Relationer i skolan : en studie av feminiteter och maskuliniteter i år 9
Abstract
This thesis aims to explore the range of femininities and masculinities that emerge among
pupils in school. It also aims to examine local variations in gender pattern in two secondary
school classes. For the project, gender is seen as a social construction and humans as actively
doing gender. R.W. Connell’s theoretical framework, which argues that school is both an
institutional agent of the formation processes and the setting where they take place, is used.
The theory implies that there are multiple definitions of masculinities and femininities that are
constructed in relation to each other in a hierarchical order. Connell identifies the positions as
hegemonic/emphasized, participating and subordinated, arguing that they emerge as more or
less dominant in different contexts and indicate the simultaneous existence of various local
gender regimes.
The empirical data presented are derived from classroom observations and interviews with 42
pupils in two 9th grade classes in two different schools in Sweden. One school is located in a
rural community, the other in a town. The classroom observations focused on the daily
teacher-pupil and pupil-pupil interactions. The interviews focused on the participants’ general
conceptions of boys and girls as well as the individuals’ experiences of daily life in school. In
addition, questions about popularity norms were asked.
The results show that gender construction processes are fluid and flexible. Depending on
contexts, situations and persons involved, boys and girls adopt different positions of
masculinity and femininity in the gender hierarchy. These positions also vary between
discourses and practices related to the various gender regimes. The regime in the rural class is
supported by a sporty agenda, while the regime in the other class is related to intersections
between gender and ethnicity. Whereas previous research often shows pupils’ positions in
school to be closely related to their informal homosocial networks, this study shows that girls
and boys also gain from associating in cross gender-networks. The thesis discusses how these
relationships can be seen as both challenging the gender order and establishing it. The results
also show how teachers in various ways might be seen as co-constructors of pupil gender
identities in school. The analysis of the pupils’ definitions of popular and valued forms of
femininity and masculinity implicates a strong and confident individual, successful in both
social relations and study attainment. This indicates that there is pressure on both boys and
girls to broaden their gender repertoires. At the same time, pupils of both genders tend to
glorify domains considered male and belittle those connected with females. This indicates a
masculinising tendency in school. The thesis also shows that success stories told by
structurally subordinated groups come at a cost. To succeed and gain a high position in school
seem to imply that you need to adapt to the norms of the dominating group and, at the same
time, distance yourself from your “own” group. What might appear to challenge traditional
gender and ethnic stereotypes, however, is connected to a glorification of Swedish, male,
middleclass activities and relations.
University
Göteborgs universitet/University of Gothenburg
Institution
Department of Education
Institutionen för pedagogik och didaktik
Disputation
Kjell Härnqvistsalen, Pedagogen, hus A, kl. 13.15
Date of defence
2008-02-22
Date
2008Author
Holm, Ann-Sofie
Publication type
Doctoral thesis
ISBN
978-91-7346-610-3
Series/Report no.
260
Göteborg studies in educational sciences