Sciencey Girls: Discourses Supporting Working-Class Girls’ to Identify with Science

Women from working class and some ethnic minority backgrounds continue to be underrepresented in science, particularly in areas such as physical sciences and engineering. Many find it difficult to see science as something that is “for them”, which then has implications for their learning and partici...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Spela Godec
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2018-01-01
Series:Education Sciences
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2227-7102/8/1/19
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spelling doaj-c41fc835d68e4cbcb631ac029fb405072020-11-24T21:11:29ZengMDPI AGEducation Sciences2227-71022018-01-01811910.3390/educsci8010019educsci8010019Sciencey Girls: Discourses Supporting Working-Class Girls’ to Identify with ScienceSpela Godec0UCL Institute of Education, University College London, 20 Bedford Way, Bloomsbury, London WC1H 0AL, UKWomen from working class and some ethnic minority backgrounds continue to be underrepresented in science, particularly in areas such as physical sciences and engineering. Many find it difficult to see science as something that is “for them”, which then has implications for their learning and participation in science. In this paper, I discuss findings from a U.K.-based qualitative study with 15 working-class girls, aged 11 to 13, from diverse ethnic backgrounds. Data were collected over the course of one academic year, through interviews and discussion groups with the girls and interviews with their science teachers, and analysed through a post-structural gender lens. The paper foregrounds five science-identifying girls, who negotiated their identification and engagement with science through the following discursive strategies: (i) rendering gender invisible, (ii) drawing attention to the presence of women in science, (iii) reframing “science people” as caring and nurturing, and (iv) cultural discourses of desirability of science. The findings contribute to the understanding of how working class girls—who are often “othered” and constructed as “unintelligible” within the dominant discursive regime of prototypical science—find identification with science possible. The paper discusses the affordances and challenges of each discursive strategy.http://www.mdpi.com/2227-7102/8/1/19identification with scienceworking classgirlsgenderperformativitydiscourse
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Spela Godec
spellingShingle Spela Godec
Sciencey Girls: Discourses Supporting Working-Class Girls’ to Identify with Science
Education Sciences
identification with science
working class
girls
gender
performativity
discourse
author_facet Spela Godec
author_sort Spela Godec
title Sciencey Girls: Discourses Supporting Working-Class Girls’ to Identify with Science
title_short Sciencey Girls: Discourses Supporting Working-Class Girls’ to Identify with Science
title_full Sciencey Girls: Discourses Supporting Working-Class Girls’ to Identify with Science
title_fullStr Sciencey Girls: Discourses Supporting Working-Class Girls’ to Identify with Science
title_full_unstemmed Sciencey Girls: Discourses Supporting Working-Class Girls’ to Identify with Science
title_sort sciencey girls: discourses supporting working-class girls’ to identify with science
publisher MDPI AG
series Education Sciences
issn 2227-7102
publishDate 2018-01-01
description Women from working class and some ethnic minority backgrounds continue to be underrepresented in science, particularly in areas such as physical sciences and engineering. Many find it difficult to see science as something that is “for them”, which then has implications for their learning and participation in science. In this paper, I discuss findings from a U.K.-based qualitative study with 15 working-class girls, aged 11 to 13, from diverse ethnic backgrounds. Data were collected over the course of one academic year, through interviews and discussion groups with the girls and interviews with their science teachers, and analysed through a post-structural gender lens. The paper foregrounds five science-identifying girls, who negotiated their identification and engagement with science through the following discursive strategies: (i) rendering gender invisible, (ii) drawing attention to the presence of women in science, (iii) reframing “science people” as caring and nurturing, and (iv) cultural discourses of desirability of science. The findings contribute to the understanding of how working class girls—who are often “othered” and constructed as “unintelligible” within the dominant discursive regime of prototypical science—find identification with science possible. The paper discusses the affordances and challenges of each discursive strategy.
topic identification with science
working class
girls
gender
performativity
discourse
url http://www.mdpi.com/2227-7102/8/1/19
work_keys_str_mv AT spelagodec scienceygirlsdiscoursessupportingworkingclassgirlstoidentifywithscience
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