        and transform rather than reinscribe the
   gendered ways of being, practises and structure
   that limit and constrain students life-worlds and
                   future pathways”
(Keddie, 2005 from a framework for gender justice).
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Armstrong, A., & Spandagou, (2010). Communicating Inclusively. In Ewing, R., Lowrie, T., & Higgs, J. (Eds.), Teaching and communicating: Rethinking professional experiences. South
       Melbourne, VIC: Oxford University Press.

Australian College of Educators (ACER). (2007). A trickle from the pipeline: Why girls under-participate in maths. Professional Educator.

Boys Forward Institute. (2011). Classroom success. Retrieved from file:///Users/ianchaseling/Desktop/ESS/Classroom%20Success%20-%20Boys%20Forward%20Institute.webarchive

Booker, G., Bond, D., Sparrow, L., & Swan, P. (2009). Teaching primary mathematics (2nd ed). Frenchs Forest, NSW: Pearson Education

Clarke, M., & Page, C. (1997). Understanding the process of gender construction. In Gender equity: a framework for Australian schools. Ministerial Council on Education, Employment, Training and
        Youth Affairs [MCEETYA]. Retrieved from http://www.mceecdya.edu.au/verve/_resources/genderframwk23-73.pdf.

Cooper, M., & Iles, L. (2010). Gender and diversity in the classroom. In M. Hyde, L. Carpenter, & R. Conway (Eds.), Diversity and inclusion in Australian schools (pp. 88-111). South Melbourne, VIC:
        Oxford University Press.

Cortis, N., & Newmarch, E. (2000). Boys in schools: what’s happening. Retrieved from
         http://www.dest.gov.au/sectors/school_education/publications_resources/profiles/boys_schools_whats_happening.htm.

Department of Education, Science and Training [DEST]. (2002). Boys, literacy and schooling: Expanding the repertoires of practice. Commonwealth of Australia. Retrieved from
       http://www.dest.gov.au/NR/rdonlyres/835D5DAC-D69C-4716-91EE-CB6E2DCDA934/1564/BoysLiteracy.pdf

Department of Education, Science and Training [DEST]. (n.d). Motivation and engagement of boys: Evidence-based teaching practices. Retrieved from
       http://www.deewr.gov.au/Schooling/BoysEducation/Documents/motivation_engagement_boys_pdf.pdf

Education Queensland. (2005). Inclusive education statement. Retrieved from http://education.qld.gov.au/studentservices/learning/docs/inclusedstatement2005.pdf.

Gill, Z., (2004,September).’Boys’ (and ‘girls’?) In the policy document boys: getting it right. Paper presented at the Australasian Political Studies Association Conference, Adelaide, SA.

Hyde, M., Carpenter, L., & Conway, R. (2010). Diversity and inclusion in Australian schools. South Melbourne, VIC: Oxford University Press.

Keddie, A. (2005). A framework for gender justice: Evaluating the transformative capacities of three key Australian schooling initiatives. In The Australian Educational Researcher, 32(3), 105-184.
        Retrieved from http://www.aare.edu.au/aer/online/50030e.pdf

Kitchenham, A. (2002). Viva la difference: gender, motivation and achievement. School libraries in Canada, 22(2), 34. Retrieved from
        http://vs7pm8vz2k.scholar.serialssolutions.com/?sid=google&auinit=A&aulast=Kitchenham&atitle=Viva+la+difference:+Gender,+motivation+and+achievement&title=School+libraries+in
        +Canada&volume=22&issue=2&date=2002&spage=34&issn=0227-3780

Larrivee, B. (2000). Transforming teaching practice: becoming the critically reflective teacher. Reflective Practice, 293-307.

Limbrick, L., Wheldall, K., & Madetaine, A. (2010). Estimating gender ratios of poor reading using large-scale assessments. Australian Journal of Education, 54(2), 190-222. Retrieved from
        http://web.ebscohost.com/ehost/pdfviewer/pdfviewer

Martin, A. J. (2002). Improving the educational outcomes of boys. Canberra, ACT. Retrieved from http://www.det.act.gov.au/__data/assets/pdf_file/0005/17798/Ed_Outcomes_Boys.pdf

Mckie, R.(2010, September 9).The gender myth. The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved from http://www.smh.com.au

Nagel, M. C. (2006). Boys stir us: working with the hidden nature of boys. Heatherton, VIC: Hawker Brownlow Education.

Queensland Studies Authority (QSA). (2008). 3579 analysis of Queensland students’ NAPLAN performance. Retrieved from
       http://www.qsa.qld.edu.au/downloads/early_middle/3579_naplan_performance_rept_08.pdf

Ryan, K., & Cooper, J. (2010). Those who can, teach. Boston, USA: Wadsworth Cengage Learning. Retrieved from
        http://books.google.com/books?id=rqmdR6Xrgq8C&pg=PA126&dq=%22hidden+curriculum%22&hl=en&ei=OiM3TrauKs70mAWFpbSTAg&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=8&v
        ed=0CFAQ6AEwBzge#v=onepage&q=%22hidden%20curriculum%22&f=false CHAPTER 5 12th EDITION p124-162

Snowman, J., Dobozy, E., Scevak, J., Bryer, F., Bartlett, B., & Biehler, D. (2009). Psychology applied to teaching (1st ed.). Milton, QLD: John Wiley & Sons.

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Ess loz

  • 1. Do you believe that gender impacts greatly or not at all on the notions of students success and achievement in schools? The Human Continuum
  • 2. Ashman & Elkin (2009) recognise gender to be “ the social formation of roles that society imposes on males and females”.
  • 4. “What can we do within our classroom to avoid creating gender limitations in regards to student educational success, and ensure an equitable learning environment for all”.
  • 5. The Problem Solving Model Possible Model 1. What am I trying to accomplish? What is my goal? 2. What are the limits or barriers that are in the way? 3. What are some solutions for overcoming the limits or barriers? 4. Which solution will I try? 5. Try out the solution that appears to be the best. 6. How well did it work? Should I try another solution.
  • 6. Step One of the Problem Solving Model. What are we trying to accomplish? What is our goal? • To break down the barriers that gender stereotypes create to ensure an equitable learning environment for all learners
  • 7. Step Two of the Problem Solving Model. Neurological Makeup Biological Factors Behaviour Nature and Nurture Teacher/Peer relationships What are the School Teacher limits/barriers Factors ideals/expectations standing in the way? Assessment techniques Traditionalist perspectives on Gender gender roles Stereotypes Socio-cultural Childhood perspectives Socialisation
  • 8.
  • 9. “ There is almost nothing we do with our brains that is hard wired. Every skill, attribute and personality trait is moulded by experience” (McKie, 2010).
  • 10. GENDER STEREOTYPES THE SOCIALISATION OF CHILDREN INTO GENDER “Research confirms that children do not learn how to be female and male in passive ways rather individuals actively develop a sense of themselves as gendered people by interacting with the myriad of messages and practices which they encounter”. “As girls and boys develop a sense of self as gender beings they may come to actively desire ways of being that can be potentially limiting rather than liberating”. Clark & Page (1997)
  • 11. Teacher: “Now I need some big strong boys to come and help me lift this desk.”
  • 12. Text Assessment techniques Teacher/Peer relationships Teacher expectations
  • 13. GENDER DIFFERENCES The following graph shows that in Spelling, Writing and Grammar and Punctuation the girls’ results were better than the boys’ with the girls generally performing at the national average except at the Year 3 level. The gap in reading is not nearly as significant, while the boys have a slight edge in numeracy overall and are close to the national average at Year 9 (NAPLAN Performance Report, 2008).
  • 14. Do you believe that gender impacts upon learning, and student success? If so elaborate. • “Yes especially in the early years. Girls are often able to concentrate and focus on text. Boys can be more active and hands on.” Teacher A • “Yes it can in the area of behaviour management, where sometimes a make teacher can have better control of a class and therefore enhanced learning; particularly with boys in education. Conversely, girls may have problems relating to a ale teacher which could lead to learning problems. Teacher B • “No.” Teacher C • “I believe gender has a limited impact upon earning and student success. As an effective learning manager you need to take into account individual differences and preferences among learners. Whilst gender sometimes effects this {eg. Boys may need more outside time) it is not the rule. Teacher D
  • 15.
  • 16. “In school you are taught things that you will supposedly use later in life, but you have no understanding of how they are going to be useful” (Stated by a male student).
  • 17. Step Three What are some solutions for overcoming the limits or barriers Authentic PD to develop Assessment to an awareness Differentiated make learning assessment of gender relevant to students stereotypes Single sex and Gender co-ed schooling inclusive SOLUTIONS curriculum and content Development Critical via biology / audits experience
  • 18. As identified by Davis & Dargusch (2010) “the research found around authentic assessment indicates that students are more likely to learn when they need to use their knowledge and skills in meaningful ways”.
  • 19. • “Adjustments are always made at the individual level”. Teacher A • “I think that besides being male or female, there are so many individual needs providing assessment that allows choice and freedom, brings out the best in students”. Teacher B
  • 20. Ryan & Cooper (2010) discuss how “the messages of the hidden curriculum are usually conveyed indirectly and deal with attitudes, values, beliefs and behaviour. These messages can either support or undermine the formal curriculum”.
  • 21. What kind of values and masculinity and femininity do you think this kind of teacher response could be giving students?
  • 22. The Inclusive Education Statement (2005) believes that an inclusive education in Queensland is one that, • “Maximises the educational and social outcomes of all students through the identification and reduction of barriers to learning, especially for those who are vulnerable to marginalisation and exclusion.” The Inclusive Education Statement (2005) suggests the following indicators can be used initially as guidelines to review current practices, promote dialogue, plan for change and implement reform. Later, they can also be used to help evaluate outcomes. • Professional learning opportunities are provided to enhance understanding of the recognition of difference and the factors that contribute to educational disadvantage, especially an appreciation of factors such as: poverty; gender; disability; cultural and linguistic diversity; and sexuality. • Plans reflect an ethos, organisation, culture and values underpinned by principles of social justice and by democratic processes.
  • 23. “Unless teachers engage in critical reflection and ongoing discovery they stay trapped in unexamined judgments, interpretati ons, assumptions and expectations” (Larrivee, 2000).
  • 24. The Boys Literacy and Schooling Report (2002) refers to the “explicit considerations of how both popular and curricular texts may, whatever else they may do, reinforce the already heavily patrolled gender borders of daily social justice”.
  • 25. “Transformative remedies would focus on recognising diversity and difference, through promoting multiple ways of being masculine and feminine but within an affirmative and discerning critical framework that seeks to promblematise and transform rather than reinscribe the gendered ways of being, practises and structure that limit and constrain students life-worlds and future pathways” (Keddie, 2005 from a framework for gender justice).
  • 26.
  • 27. BIBLIOGRAPHY Armstrong, A., & Spandagou, (2010). Communicating Inclusively. In Ewing, R., Lowrie, T., & Higgs, J. (Eds.), Teaching and communicating: Rethinking professional experiences. South Melbourne, VIC: Oxford University Press. Australian College of Educators (ACER). (2007). A trickle from the pipeline: Why girls under-participate in maths. Professional Educator. Boys Forward Institute. (2011). Classroom success. Retrieved from file:///Users/ianchaseling/Desktop/ESS/Classroom%20Success%20-%20Boys%20Forward%20Institute.webarchive Booker, G., Bond, D., Sparrow, L., & Swan, P. (2009). Teaching primary mathematics (2nd ed). Frenchs Forest, NSW: Pearson Education Clarke, M., & Page, C. (1997). Understanding the process of gender construction. In Gender equity: a framework for Australian schools. Ministerial Council on Education, Employment, Training and Youth Affairs [MCEETYA]. Retrieved from http://www.mceecdya.edu.au/verve/_resources/genderframwk23-73.pdf. Cooper, M., & Iles, L. (2010). Gender and diversity in the classroom. In M. Hyde, L. Carpenter, & R. Conway (Eds.), Diversity and inclusion in Australian schools (pp. 88-111). South Melbourne, VIC: Oxford University Press. Cortis, N., & Newmarch, E. (2000). Boys in schools: what’s happening. Retrieved from http://www.dest.gov.au/sectors/school_education/publications_resources/profiles/boys_schools_whats_happening.htm. Department of Education, Science and Training [DEST]. (2002). Boys, literacy and schooling: Expanding the repertoires of practice. Commonwealth of Australia. Retrieved from http://www.dest.gov.au/NR/rdonlyres/835D5DAC-D69C-4716-91EE-CB6E2DCDA934/1564/BoysLiteracy.pdf Department of Education, Science and Training [DEST]. (n.d). Motivation and engagement of boys: Evidence-based teaching practices. Retrieved from http://www.deewr.gov.au/Schooling/BoysEducation/Documents/motivation_engagement_boys_pdf.pdf Education Queensland. (2005). Inclusive education statement. Retrieved from http://education.qld.gov.au/studentservices/learning/docs/inclusedstatement2005.pdf. Gill, Z., (2004,September).’Boys’ (and ‘girls’?) In the policy document boys: getting it right. Paper presented at the Australasian Political Studies Association Conference, Adelaide, SA. Hyde, M., Carpenter, L., & Conway, R. (2010). Diversity and inclusion in Australian schools. South Melbourne, VIC: Oxford University Press. Keddie, A. (2005). A framework for gender justice: Evaluating the transformative capacities of three key Australian schooling initiatives. In The Australian Educational Researcher, 32(3), 105-184. Retrieved from http://www.aare.edu.au/aer/online/50030e.pdf Kitchenham, A. (2002). Viva la difference: gender, motivation and achievement. School libraries in Canada, 22(2), 34. Retrieved from http://vs7pm8vz2k.scholar.serialssolutions.com/?sid=google&auinit=A&aulast=Kitchenham&atitle=Viva+la+difference:+Gender,+motivation+and+achievement&title=School+libraries+in +Canada&volume=22&issue=2&date=2002&spage=34&issn=0227-3780 Larrivee, B. (2000). Transforming teaching practice: becoming the critically reflective teacher. Reflective Practice, 293-307. Limbrick, L., Wheldall, K., & Madetaine, A. (2010). Estimating gender ratios of poor reading using large-scale assessments. Australian Journal of Education, 54(2), 190-222. Retrieved from http://web.ebscohost.com/ehost/pdfviewer/pdfviewer Martin, A. J. (2002). Improving the educational outcomes of boys. Canberra, ACT. Retrieved from http://www.det.act.gov.au/__data/assets/pdf_file/0005/17798/Ed_Outcomes_Boys.pdf Mckie, R.(2010, September 9).The gender myth. The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved from http://www.smh.com.au Nagel, M. C. (2006). Boys stir us: working with the hidden nature of boys. Heatherton, VIC: Hawker Brownlow Education. Queensland Studies Authority (QSA). (2008). 3579 analysis of Queensland students’ NAPLAN performance. Retrieved from http://www.qsa.qld.edu.au/downloads/early_middle/3579_naplan_performance_rept_08.pdf Ryan, K., & Cooper, J. (2010). Those who can, teach. Boston, USA: Wadsworth Cengage Learning. Retrieved from http://books.google.com/books?id=rqmdR6Xrgq8C&pg=PA126&dq=%22hidden+curriculum%22&hl=en&ei=OiM3TrauKs70mAWFpbSTAg&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=8&v ed=0CFAQ6AEwBzge#v=onepage&q=%22hidden%20curriculum%22&f=false CHAPTER 5 12th EDITION p124-162 Snowman, J., Dobozy, E., Scevak, J., Bryer, F., Bartlett, B., & Biehler, D. (2009). Psychology applied to teaching (1st ed.). Milton, QLD: John Wiley & Sons.