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Peer reviewedFrancis, Becky – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 1999
Ex-Education Minister Stephen Byers claimed that "laddish behaviour" was in part responsible for English boys' academic underachievement. Presents and discusses students' responses to Byers' claim. Draws data from the semi-structured interviews of a study with 100 14-16-year-old students. (CMK)
Descriptors: Academic Failure, Foreign Countries, Gender Issues, Higher Education
Allison, Pete – Horizons, 2001
The death of a 17-year-old British girl on a youth expedition to Vietnam prompts questions about the ethics and role of expedition education and about accreditation and regulation of the adventure field. Should the agenda be controlled by a central corporation, government, or the field itself? Those in the field should present a united front on…
Descriptors: Accreditation (Institutions), Adventure Education, Criticism, Cultural Awareness
Green, Michelle Y. – NEA Today, 2000
Presents findings from a commission that looked into gender technology and teacher education. Girls use technology as much as boys, but they have less interest in the machine for the machine's sake and more interest in using computers as tools for current interests. Both teachers and girls have similar concerns about computer technology in the…
Descriptors: Computer Science Education, Elementary Secondary Education, Females, Gender Issues
Peer reviewedHughes, Gwyneth – Gender and Education, 2001
Takes an anti-essentialist approach to the gendered construction of science education, examining student subject positions generated within the dominant discourses and practices of curriculum science. Examines interview data from British secondary and postsecondary students, noting contradictions arising from gender and curriculum essentialism and…
Descriptors: Females, Femininity, Feminism, Foreign Countries
Peer reviewedGuthrie, Barbara J.; Flinchbaugh, Laura J. – Journal of Early Adolescence, 2001
Presents a brief history of the Female Adolescent Initiative Program, findings from selected programs, and a synthesis of what program interventionists learned. Discusses how program results inform development of a framework for future work on gender-specific substance abuse prevention. Suggests specifics for designing new programs. (Author/DLH)
Descriptors: Adolescent Behavior, Adolescents, At Risk Persons, Drinking
Peer reviewedMinnaert, Alexander – European Journal of Psychology of Education, 1999
Examines the self-referenced cognitions and feelings of 292 freshmen and the regulatory study activities that were measured by self-report. Reveals that the correlation between self-referenced cognitions and feelings and regulatory activities was very substantial. Fear of failure acted as a detrimental agent on regulatory activities for female…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, College Freshmen, College Students, Educational Research
Chandler, Sally – Feminist Teacher: A Journal of the Practices, Theories, and Scholarship of Feminist Teaching, 2004
In this essay, the author theorizes and illustrates how engaging students in reflective talk can help them change their minds. The essay specifically addresses how patterns for reflective talk can support both the sustained, nonevaluative exploration of difficult material and the self-scrutiny necessary for acknowledging the implication in…
Descriptors: Reflective Teaching, College Students, Discussion (Teaching Technique), Thinking Skills
Bhana, Deevia – Perspectives in Education, 2005
This article presents elements of an ethnographic study of gendered identities among boys and girls in the early years of primary schooling. Foregrounding group work in mathematics as a key arena for the production of young masculine identities, this article goes some way to addressing what is absent from sociological portrayals of young children,…
Descriptors: Grade 2, Masculinity, Foreign Countries, Social Environment
Skelton, Christine – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2005
The work of Ulrich Beck, particularly his concept of the "individualised individual", is increasingly cited by educational social scientists. As yet, there have been few empirical investigations that consider how applicable and relevant is the notion of the "individualised individual" in understanding how people make sense of…
Descriptors: Social Class, Women Faculty, Higher Education, Individual Power
Swain, Jon – Gender and Education, 2005
This paper explores the effect of cross gender relations on the construction of boys' masculine identities. The findings are based on data gathered from a year long empirical study of 10 to 11-year-old boys set in three UK junior schools. Although masculinity is defined against femininity and boys needed to mark out a set of distinctions from…
Descriptors: Females, Sexual Identity, Social Class, Males
Wedgwood, Nikki – Gender and Education, 2005
Studies of physical education teacher training have already established that hegemonic forms of masculinity are reinforced and reproduced both in the hidden curriculum (Flintoff, 1997) and the informal student culture (Skelton, 1993). Given this, an important feminist concern is whether male PE teachers whose own masculine identities are anchored…
Descriptors: High Schools, Masculinity, Hidden Curriculum, Physical Education Teachers
Martin, Jane – Gender and Education, 2005
This article tells the stories of four middle class, white, English women whose participation in educational policy making is little known: Annie Leigh Browne (1851-1936), Margaret MacDonald (1870-1911), Hilda Miall-Smith (born 1861) and Honnor Morten (1861-1913). In doing so, it provides a perspective on the circumstances that enabled or…
Descriptors: Social History, Activism, Feminism, Biographies
Peer reviewedStout, Eric J.; Frame, Marsha Wiggins – Professional School Counseling, 2004
In recent decades, men have been bombarded with images in society that depict the "ideal" male: strong, muscular, lean, with perfect features. What many adolescents do not realize is that most of the male bodies that they idealize can be acquired only with the use of anabolic steroids. Thus, many adolescent boys find themselves pursuing a body…
Descriptors: Self Concept, Intervention, School Counselors, Males
Carnell, Eileen – Curriculum Journal, 2005
Within the context of the national debate about boys' achievement in secondary schools, this article examines young people's conceptions of the success of the "Full On" magazine designed to encourage boys to read more and to challenge the negative aspects of a "lad" culture. The article begins with an analysis of the magazine, its editorial policy…
Descriptors: Periodicals, Reading Materials, Adolescents, Secondary School Students
Hoxby, Caroline M.; Leigh, Andrew – Education Next, 2005
Though exceptions undoubtedly exist, women with higher aptitudes can ordinarily be expected to be more effective classroom teachers than those with lower aptitudes. It is therefore troubling to think that in the United States those entering the teaching profession in recent years have, on average, lower measured aptitudes than their predecessors.…
Descriptors: Teaching (Occupation), Collective Bargaining, Females, Teacher Effectiveness

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