‘The Gateway to Everything’: The Relationship Between Gender Safety, Gender Violence and Learning Processes in Two Primary Schools in Kirinyaga County, Kenya

The ways in which gender violence in schools (GVS) relate to teaching and learning processes and the extent to which aspects of gender safety in school (GSS) create an empowering, protective learning environment form this study’s central topics of investigation. Using a multiple qualitative case stu...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Vanner, Catherine
Other Authors: Maclure, Richard
Language:en
Published: Université d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10393/36748
http://dx.doi.org/10.20381/ruor-21020
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spelling ndltd-uottawa.ca-oai-ruor.uottawa.ca-10393-367482018-01-05T19:03:09Z ‘The Gateway to Everything’: The Relationship Between Gender Safety, Gender Violence and Learning Processes in Two Primary Schools in Kirinyaga County, Kenya Vanner, Catherine Maclure, Richard Gender violence Gender safety Primary school Kenya The ways in which gender violence in schools (GVS) relate to teaching and learning processes and the extent to which aspects of gender safety in school (GSS) create an empowering, protective learning environment form this study’s central topics of investigation. Using a multiple qualitative case study of two primary schools in Kirinyaga County, Kenya, this dissertation explores the elements of gender safety and gender violence that exist within each school and relate to student learning. The following qualitative methods were used over seven months in 2015: participant observation, individual teacher interviews, individual art-based student interviews and member-check interviews with teachers and students. GSS is promoted within the national policy framework and through teacher and student actions but is prevented from flourishing by a prioritization of discipline, authority, and examinations that reinforce traditional hierarchies, power discrepancies and competition. These practices define a school culture that enables GVS to continue and undermine efforts to promote GSS. Findings show that efforts to eradicate GVS cannot be designed in isolation from broader teaching and learning processes. Ensuring school safety and equality requires collaboration between education and child protection systems and reflection on current and historical power structures that shape school cultures. Efforts to eradicate GVS should build on existing opportunities for enhancing GSS and thus learning for girls and boys and address the systemic constraints that limit teachers’ ability to promote protection and equality for their students. 2017-10-04T17:55:25Z 2017-10-04T17:55:25Z 2017 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/10393/36748 http://dx.doi.org/10.20381/ruor-21020 en Université d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic Gender violence
Gender safety
Primary school
Kenya
spellingShingle Gender violence
Gender safety
Primary school
Kenya
Vanner, Catherine
‘The Gateway to Everything’: The Relationship Between Gender Safety, Gender Violence and Learning Processes in Two Primary Schools in Kirinyaga County, Kenya
description The ways in which gender violence in schools (GVS) relate to teaching and learning processes and the extent to which aspects of gender safety in school (GSS) create an empowering, protective learning environment form this study’s central topics of investigation. Using a multiple qualitative case study of two primary schools in Kirinyaga County, Kenya, this dissertation explores the elements of gender safety and gender violence that exist within each school and relate to student learning. The following qualitative methods were used over seven months in 2015: participant observation, individual teacher interviews, individual art-based student interviews and member-check interviews with teachers and students. GSS is promoted within the national policy framework and through teacher and student actions but is prevented from flourishing by a prioritization of discipline, authority, and examinations that reinforce traditional hierarchies, power discrepancies and competition. These practices define a school culture that enables GVS to continue and undermine efforts to promote GSS. Findings show that efforts to eradicate GVS cannot be designed in isolation from broader teaching and learning processes. Ensuring school safety and equality requires collaboration between education and child protection systems and reflection on current and historical power structures that shape school cultures. Efforts to eradicate GVS should build on existing opportunities for enhancing GSS and thus learning for girls and boys and address the systemic constraints that limit teachers’ ability to promote protection and equality for their students.
author2 Maclure, Richard
author_facet Maclure, Richard
Vanner, Catherine
author Vanner, Catherine
author_sort Vanner, Catherine
title ‘The Gateway to Everything’: The Relationship Between Gender Safety, Gender Violence and Learning Processes in Two Primary Schools in Kirinyaga County, Kenya
title_short ‘The Gateway to Everything’: The Relationship Between Gender Safety, Gender Violence and Learning Processes in Two Primary Schools in Kirinyaga County, Kenya
title_full ‘The Gateway to Everything’: The Relationship Between Gender Safety, Gender Violence and Learning Processes in Two Primary Schools in Kirinyaga County, Kenya
title_fullStr ‘The Gateway to Everything’: The Relationship Between Gender Safety, Gender Violence and Learning Processes in Two Primary Schools in Kirinyaga County, Kenya
title_full_unstemmed ‘The Gateway to Everything’: The Relationship Between Gender Safety, Gender Violence and Learning Processes in Two Primary Schools in Kirinyaga County, Kenya
title_sort ‘the gateway to everything’: the relationship between gender safety, gender violence and learning processes in two primary schools in kirinyaga county, kenya
publisher Université d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa
publishDate 2017
url http://hdl.handle.net/10393/36748
http://dx.doi.org/10.20381/ruor-21020
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