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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

An ethnographic study of gender differentiation in a middle school

Jones, Rosalyn January 1988 (has links)
This study examines facets of gender differentiation in a middle school. Utilizing an ethnographic methodology emphasis is placed upon the exploration of classroom interaction, inter-personal relations and participants' perceptual stances in order to explore how gender is implicated in the process of schooling. Although inquiries are located within a micro sociological context, the study is conducted against a backdrop of the socio-economic position of women and particular attention is accorded to the educational experience of girls and its implications for gender inequality at a structural level. The research demonstrates gender differentiation to be a ubiquitous feature of school life both in terms of its more formal routines and rituals and in its informal relations at the interactive level. Conventional constructs of femininity and masculinity impinge upon teacher perceptions of,and interaction with pupils, with the result that girls' competencies are devalued, they are not subject to the same degree of educative rigour as boys and, consequently, are marginalized within the classroom. Various dimensions of teacherpupil interaction are presented which elucidate the intricacies of such differentiation and which suggest how opportunities for enhancing pupils' self-esteem and facilitating the acquisition of participatory learning skills are distributed in favour of boys. Certain preoccupations and predispositions are, moreover, presented by pupils and the inquiry elaborates how these are reciprocated with institutional arrangements and expectancies. In terms of school as a working environment, educative processes are demonstrated as potentially more anxiety prcvoking for girls and, in relation to school as a social milieu, friendship networks are organized on a hierarchical basis in response to the contingencies of subject settings. Thus girls engage in certain ameliorative strategies and it is maintained, that to the extent that the school colludes with these, femininity is fostered in a way which is, in the longer term, educationally disadvantaging for girls and, ultimately, socially and economically disadvantaging for women.
2

The Influence of Advertisement Music on Gender Identity and Sex Stereotyping in Young Girls

Pelos, Ellen S 01 January 2016 (has links)
This paper proposes a study that investigates whether manipulating pitch and tempo in children’s toy advertisement music has an effect on gender identity and sex stereotyping in preschool-aged girls. This particular intersection between advertisement, persuasion, gender identity, and sex stereotyping scholarship has not yet been explored. However, past research does suggest that high pitch and fast tempo have a significant positive impact on mood and arousal, two factors associated with more susceptibility to persuasive messages. The 3- to 4-year-old female participants will be randomly assigned to one of the nine advertisement conditions. The music in the ads for each condition will contain a combination of pitch variation (high, medium, or low pitch) as well as a tempo variation (fast, medium, or slow tempo) to create a fully-crossed design. The dependent variables, gender identity and sex stereotyping, will be measured in the lab before and after a 2-week period in which the the advertisement stimuli will be presented in the children’s homes. Based on previous research, higher pitch and faster tempo are expected to be associated with more stereotypical gender identity and more sex stereotyping in participants.

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