Down the Rabbit Hole: Perceptions of Identity Formation In and Through the Educative Experience of Women from Working-Class Backgrounds

abstract: ABSTRACT There is a body of literature--albeit largely from the UK and Australia--that examines the ways in which class and gender influence life course, including educational attainment; however, much of this literature offers explanations and analyses for why individuals choose the l...

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Other Authors: Decker, Shannon Irene (Author)
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.9302
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spelling ndltd-asu.edu-item-93022018-06-22T03:01:57Z Down the Rabbit Hole: Perceptions of Identity Formation In and Through the Educative Experience of Women from Working-Class Backgrounds abstract: ABSTRACT There is a body of literature--albeit largely from the UK and Australia--that examines the ways in which class and gender influence life course, including educational attainment; however, much of this literature offers explanations and analyses for why individuals choose the life course they do. By assuming a cause-effect relationship between class and gender and life course, these studies perpetuate the idea that life can be predicted and controlled. Such an approach implies there is but one way of viewing--or an "official reading" of--the experience of class and gender. This silences other readings. This study goes beneath these "interpretations" and explores the phenomenon of identity and identity making in women who grew up working-class. Included is an investigation into how these women recognize and participate in their own identity making, identifying the interpretations they created and apply to their experience and the ways in which they juxtapose their educative experience. Using semi-structured interview I interviewed 21 women with working-class habitués. The strategy of inquiry that corresponded best to the goal of this project was heuristics, a variant of empathetic phenomenology. Heuristics distinguishes itself by including the life experience of the researcher while still showing how different people may participate in an event in their lives and how these individuals may give it radically different meanings. This has two effects: (1) the researcher recognizes that their own life experience affects their interpretations of these stories and (2) it elucidates the researcher's own life as it relates to identity formation and educational experience. Two, heuristics encourages different ways of presenting findings through a variety of art forms meant to enhance the immediacy and impact of an experience rather than offer any explanation of it. As a result of the research, four themes essential to locating the experience of women who grew up working class were discovered: making, paying attention, taking care, and up. These themes have pedagogic significance as women with working-class habitués navigate from this social space: the downstream effect of which is how and what these women take up as education. Dissertation/Thesis Decker, Shannon Irene (Author) Blumenfeld-Jones, Donald (Advisor) Richards-Young, Gillian (Committee member) Sandlin, Jennifer (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Cultural Anthropology Sociology Women's Studies Class Education Gender Habitus Heuristics Phenomenology eng 342 pages Ph.D. Curriculum and Instruction 2011 Doctoral Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.9302 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ All Rights Reserved 2011
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic Cultural Anthropology
Sociology
Women's Studies
Class
Education
Gender
Habitus
Heuristics
Phenomenology
spellingShingle Cultural Anthropology
Sociology
Women's Studies
Class
Education
Gender
Habitus
Heuristics
Phenomenology
Down the Rabbit Hole: Perceptions of Identity Formation In and Through the Educative Experience of Women from Working-Class Backgrounds
description abstract: ABSTRACT There is a body of literature--albeit largely from the UK and Australia--that examines the ways in which class and gender influence life course, including educational attainment; however, much of this literature offers explanations and analyses for why individuals choose the life course they do. By assuming a cause-effect relationship between class and gender and life course, these studies perpetuate the idea that life can be predicted and controlled. Such an approach implies there is but one way of viewing--or an "official reading" of--the experience of class and gender. This silences other readings. This study goes beneath these "interpretations" and explores the phenomenon of identity and identity making in women who grew up working-class. Included is an investigation into how these women recognize and participate in their own identity making, identifying the interpretations they created and apply to their experience and the ways in which they juxtapose their educative experience. Using semi-structured interview I interviewed 21 women with working-class habitués. The strategy of inquiry that corresponded best to the goal of this project was heuristics, a variant of empathetic phenomenology. Heuristics distinguishes itself by including the life experience of the researcher while still showing how different people may participate in an event in their lives and how these individuals may give it radically different meanings. This has two effects: (1) the researcher recognizes that their own life experience affects their interpretations of these stories and (2) it elucidates the researcher's own life as it relates to identity formation and educational experience. Two, heuristics encourages different ways of presenting findings through a variety of art forms meant to enhance the immediacy and impact of an experience rather than offer any explanation of it. As a result of the research, four themes essential to locating the experience of women who grew up working class were discovered: making, paying attention, taking care, and up. These themes have pedagogic significance as women with working-class habitués navigate from this social space: the downstream effect of which is how and what these women take up as education. === Dissertation/Thesis === Ph.D. Curriculum and Instruction 2011
author2 Decker, Shannon Irene (Author)
author_facet Decker, Shannon Irene (Author)
title Down the Rabbit Hole: Perceptions of Identity Formation In and Through the Educative Experience of Women from Working-Class Backgrounds
title_short Down the Rabbit Hole: Perceptions of Identity Formation In and Through the Educative Experience of Women from Working-Class Backgrounds
title_full Down the Rabbit Hole: Perceptions of Identity Formation In and Through the Educative Experience of Women from Working-Class Backgrounds
title_fullStr Down the Rabbit Hole: Perceptions of Identity Formation In and Through the Educative Experience of Women from Working-Class Backgrounds
title_full_unstemmed Down the Rabbit Hole: Perceptions of Identity Formation In and Through the Educative Experience of Women from Working-Class Backgrounds
title_sort down the rabbit hole: perceptions of identity formation in and through the educative experience of women from working-class backgrounds
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.9302
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