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Cousins, Andrew; Mills, Martin – Cambridge Journal of Education, 2015
This paper reports on research undertaken in a middle-class Australian school. The focus of the research was on the relationship between gender and students' engagement with high school chemistry. Achievement data from many OECD [Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development] countries suggest that middle-class girls are achieving equally…
Descriptors: Gender Differences, High School Students, Chemistry, Learner Engagement
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Lingard, Bob; Martino, Wayne; Mills, Martin – International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education (QSE), 2013
In this paper, we draw on pro-feminist, anti-essentialist espistemological and theoretical frameworks, in conjunction with adopting autoethnographic narratives, both to provide critical insight into and contextualize the particular testimony and witnessing of our own personal involvement in the gendering of a government-commissioned research…
Descriptors: Masculinity, Politics, Feminism, Epistemology
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Johannesson, Ingolfur Asgeir; Lingard, Bob; Mills, Martin – Scandinavian Journal of Educational Research, 2009
Recognising that there is now a globalised educational discourse about "failing boys" circulating in the privileged nations of the global north, this article provides a comparative perspective on educational policy responses to the "boy turn" in Australia and Iceland. Specificities of the responses to the boy turn in the two…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Federal Government, Educational Policy, Males
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Martino, Wayne; Lingard, Bob; Mills, Martin – Gender and Education, 2004
This paper explores the effects of specific teacher threshold knowledges about boys and gender on the implementation of a so-called 'boy friendly' curriculum at one junior secondary high school in Australia. Through semi-structured interviews with selected staff at the school, it examines the normalizing assumptions and 'truth claims' about boys,…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Secondary Education, Teacher Characteristics, Curriculum Development