5,726 research outputs found

    \u27Go Grrrl!\u27 : constructions of femininity in the textual practices of elite girls\u27 schooling

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    In this paper I consider the utility of discourses of &lsquo;girl power&rsquo; for understanding, and complicating, the way youthful femininities are produced in schooling. The paper is concerned with expanding the possibilities for how queer theoretical resources might be utilized within studies of girls and schooling. Existing studies have drawn upon Judith Butler&rsquo;s notion of a &lsquo;heterosexual matrix&rsquo; for understanding, and attending to, the way normative discourses of heterosexuality underpin the school-based production of youthful femininities. The term &lsquo;heterofemininities&rsquo; has been used in order to label these school-produced intersections of sex/gender/sexuality. Drawing on discourses of &lsquo;girl power&rsquo; that gather around &lsquo;voice&rsquo; and responsibility, I propose that the production of &lsquo;hetero-femininities&rsquo; within educational contexts might be further explored, and thus complicated, when the significance of discourses of &lsquo;girl power&rsquo; is considered. I analyse young women&rsquo;s discussions of key &lsquo;girl power&rsquo; icons in popular culture, generated through fieldwork in an elite girls&rsquo; school in Australia. In this analysis I explore the intersections of gender/sexuality/girl power that are produced in the young women&rsquo;s textual practices.<br /

    Re-thinking discourses of heterosexuality in single-sex girls\u27 education

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    Girling in liminal spaces : schooling and the constitution of young femininity

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    Heteroglossia : a space for developing critical language awareness?

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    This paper reports on research into the challenges of implementing a critical writing pedagogy within a teacher education program in Australia. Participants in this study are student teachers enrolled in a compulsory subject, &ldquo;Language and Literacy in Secondary School&rdquo;, a subject requiring them to develop a knowledge of the role of language and literacy across the secondary school curriculum and to show personal proficiency in literacy as part of graduate outcomes for teacher education dictated by the State Government of Victoria. To develop an understanding of the way that language has shaped their lives, students write a narrative about their early literacy experiences &ndash; a task which they all find very challenging, especially in comparison with the formal writing of other university subjects. Rather than simply reminiscing about their early childhood, they are encouraged to juxtapose voices from the past and the present, and to combine a range of texts within their writing. Later in the semester they revisit these accounts of their early literacy experiences and, in a separate piece of writing, endeavour to place these accounts within the contexts of theories and debates they have encountered in the course of completing this unit. The students&rsquo; writing provides a small window on how they are experiencing their tertiary education and their preparation as teachers, including the managerial controls that are currently shaping university curriculum and pedagogy. We argue that such heteroglossic texts (Bakhtin, 1981) prompt students to stretch their repertoires as language-users, enabling them to develop a socially critical awareness of language and literacy, including the literacy practices in which they engage as university students.<br /

    Constructions of education and resistance within popular feminist commentary on girls and sexualisation

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    We are currently witnessing a renewed vigour to ongoing concerns about the sexualisation of young women and girls in western popular culture. This paper takes up Angela McRobbie&rsquo;s concerns that the commercial sphere has become a primary site for talking about, and educating, girls and young women (McRobbie, 2008). I first explore the growth in &lsquo;expert&rsquo; commentary, on girls and sexualisation, drawing on the work of a number of commentators and authors from the USA, the UK and Australia, who have become ubiquitous media commentators on issues facing girls, including sexualisation. I then draw on feminist and education theory to explore the possible limitations of how education is conceived within this cultural site, particularly with respect to constructions of girls&rsquo; resistance. In the final part of the paper I show how girls&rsquo; resistance is complicated in postfeminist, neoliberal societies and I propose that education scholarship and practice must confront the ways in which girls&rsquo; resistance is bound up in their developing classed and raced identities

    Exploring girl power : gender, literacy and the textual practices of young women attending an elite school

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    Popular discourses concerning the relationship between gender and academic literacies have suggested that boys are lacking in particular, school-based literacy competencies compared with girls. Such discourses construct &ldquo;gender&rdquo; according to a binary framework and they obscure the way in which literacy and textual practices operate as a site in which gendered identities are constituted and negotiated by young people in multiple sites including schooling, which academic inquiry has often emphasized. In this paper I consider the school-based textual practices of young women attending an elite school, in order to explore how these practices construct &ldquo;femininities&rdquo;. Feminist education researchers have shown how young women negotiate discourses of feminine passivity and heterosexuality through their reading and writing practices. Yet discourses of girlhood and femininity have undergone important transformations in times of &lsquo;girl power&rsquo; in which young women are increasingly constructed as successful, autonomous and sexually agentic. Thus young women&rsquo;s reading and writing practices may well operate as a space in which new discourses around girlhood and femininity are constituted. Throughout the paper, I utilize the notion of &ldquo;performativity&rdquo;, understood through the work of Judith Butler, to show how textual practices variously inscribe and negotiate discourses of gender. Thus the importance of textual work in inscribing and challenging notions of gender is asserted. I argue that critical literacy is just as important, but perhaps no more guaranteed, within elite girls&rsquo; education as it is within boys&rsquo; education.<br /

    Little SAC River Watershed: Bacterial Source Tracking Analysis

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    Agricultural and Food Policy, Environmental Economics and Policy,

    Deleting the male gaze? Tech-savvy girls and new femininities in secondary school classrooms

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