РефератыИностранный языкGeGender Inequality Research Essay Research Paper Gender

Gender Inequality Research Essay Research Paper Gender

Gender Inequality Research Essay, Research Paper


Gender equality is a broad topic with many different angles that can be examined. For my part in


this project I chose to research the changing perspective on gender inequalities in schools. I


wanted to find out what people really felt about the fairness of their education, and whether they


really felt they had been shortchanged in the learning process because of their sex. My results


were generally what I had expected to find, though there were a few interesting findings along the


way. I used an article from Education Week entitled, “The Silent Gender Gap”, An empirical


research project conducted by Molly Weinburgh of Georgia State University, and I conducted my


own research by using surveys and interviewing people about what they remember from their days


in the public schools.


I wanted to answer the question as to whether or not gender really played a role in the


equality of people’s education. I expected to find that the further back through time I looked, the


more evidence I would find of there being a general sentiment toward the belief that males were


favored in the classroom. This favoritism I expected to be greater and have a larger impact the


further back through time I went with my interviews. However, I expected that in more recent


times the pendulum of educational inequalities would have swung hard the other way, giving the


females a clear advantage. In the end I was right, to an extent.


I conducted interviews with or received surveys back from forty-eight people ranging in


age, background, and geographic region of where they attended high school. Six of these people


graduated high school between 1945 and 1955, twenty-four graduated between 1968 and 1979,


and the remaining eighteen people have recently graduated since 1995. They represent three


generations education in the public schools. When asked how they felt overall about the equality


of their education based on gender, only two people responded that they felt there had not been


fair treatment between the sexes, these two will be discussed in-depth later. Every respondent


said that they had not changed the beliefs they held during school. However, the inequalities


became evident in later questions that were designed to bring out impressions about certain


situations and asked for additional comments. Of the twenty-four respondents graduating from


1968 to 1979, twenty-two claimed overall equality in their education, of these, nine indicated


some minor tendencies toward gender biased policies in teachers’ classrooms. All but one of


these nine said the males had received some form of

favoritism regardless of their own gender.


The recent graduate group results showed opposite results. Of the eighteen people who


graduated since 1995, all claimed overall equality (a sign of progress), however all but two


claimed that the girls were given advantages over the males (a sign of too much progress). The


two who did not claim female benefits felt their education was equal. The interesting age group


was the elders. They were hesitant to respond to my questions. After great amount of reflection,


there was an agreement that men were given a better opportunity for success. These people


struggled to decide not because they could not remember, but because they never gave gender


inequality too much thought. Some responses to the questions designed to inspire thought and


sentiments were good examples of the overall feeling on gender inequalities. For example,


“Studies today seem to draw our focus to minor issues (mountains out of mole hills)” and


“…gender was the inequality of least concern back when I was in school.” As for the two who


did not feel there overall educational experience was fair, both graduated in 1976, both were


female, but one felt the males got the clear advantage, the other felt the females won the war for


favoritism. “The Silent Gender Gap,” offers the best explanation for this conflict of opinions.


The Education Week article makes the claim that when looking at African-American students the


gender gap actually favored the females as early as 1970. The women who said there schooling


was unfairly tilted toward males was from the predominantly white Central Pennsylvania region,


while the lady saying girls had the upper hand came from a school in Maryland which had an equal


if not greater number of African-American students, a possible explanation for the differing views


from the same time period.


When looking at the results, we see that the hypothesis was overall correct. The trend has


been for the girls to be treated progressively better while the boys advantage has slipped away.


However gender inequality does still exist in schools to differing degrees, even if the offended


party has changed. Interestingly enough, against the hypothesis, the oldest group we looked at


were not concerned over gender inequalities, maybe this something we can learn from and focus


our attention on some bigger issues. Also, Molly Weinburgh’s research found gender to be the


least predictive of a student’s scholastic success. On a final note, it is important to keep in mind


that this is the schools we have looked at, the glass ceiling of the work place still must be


addressed.


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