FEMINISM Secondary
FEMINISM Secondary
FEMINISM Secondary
AND EDUCATIONAL
ADMINISTRATION
FEMINISM
CHIGERWE, W.
QUESTIONS
Assess the assertion that
gender equality is reverse
discrimination.
Gender equality is a myth.
Discuss.
Analyse the view that feminists
are fighting a losing battle.
FEMINISM
• Giddens (2009) defines feminism as
the struggle to defend & expand the
rights of women
• is the advocacy for equal opportunity
for women & men in all spheres of life
• there are different versions of
feminism
• sexism is a belief in traditional gender
role stereotypes & in inequality
between men & women
FEMINISM HISTORICAL
DEVELOPMENT
• borrows from Marxism
• dates back to 18thC in Europe
• Feminists were then challenging
patriarchal ideologies of society
(Sadovnik, 2011)
History
• World Wars left women taking up
jobs usually meant for men
• USA: related to the abolition of
slavery
• Britain: 1877 National Society for
Women’s Suffrage
History
• In the world, women fighting for:
economic equality
availability of abortion
divorce laws
education
GENERAL FEMINIST VIEWS
• blames men
• says women are good & men are
bad
• believe men are the enemy
• they’re untrustworthy as fathers,
friends, lovers and leaders
2. MARXIST-SOCIALIST FEMINISM
Sex
• natural biological differences
between men & women (in
reproductive organs)
• difficult to change (born
male/female)
• found in history & across cultures
• policies respond to sex differences
in areas to do with the physical
body
Sex & gender
Gender
• the culturally, socially-
constructed differences between
men & women
• is the way society encourages &
teaches the sexes to behave in
different ways through
socialisation
Sex & gender
• changeable since gender identity
is determined by society
• historically & in different
societies, gender roles are
different
• policies can respond to gender
stereotyping & traditional gender
roles
N.B. sex & gender are closely
linked but not synonymous
EDUCATIONAL IMPLICATIONS
• help us to understand:
the significance of gender
relations
the role of education as a means
address gender disparities
• both boys & girls deserve equal
treatment as humans
Implications cont’d
• Women’s right to independent
existence & education is
confronted by ‘Wollstonecraft’s
dilemma.’
• the dilemma is whether women
should ask for the same or
different treatment to men in life
generally and in education
specifically.
Implications cont’d
• Education to promote women, e.g.
MTC’s constitution for the SRC
states that:
1. at least 1/3 of SRC to be women
2. the posts of Vice President,
The Secretary for Gender Affairs
& The Treasurer are reserved
for ladies.
Implications cont’d
• Gender neutral terms to be
promoted in books and mass
media, e.g. chairperson instead of
chairman, school head for
headmaster etc.
• Both sexes to participate in all
classroom activities [sweeping,
moving furniture].
• Gendered subject allocation to be
discouraged in schools.
Implications cont’d
• Education to promote gender
balance as enshrined in the
Constitution of Zimbabwe
Amendment (No. 20) Act 2013
Chapter 2 National Objectives
Section 17 by allowing full
participation of the girl child in
school activities.
• This includes allowing girls to lead,
play women soccer, study science
among others.
Cont’d
• encourage girls to:
be explorative
dress properly to overcome
hindrance to certain activities
(track suits or shorts)
• provide female models who
overcame discrimination [real,
pictures or films].
REFERENCES [33]