Gender Sensitivity in Education
Gender Sensitivity in Education
Gender Sensitivity in Education
EDUCATION
WHAT IS GENDER?
Contrary to sex, ‘gender’ has social, cultural and psychological rather than
biological connotations. It is defined in terms of femininity and masculinity.
The proper terms for describing sex, for example, are ‘male and female’
while the corresponding terms for gender are ‘masculine and feminine.’
Although the latter may be independent of biological sex, masculinity
pertains to the attributes that describe males in the social and cultural
context. Hence, the ‘normal’ male has a preponderance of masculinity, while
the ‘normal’ female has a preponderance of femininity (Stoller). According to
Stoller, therefore, ‘gender’ is the amount of masculinity or femininity found
in a person.
In nearly all societies, men and women, boys and girls,
have a different status and play different roles. Men and
women behave differently, dress differently, have
different attitudes and interests, and have different
leisure activities. Contrary to traditionally held beliefs
that these differences between male and female behavior
are biologically or genetically determined, recent
research has revealed that they are to a large extent
socially constructed, or based on the concept of gender.
thedistinction between gender and sex is made to
emphasize that everything men and women do,
and is expected of them, with the exception of
their sexually distinct functions (impregnation,
childbearing and breast-feeding), can change, and
does change, in time and according to changing
and different cultural factors.
Gender is a dynamic concept. Gender roles for men and
women vary greatly from one culture to another, and from
one social group to another within the same culture. Race,
class, economic circumstances, age - all of these influence
what is considered appropriate for men and women. As
culture is dynamic, and socio-economic conditions change
over time, so gender patterns change with them. Sudden
crisis, like war or famine, can radically and rapidly change
what men and women do. Sometimes, however, the old
attitudes return after the crisis (as women ex-combatants
in liberation struggles have found). Sometimes, the
changes have a permanent impact.
SEX-ROLE STEREOTYPES