Participation of rural Zimbabwean female students in mathematics: The influence of perception

The study was premised on the influence of perceptions on the participation of Ordinary Level rural African Zimbabwean female students in mathematics. Qualitative research design grounded in the interpretive paradigm was employed. Eighteen Ordinary Level female students and six teachers purposively...

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Main Authors: Anna Gudyanga, Victor Mandizvidza, Ephias Gudyanga
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2016-12-01
Series:Cogent Education
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/2331186X.2016.1156836
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spelling doaj-120866ba22284bd987c9b14dfa961ffc2021-02-18T10:11:01ZengTaylor & Francis GroupCogent Education2331-186X2016-12-013110.1080/2331186X.2016.11568361156836Participation of rural Zimbabwean female students in mathematics: The influence of perceptionAnna Gudyanga0Victor Mandizvidza1Ephias Gudyanga2Nelson Mandela Metropolitan UniversityMidlands State UniversityMidlands State UniversityThe study was premised on the influence of perceptions on the participation of Ordinary Level rural African Zimbabwean female students in mathematics. Qualitative research design grounded in the interpretive paradigm was employed. Eighteen Ordinary Level female students and six teachers purposively selected from three rural co-educational secondary schools participated in the study. Data were generated through lesson observations and semi-structured question type interview guide. Findings revealed that rural female students perceived mathematics as a difficult subject, masculine and irrelevant to their future aspirations. Participants outlined that their perceptions were rooted in the prevailing cultural belief that mathematics is a masculine subject and negative stereotypes about girls’ maths abilities. Further findings indicate that female students’ participation in mathematics was highly influenced by their perception towards the subject. These perceptions result in the development of a general negative attitude to the subject that caused fewer female students to participate in mathematics in large numbers. We recommended parents and teachers to work hard to eliminate the negative gender and cultural stereotypes in order to enhance female students’ confidence in mathematics abilities. Schools should employ female mathematics teachers and expose female students to female role models who have succeeded in life in order to encourage more participation of female students in mathematics. Schools are made responsible for smoothing out difficulties generated by the prevailing culture. There is a gap in knowledge base pertaining to the Zimbabwean rural girls’ participation in Mathematics.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/2331186X.2016.1156836influenceperceptionparticipation and mathematics
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Anna Gudyanga
Victor Mandizvidza
Ephias Gudyanga
spellingShingle Anna Gudyanga
Victor Mandizvidza
Ephias Gudyanga
Participation of rural Zimbabwean female students in mathematics: The influence of perception
Cogent Education
influence
perception
participation and mathematics
author_facet Anna Gudyanga
Victor Mandizvidza
Ephias Gudyanga
author_sort Anna Gudyanga
title Participation of rural Zimbabwean female students in mathematics: The influence of perception
title_short Participation of rural Zimbabwean female students in mathematics: The influence of perception
title_full Participation of rural Zimbabwean female students in mathematics: The influence of perception
title_fullStr Participation of rural Zimbabwean female students in mathematics: The influence of perception
title_full_unstemmed Participation of rural Zimbabwean female students in mathematics: The influence of perception
title_sort participation of rural zimbabwean female students in mathematics: the influence of perception
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series Cogent Education
issn 2331-186X
publishDate 2016-12-01
description The study was premised on the influence of perceptions on the participation of Ordinary Level rural African Zimbabwean female students in mathematics. Qualitative research design grounded in the interpretive paradigm was employed. Eighteen Ordinary Level female students and six teachers purposively selected from three rural co-educational secondary schools participated in the study. Data were generated through lesson observations and semi-structured question type interview guide. Findings revealed that rural female students perceived mathematics as a difficult subject, masculine and irrelevant to their future aspirations. Participants outlined that their perceptions were rooted in the prevailing cultural belief that mathematics is a masculine subject and negative stereotypes about girls’ maths abilities. Further findings indicate that female students’ participation in mathematics was highly influenced by their perception towards the subject. These perceptions result in the development of a general negative attitude to the subject that caused fewer female students to participate in mathematics in large numbers. We recommended parents and teachers to work hard to eliminate the negative gender and cultural stereotypes in order to enhance female students’ confidence in mathematics abilities. Schools should employ female mathematics teachers and expose female students to female role models who have succeeded in life in order to encourage more participation of female students in mathematics. Schools are made responsible for smoothing out difficulties generated by the prevailing culture. There is a gap in knowledge base pertaining to the Zimbabwean rural girls’ participation in Mathematics.
topic influence
perception
participation and mathematics
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/2331186X.2016.1156836
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