scholarly journals Gender Equity in STEM Education: The Case of an Egyptian Girls’ School

Author(s):  
Mohamed El Nagdi ◽  
Gillian Heather Roehrig
Author(s):  
Gayle A. Buck ◽  
Dionne Cross Francis ◽  
Kerrie G. Wilkins-Yel
Keyword(s):  

Author(s):  
Mustafa ÇETİN ◽  
H. Özlen DEMİRCAN ◽  
Ezgi ŞENYURT ◽  
Aysun ATA AKTÜRK

2008 ◽  
Vol 1 (2) ◽  
pp. 125-138
Author(s):  
CLARE HOLLOWELL

This paper examines girls and power in British co-educational boarding school stories published from 1928 to 1958. While feminist scholars have hailed the girls’ school story as a site of potential resistance to constricting gender roles, the same can not be said of the co-educational school story. While the genres share many tropes and characterisation, the move from an all-female world to a co-educational setting allows the characters access to a narrower range of gender roles, and renders the female characters significantly less powerful. The disciplinary structures of the co-educational schools, mirroring those in real life, operate in a supposedly progressive manner that in fact removes girls from access to power.


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