Gender and high school chemistry: student perceptions on achievement in a selective setting |
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Authors: | Andrew Cousins |
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Institution: | School of Education, The University of Queensland, Brisbane, 4072 Australia |
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Abstract: | This paper reports on research undertaken in a middle-class Australian school. The focus of the research was on the relationship between gender and students’ engagement with high school chemistry. Achievement data from many OECD countries suggest that middle-class girls are achieving equally as well as, if not better than, boys in many subjects. This has led to claims that the ‘girls and science’ agenda is no longer necessary, and indeed may have been detrimental to boys’ achievements in science subjects. The data collected from students at this site indicate that at this school this agenda is far from a completed one. These data indicate that whilst girls’ achievement levels are comparable with those of the boys, for many students chemistry is still perceived as a masculine subject. Hence, the girls in the chemistry classrooms at this school construct themselves, and are constructed, as outsiders in the subject. |
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Keywords: | gender and achievement gender and science education high school chemistry |
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