Gender in Uganda’s tertiary educational distribution

Gender is a major factor in Uganda’s higher education system. This manuscript accounts for the conundrum of gender inequality in the system through a comparative multi group analysis of Gender Parity Index in 10 colleges and 158 fields of study. From a sample of 101 ​504 students, admitted in five p...

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Main Author: Geoffrey Odaga
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2020-01-01
Series:Social Sciences and Humanities Open
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2590291120300127
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spelling doaj-d64d994b5486492eb0ce330d630428062020-12-27T04:31:36ZengElsevierSocial Sciences and Humanities Open2590-29112020-01-0121100023Gender in Uganda’s tertiary educational distributionGeoffrey Odaga0University of South Africa (UNISA), College of Graduate Studies, Institute for African Renaissance Studies, 287 Nana Sita Street, Pretoria, South AfricaGender is a major factor in Uganda’s higher education system. This manuscript accounts for the conundrum of gender inequality in the system through a comparative multi group analysis of Gender Parity Index in 10 colleges and 158 fields of study. From a sample of 101 ​504 students, admitted in five public universities, from 112 districts, from 2009 to 2017, the study found that even though women in Uganda now participate in higher education in much greater numbers, gender realities on the ground have not changed. In fact, gender inequality in access to higher education has become much more nuanced and complex than was anticipated; half the population of women was found in one of ten colleges; in eight other colleges, men outnumbered women by a ratio of 8:2. Uganda’s higher education system was stereotypic of a system that reinforces the images of women in one field and that of men in another. The study calls for a differentiated approach to policy making, to change the history, customs and traditions of college admission, which remains strongly in favor of men, in order to address the conundrum of gender inequality in Uganda’s higher education system.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2590291120300127Gender inequalityTertiary educationEducational distributionGender parity
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Geoffrey Odaga
spellingShingle Geoffrey Odaga
Gender in Uganda’s tertiary educational distribution
Social Sciences and Humanities Open
Gender inequality
Tertiary education
Educational distribution
Gender parity
author_facet Geoffrey Odaga
author_sort Geoffrey Odaga
title Gender in Uganda’s tertiary educational distribution
title_short Gender in Uganda’s tertiary educational distribution
title_full Gender in Uganda’s tertiary educational distribution
title_fullStr Gender in Uganda’s tertiary educational distribution
title_full_unstemmed Gender in Uganda’s tertiary educational distribution
title_sort gender in uganda’s tertiary educational distribution
publisher Elsevier
series Social Sciences and Humanities Open
issn 2590-2911
publishDate 2020-01-01
description Gender is a major factor in Uganda’s higher education system. This manuscript accounts for the conundrum of gender inequality in the system through a comparative multi group analysis of Gender Parity Index in 10 colleges and 158 fields of study. From a sample of 101 ​504 students, admitted in five public universities, from 112 districts, from 2009 to 2017, the study found that even though women in Uganda now participate in higher education in much greater numbers, gender realities on the ground have not changed. In fact, gender inequality in access to higher education has become much more nuanced and complex than was anticipated; half the population of women was found in one of ten colleges; in eight other colleges, men outnumbered women by a ratio of 8:2. Uganda’s higher education system was stereotypic of a system that reinforces the images of women in one field and that of men in another. The study calls for a differentiated approach to policy making, to change the history, customs and traditions of college admission, which remains strongly in favor of men, in order to address the conundrum of gender inequality in Uganda’s higher education system.
topic Gender inequality
Tertiary education
Educational distribution
Gender parity
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2590291120300127
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