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Constructions of masculinity among young sporty boys : the case of KwaZulu-Natal Preparatory School's first rugby team.Bowley, Barbara. January 2007 (has links)
This study is an analysis of the manner in which preparatory school boys construct their masculinities through the sport of rugby. The study is based on interviews with the entire First XV rugby team of Connaught Prep School. Sport and rugby in particular are seen as an important cog in the masculinity-making process for men but this is also true for young boys. Rugby in South Africa is regarded as a sport that real men play. Historically played primarily by white men, it remains a marker of hegemonic masculinity. In their involvement in the Connaught Prep.s First XV, boys affirm the importance of the sport, act out the values associated with the sport and display the skills required to play the sport successfully. The thesis argues that sport, and in particular, rugby, is a central feature of boys. constructions of masculinity. Due to the physical nature of rugby and the hype that surrounds and the support that is given to the sport, it has become part of the hegemonic culture of boys at Connaught Prep School. But hegemonic masculinity is not fixed; it is contested and changes. The 1st XV rugby team and its members are an important part of the process that gives content to the masculinity that is hegemonic at Connaught Preparatory. The boys try and live up to the ideals of masculinity that they see on television, hear from and see in their fathers and find in other boys. In selecting a set of sporty values, these boys perpetuate rugby as the preferred sport and a rugged school boy masculinity as the hegemonic made gender identity of the school. While the 1st rugby team try to aspire to the ideal hegemonic masculinity at the school, they cannot meet the ideal rugby masculinity and this renders them vulnerable. They are vulnerable to physical injury and also to the humiliation of heavy losses against rival teams. Susceptible to these conditions makes their construction of masculinity a delicate and fragile situation to be in. While the boys contribute to hegemonic masculinity they also, at times, undermine it by contributing to a counter hegemonic masculinity. These are the boys that stress playing sport for fun (rather than winning), are caring, and develop friendships through the sport. The findings of this study, brings to light the importance of sport in the development of a young boys. masculinity and the vulnerable and fragile situation these boys find themselves in as a result. / Thesis (M.Ed.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, 2007.
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Failing boys : poor achievement and the construction of masculinity of six Indian boys in a secondary school in Chatsworth, Durban.Maduray, Manimagalay. January 2004 (has links)
This research project investigates the ways in which six Indian boys who have been officially proclaimed failures in grade 11 construct their masculinity in Meadowlands
Secondary School, a predominantly Indian technical secondary school in a working class area of Chatsworth. The way in which failing Indian boys construct their
masculinity is under-researched in South Africa. When boys are officially declared academic failures by the school, they often take other ways to validate their masculine identities. This study focused on the complex relationship between their academic failure and the formation of their masculinities.
Drawing from semi-structured in-depth interviews with six boys who failed grade 11 in 2003 and are currently repeating grade 11 in 2004, the study shows the complex
relationship between school failure, and the formation of boys' masculinities in three areas. These areas are the formal academic dimension of schooling, the informal social dimension of schooling and outside school activities.
The major fmdings from the interviews indicate that boys construct their masculinity by resisting the demands placed on them in schools and engage in disruptive
activities. They find alternate power and prestige in wearing brand name clothes,
wearing jewellery, carrying cellular phones, having girlfriends, clubbing, taking drugs and joining gangs. They find school boring and equate academic achievement with
being feminine and thus being gay and resist doing school-work. They are thus able to construct their masculinities in ways that are anti-school and anti-authority.
The study concludes by suggesting that failing boys at MSS are in trouble and that schools and teachers must be more alert to why failing boys behave in the ways that they do. At MSS it is suggested that the school encourages the development of sport
as a way of exposing boys to different ways of being a boy. / Thesis (M.Ed.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban, 2004.
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African boys and gangs : construction of masculinities within gang cultures in a primary school in Inanda, Durban.Maphanga, Innocent Dumisani. January 2004 (has links)
This thesis explores the ways in which a group of boys who belong to gangs enact their masculinity. The focus is on African boys' construction of their masculinities within gang cultures at a primary school in Inanda, Durban. The school is an exclusively African co-educational school and predominantly African teaching staff. Data collection involved qualitative methods that primarily include observation and unstructured interviews. These research tools were used to investigate the interrelatedness between violence, gangs, and masculinities. This study demonstrates that young boys in gangs enact violent masculinities which are bound up with issues of race/ethnicity, gender, class, and context in the making of young gang cultures. The performance of violent gang masculinity produced the exaggerated quality of masculine protest, in which violence is employed as a compensation for perceived weakness. This study reveals that gang of boys are enacting masculinity that is oppositional to school's authority by contravening school rules and regulations in multiple ways. This research has indicated that modes of masculinities are shaped, constrained or enabled by gang cultures. Gang boys acted out their protest masculinity in multiple ways. They are anti-school authority, anti-social and undisciplined. The study also demonstrates that there are many socio-economic and political factors that impact negatively on the school such as unemployment, poverty, and violent gang crime. The social, economic and political contexts are therefore crucially important in understanding a multiplicity of masculine identities amongst gang boys at the school under study. Schooling is an important arena where masculinities are enacted in various forms including violent (gang) masculinities. The overall conclusion stemming from the research project is that attempts to reduce violent gang masculinities in the school need to include a gender strategy that tackles gender inequality. In South Africa this could form part of the Life Skills curriculum. Much greater attention needs to be given, in the life skills curriculum and through the ethos of the school as a whole, to promote gender equality and in particular models of masculine identity not predicated on force and violence. / Thesis (M.Ed.) -University of Natal, Durban, 2004.
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An exploration of educator's and learners' perceptions of learner discipline at an all-boys primary school in the southern region of Durban.John, Samuel Eric Vedanayagam. January 2013 (has links)
Poor learner discipline, a problem for both educators and learners at South African public
schools, ranges from violence to issues with classroom management. As a result of learner-on-
learner violence, learners generally feel that schools are unsafe places to be in (Premdev,
2008). Schools have become challenging contexts for effective teaching and learning to take
place in, owing to the presence of bullying, disobedience, drug addiction, vandalism, rape,
assault, use of obscene language and disrespect for teachers (Anderson, 2009). With
examination results on a downward spiral, De Lange and Mbanjwa (2008) report that poor
learner discipline in schools is strongly implicated in learner underachievement.
This study, which is an exploration of educators’ and learners’ perceptions of poor learner
discipline, is underpinned by research in the construction of masculinities, which submits that
masculine identity is a gendered social construction, and as such, is subject to transformation.
The research project suggests that whilst schools, by virtue of the ways in which they tend to
be organised, condone and perpetuate the formation of hegemonic masculinities in boys, they
are also able to effect meaningful change and usher in emancipation to this locale.
Some of the key findings include:-
• Poor learner discipline in boys reflected their own constructions of dominant male
gender identities, formed as a result of their life experiences in a world embedded
with notions and practices of patriarchal hegemony;
• Poor learner discipline and the ineffective management thereof contributed to a poor
teaching and learning environment that disadvantaged all learners;
• Female educators relinquish their agency to successfully deal with poor learner
discipline when they choose to let male educators handle their disciplinary problems,
thereby becoming complicit in entrenching notions of male superiority;
• Male educators tend to resort to the use of corporal punishment;
• Violence in the home and wider community is reproduced in learners at school.
The study discusses approaches that may be employed in achieving a more just and
empowering teaching and learning context for educators, as well as learners at schools. / Thesis (M.Ed.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban, 2013.
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