Promoting Gender Equality |
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5 latest newsSweden ends the use of preferential treatment![]() Gender will no longer count when students are admitted to Swedish universities and university colleges. Sweden’s Minister for Higher Education and Research Tobias Krantz says that preferential treatment based on gender has hit talented female students especially hard. (13.08.2010) Read moreGender equality efforts yield results![]() Four of the five women who took part in the promotion course at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU) in 2008 were promoted to full professor this year. May Thorseth is one of them. (18.06.2010) Read moreA call for binding measures![]() Luisa Prista of the European Commission does not want to “fix” female researchers. It is the institutions and research system that need to be changed, she believes. Her goal is that the Member States will be mobilized to care about gender equality in research. (19.05.2010) Read moreHave women scored a knockout over men?![]() Women are taking over the universities, according to the newspapers. But just because the majority of students are women, does this necessarily mean that women will eventually dominate the academic disciplines? (29.04.2010) Read moreFrom no women to balance![]() In just a few short years, they saw the number of women in permanent academic positions go from zero to four. Three of them are now professors. “We needed to strengthen our department and realized that the measures established by the central administration held great potential,” explains Jan-Eirik Angell Killie of the Norwegian College of Fishery Science. (21.04.2010) Read more |
Unsuccessful strategyAll the fuss about recruitment destroys young women’s interest in natural science, according to educational researcher Guðrún Jónsdóttir. We should ask ourselves what is wrong with natural science education when the students who usually are considered to be the ’winners’ at school – middle-class girls – choose not to take it, according to researcher Guðrún Jónsdóttir. (Photo: Istockphoto)“I would say that you need to know how nature works because it is rather important to understand. What you are and why you are alive. Why you are a human being.” “Science for me”“How they have produced a pill that prevents you from getting pregnant – that is interesting. It’s things like that I find interesting in natural science. It has to do with me. It is for me, science for me.” Help to sort through the information?“I’m the kind of person who believes everything I read [laughter], but lately I’ve found that not everything is correct...you can’t believe everything you read,” says “Lea”, another of Jónsdóttir’s informants. Guðrún Jónsdóttir (Photo: Kristin Engh Førde)Several of the young women say they have little faith in the information they get from the media and elsewhere about dangers and risks. They complain especially about the conflicting opinions of politicians and experts regarding what is dangerous and what is healthy. They get no help with this in their natural science classes,” according to Jónsdóttir. Autonomous individualsWhen the young women cannot know something for certain, they doubt their own ability to make independent assessments and choices, and they think it is important for all people to have this type of independence. Jónsdóttir believes that the young women’s ideals are similar to what Kant calls autonomy, which is a prerequisite for self-formation of the individual. Perspective on self-formation of the individual gets lost“I wish I were more interested in natural science, such as chemistry, physics and biology, but at this point it seems completely hopeless. Just incredibly boring with lots of reports and papers and such that I think are totally ridiculous. But then we have those mathematics and natural science points hanging there like a carrot.” Revolt against pressure?In general, Jónsdóttir believes there is too much focus on why young women make the “wrong” choice. Translated by Connie Stultz. |
Doctoral dissertationJónsdóttir, Guðrún: Dubito ergo sum? Ni jenter møter naturfaglig kunnskap. (Dubito ergo sum? Nine young women’s encounter with knowledge about natural science.) University of Bergen, 2009. |
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