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Recognizing the Hidden Curriculum of Gender Roles The Relationship Between Reading and Gender A Master’s Research Project by Catherine Holland St. Mary’s College of Maryland

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Recognizing the Hidden Curriculum of Gender RolesThe Relationship Between Reading and Gender

 

A Master’s Research Project byCatherine Holland

St. Mary’s College of Maryland

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Introduction

• Schools: tools for socialization

• Stated curriculum vs. “hidden curriculum” (Giroux, 1988)

• Reinforcing traditional gender roles

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The Problem

• Researchers report gender inequalities– On standardized tests (Lietz, 2006;

Marks, 2008)– Increasing over time (Klecker, 2006)– Influencing educational policies (Martino

& Kehler 2007)

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The Problem

• Gender Similarities Hypothesis (Hyde, 2005)

• Gender isn’t a predictor of causal thinking abilities (Berkant, 2009)

• Gender isn’t related to preferred learning style (Younger & Warrington, 2005 as cited in Watson, Kehler, & Martino, 2010)

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The Problem

Differences between genders are socially created, not biologically innate.

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Research Questions

• Do boys consider reading to be a gendered activity? Do girls?

• Is it primarily teachers or their students who replicate and encourage these gender-specific behaviors and opinions?

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Population

• AP English Literature students; grade 12

• English teachers• Public high school in Southern

Maryland

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Methods

• Affective survey– Questionnaire– Open-ended question– Book descriptions

• Student interviews

• Teacher interviews

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Findings

Q7 – I like to read.

Q8 – I would rather read a book than play a sport in my free time.*

Q9 - I like the books that I read in English class.

AVG Male 3.8 2.067 3.27

AVG Female 4.17 3.31 3.46*p < .05

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Findings

Prid

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Beowul

f

Uglie

s

Hitchi

ker's

Gui

de to

the

Galax

y

Love

ly B

ones

Holes

0.00

20.00

40.00

60.00

80.00

100.00

120.00

% Boys Who Would Like to Read This Book% Girls Who Would Like to Read This Book

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Findings

“Depends on the text. A lot of the stories that we’re doing are not geared toward young men…They’re definitely reluctant.”

“Um, if it’s about things that they liketo read about. We did The Contenderand it was about boy-things, they don’t like to read about love stories. It has a little bit of boy violence or things that they could relate to.”

“No. They’re a harder sell.”

“No.”

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Findings

• Teacher responses to: “Do you find that the girls in your class like reading?”

• All four responded yes:– Compared to boys in the class–More obedient

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Findings“Not a particular genre, but I like really descriptive books. I’m trying to think of particular books…realistic that I could see happening somewhere to someone real.”

“Favorite genre – anything that twists reality. Anything that messes with your perception and then gives you a shock. Thriller is too broad. You could go with a thriller but that’s too broad.”

“Love stories.”

“Fiction novels in general. No specific genre.”

“Anything funny”

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Implications

• Teachers are noticing reluctant male readers– They are more resistant– Underlying assumption that males don’t

like reading – Adjust text choice to appeal to males

Girls may not like the texts they read in class, but they are more willing to try new ones

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Conclusions

• Teachers choose “boy-friendly” texts, focus attention on males, but they still don’t like reading– These texts describe “masculine” males–Make males even more resistant to

readingBased on the interviews, students’ text preferences are idiosyncratic.

Yet students tend to choose texts with same-sex protagonists

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Recommendations

• Provide text choices whenever possible

• Encourage students to cross gender-boundaries in reading; reading is a human activity

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ReferencesBerkant, H. G. (2009). An investigation of students' meaningful causal thinking abilities in terms of academic achievement, reading comprehension and gender. Educational Sciences:Theory and Practice, 9(3), 1149-1165.

Giroux, H. A. (1988). Teachers as Intellectuals: Toward a Critical Pedagogy of Learning. Bergin & Garvey Paperback.

Hyde, J. S. (2005). The gender similarities hypothesis. American Psychologist, 60(6), 581-592.

Klecker, B. M. (2006). The gender gap in NAEP fourth-, eighth-, and twelfth-grade reading scores across years. Reading Improvement, 43(1), 50-56.

Lietz, P. (2006). Issues in the change in gender differences in reading achievement in crossnational research studies since 1992: a meta-analytic view. International Education Journal, 7(2), 127-149.

Marks, G. N. (2008). Accounting for the gender gaps in student performance in reading and mathematics: evidence from 31 countries. Oxford Review of Education, 34(1), 89-109.

Martino, W., & Kehler, M. (2007). Gender-based literacy reform: a question of challenging or recuperating gender binaries. Canadian Journal of Education, 30(2), 406-431.

Watson, A., Kehler, M., & Martino, W. (2010). The problem of boys' literacy underachievement: raising some questions. Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy, 53(5), 356-361.

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Questions?