Where is Education for All? Parents’ and Teachers’ Perceptions of Schoolboys Becoming Men in Kirinyaga and Nairobi Counties, KENYA
国際教育協力論集 17 巻 2 号
55-71 頁
2015-10-31 発行
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この文献の参照には次のURLをご利用ください : https://doi.org/10.15027/40831
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タイトル ( eng ) |
Where is Education for All? Parents’ and Teachers’ Perceptions of Schoolboys Becoming Men in Kirinyaga and Nairobi Counties, KENYA
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作成者 |
Chege Fatuma
Likoye Francis
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収録物名 |
国際教育協力論集
Journal of international cooperation in education
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巻 | 17 |
号 | 2 |
開始ページ | 55 |
終了ページ | 71 |
収録物識別子 |
[PISSN] 1344-2996
[EISSN] 1344-7998
[NCID] AA11281847
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抄録 |
This paper focuses on findings based on analysis of perceptions of teachers and parents on how schoolboys in Kirinyaga and Nairobi counties constructed masculinities as they negotiated manhood in the midst of a clearly defined race towards attaining Education for All (EFA) goals in Kenya, by end of 2015, which is around the corner –metaphorically speaking. The paper is based on a FAWE1-sponsored study conducted in 2012 and 2013 titled “Girl-specific education focus and boys’ participation, performance and construction of masculinities in selected Kenyan schools”. The study posted major school-based findings that were shared through the CICE Research Paper Series No.5 whereby, boys emerged as relatively underperforming in the schooling project compared with their female peers. It was, however, not feasible to include findings of the interplay of parents (fathers and mothers) and teachers and the role and interpretations of constructions of masculinities in their respective school communities. This paper therefore undertakes to fill up this void by foregrounding findings in this regard, specifically the shaping of masculinities among schoolboys as men-in-the-making navigating the pathways to manhood. Conducted in an African Kenyan context, this study raises interest in the multifarious interpretations of the basic feminist standpoint theories that present men as a group that is socialised from childhood to benefit from structures of power – social, economic, political, or otherwise- that are designed to oppress women and girls as a gender category. The study design departed from the traditional Kenyan gender research that often foregrounds girls’ education independent of that of boys, and which consequently fails to problematise boys’ schooling and their construction of masculinities in a comparative manner. For many parents (mothers and fathers) and teachers, schooling in itself did not appear to offer realistic masculine modelling for boys compared with the girls and as such, the boys were disillusioned and distracted from schooling as they searched elsewhere for models of successful masculinities to emulate.
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著者キーワード |
Gender identities
Masculinities
Men-in-the-making
School cultures
Family cultures
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NDC分類 |
教育 [ 370 ]
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言語 |
英語
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資源タイプ | 紀要論文 |
出版者 |
広島大学教育開発国際協力研究センター
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発行日 | 2015-10-31 |
権利情報 |
Copyright (c) 2015 広島大学教育開発国際協力研究センター
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出版タイプ | Version of Record(出版社版。早期公開を含む) |
アクセス権 | オープンアクセス |
収録物識別子 |
[ISSN] 1344-2996
[NCID] AA11281847
[NAID] 40020751164
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備考 | ページ番号は冊子体による。 |