9789463000291-9463000291-Gender Lessons: Patriarchy, Sextyping & Schools (Teaching Gender, 4)

Gender Lessons: Patriarchy, Sextyping & Schools (Teaching Gender, 4)

ISBN-13: 9789463000291
ISBN-10: 9463000291
Author: Scott Richardson
Publication date: 2015
Publisher: Sense Publishers
Format: Paperback 240 pages
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Book details

ISBN-13: 9789463000291
ISBN-10: 9463000291
Author: Scott Richardson
Publication date: 2015
Publisher: Sense Publishers
Format: Paperback 240 pages

Summary

Gender Lessons: Patriarchy, Sextyping & Schools (Teaching Gender, 4) (ISBN-13: 9789463000291 and ISBN-10: 9463000291), written by authors Scott Richardson, was published by Sense Publishers in 2015. With an overall rating of 4.3 stars, it's a notable title among other Gender Studies (Schools & Teaching, Social Sciences) books. You can easily purchase or rent Gender Lessons: Patriarchy, Sextyping & Schools (Teaching Gender, 4) (Paperback) from BooksRun, along with many other new and used Gender Studies books and textbooks. And, if you're looking to sell your copy, our current buyback offer is $1.75.

Description

Public schools in early America were designed to ensure the reproduction of Eurocentric social values. It could be argued that little has changed. Gender Lessons takes an in-depth look at how schools institutionalize gender-how kids are taught the rules and expectations of performing masculinity and femininity. This work provides extensive examples of how elementary, middle, and high schools: sextype; defend and preserve patriarchy; weave gendered expectations in all things school related; promote inequity; and limit their students' potential by explicitly and implicitly teaching that they must fit into only one of two boxes..."girl" or "boy." Richardson argues that schools-a powerful and wide reaching publicly funded mechanism-should be engaged in social (re)imagination that disbands the antiquated girl/boy and feminine/masculine binary so that kids might have a chance at being themselves. This book is sure to provoke conversation in courses and professional communities interested in education, gender studies, social work, sociology, counseling and guidance.

"In the 1970s, feminists fought to reform sexist school curricula and challenged taken-for-granted tracking of boys and girls. Forty years later, drawing from personal experiences and insightful research in schools, Scott Richardson shows us that the job is far from finished. Informal interactions and stubborn sexist beliefs about gender difference still press girls and boys in primary, middle and high schools into different-and highly constraining-gender boxes. Anyone who cares about taking the next steps toward gender equality in schools will find in Gender Lessons a useful and hopeful map to a better future for our kids." - Michael A. Messner, Ph.D., Professor of Sociology and Gender Studies at the University of Southern California and author of Some Men: Feminist Allies and the Movement to End Violence Against Women

"This book is unique in that it includes data from elementary, middle, and high schools from both students' and teachers' perspectives. These examples are familiar to anyone working in K-12 schools, but his analysis offers a new lens for many that can expose the frustrating and often heartbreaking nature of these taken-for-granted cultural norms." - Elizabeth J. Meyer, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Education at California Polytechnic State University and author of Gender and Sexual Diversity in School

"Read how kids and their teachers conspire to create the illusion that gender is uniform. Read about teachers who sometimes teach gender lessons to their students a little too 'up close and personal.' No muckraker, Richardson reports what he learned from his resounding research, not always telling us what we're supposed to learn but allowing the facts themselves to teach. Even if Richardson didn't have kids--he has two--you know he'd make a great Dad, because he is a great teacher: 'My hope is that we might fully recognize children as complex individuals--that we go beyond any biological assignment, and resist the pressure to stereotype (sextype) how boys and girls are 'supposed to act'.' Scott Richardson understands. Read for yourself." - William F. Pinar, Professor and Canada Research Chair, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada

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