Publication Date
In 2025 | 9 |
Since 2024 | 190 |
Since 2021 (last 5 years) | 744 |
Since 2016 (last 10 years) | 1258 |
Since 2006 (last 20 years) | 1764 |
Descriptor
Foreign Countries | 1829 |
Gender Bias | 1829 |
Females | 810 |
Gender Differences | 509 |
Social Bias | 364 |
Equal Education | 323 |
Barriers | 301 |
Sex Stereotypes | 280 |
Gender Issues | 275 |
Cultural Influences | 271 |
Student Attitudes | 242 |
More ▼ |
Source
Author
Bhana, Deevia | 9 |
Keddie, Amanda | 9 |
O'Connor, Pat | 6 |
Hedlin, Maria | 5 |
Fitzgerald, Tanya | 4 |
Mills, Martin | 4 |
Morley, Louise | 4 |
Apostolov, Georgi | 3 |
Bhopal, Kalwant | 3 |
Blaise, Mindy | 3 |
Carvalho, Teresa | 3 |
More ▼ |
Publication Type
Education Level
Location
Australia | 171 |
Canada | 132 |
United Kingdom | 123 |
India | 103 |
Turkey | 96 |
United States | 84 |
South Africa | 80 |
China | 69 |
Sweden | 60 |
Spain | 57 |
United Kingdom (England) | 57 |
More ▼ |
Laws, Policies, & Programs
Assessments and Surveys
What Works Clearinghouse Rating
Farquhar, Sarah-Eve – Early Child Development and Care, 2008
The history of kiwi men's participation in paid early childcare and teaching work has not been documented to date. But what can be learned from the New Zealand experience may be helpful internationally in the movement towards greater male representation in early years work. This paper provides a brief recent history only, highlighting issues that…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Males, Preschool Teachers, Teacher Student Relationship
Opini, Bathseba M. – International Journal of Inclusive Education, 2008
This paper examines the strengths and limitations of the Ontarians with Disabilities Act (ODA) accessibility plan prepared by one post-secondary education institution in Ontario, Canada, during the 2004/05 academic year. The paper focuses on ways the intersectionality between disability and gender is not voiced in the plan and its implications for…
Descriptors: Disabilities, Foreign Countries, Gender Discrimination, Gender Bias
Kendrick, Maureen; Jones, Shelley – Canadian Journal of Education, 2008
This Ugandan-based study examined how visual modes of communication provide insights into girls' perceptions of literacy, and open broader dialogues on literacy, women, and development. Twenty-nine primary school girls used drawing and 15 secondary school girls used photography to depict local literacy practices in relation to their own lives and…
Descriptors: Photography, Females, Visual Perception, Rural Areas
Fenwick, Tara – Adult Education Quarterly: A Journal of Research and Theory, 2008
This article explores processes and possibilities for critical learning in the workplace, with a focus on workers laboring in what are often exploitive and dehumanizing conditions. The argument is based on a study of work-life learning of women, mostly new immigrants, employed long-term at an Alberta garment manufacturing plant. It is argued that…
Descriptors: Industry, Females, Manufacturing, Foreign Countries
Fitzgerald, Tanya – Journal of Educational Administration and History, 2007
The historiography of women's higher education has almost exclusively charted women's admission to universities, institutional responses to increasing numbers of women students and women's struggles to claim a presence as academics and administrators. Less attention has however been paid to the history and agency of women professors who were…
Descriptors: Women Faculty, Females, Foreign Countries, College Faculty
Xiao, Hui – ProQuest LLC, 2009
This project stands at the juncture of modern Chinese literature, post-socialist studies, cultural history of divorce, and critical studies about global middle-class cultures. Employing analytical tools mainly from literary studies, cultural studies and feminist theories, I examine stories, novels, films and TV dramas about divorce produced…
Descriptors: Divorce, Foreign Countries, Television, Films
Rankin, Bruce H.; Aytac, Isik A. – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2008
Previous research highlights the continuing relevance of family culture in explaining educational inequalities in Turkey, especially patriarchal beliefs and practices that discourage investment in the education of girls. We extend that research by introducing two much-debated, but empirically untested, aspects of family culture--parental…
Descriptors: Equal Education, Females, Family Life, Educational Attainment
Kniveton, Bromley H. – Journal of European Industrial Training, 2008
Purpose: The aim of this paper is to investigate whether those involved with recruitment/selection (RS) react differently towards male and female trainee managers. Design/methodology/approach: Measures of the perceptions towards trainee managers were collected from 440 managers and professionals involved in recruitment/selection (RS). Findings: It…
Descriptors: Women Administrators, Trainees, Gender Differences, Gender Bias
Boeckmann, Robert J.; Feather, N. T. – Psychology of Women Quarterly, 2007
Views of a selection committee's decision to promote a woman over a man on the basis of affirmative action were studied in a random sample of Australians (118 men and 111 women). The relations between perceptions of workplace gender discrimination, feelings of collective responsibility and guilt for discrimination, and judgments of entitlement to…
Descriptors: Gender Bias, Females, Justice, Gender Differences
Malzer, Maris; Popovic, Milica; Striedinger, Angelika; Bjorklund, Karin; Olsson, Anna-Clara; Elstad, Linda; Brus, Sanja; Stark, Kat; Stojanovic, Marko; Scholz, Christine – European Students' Union (NJ1), 2009
"Tolerance is not enough, discrimination must be fought" is what ESU staff stated in their Seminar on Equality in London, last May. Following their seminar, they decided to provide members with more practical tools to fight discrimination in higher education. This handbook aims at as part of that strategy. Focusing on several issues that…
Descriptors: Equal Education, Immigrants, Best Practices, Sexual Orientation
Ohan, Jeneva L.; Visser, Troy A. W. – Journal of Clinical Child and Adolescent Psychology, 2009
This study addressed why girls are less likely to be referred for mental health services for attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) than boys. Ninety-six parents of children with elevated ADHD symptoms and 140 elementary school teachers read vignettes about children with ADHD. Half of the participants read vignettes with boys' names, and…
Descriptors: Health Services, Females, Mental Health Programs, Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder
Blumberg, Rae Lesser – Prospects: Quarterly Review of Comparative Education, 2008
Gender bias in textbooks (GBIT) is a low-profile education issue, given the 72,000,000 children who still have no access to schooling, but this article argues that GBIT is: (1) an important, (2) near-universal, (3) remarkably uniform, (4) quite persistent but (5) virtually invisible obstacle on the road to gender equality in education--an obstacle…
Descriptors: Equal Education, Foreign Countries, Case Studies, Gender Bias
Lawoko, Stephen – Journal of Interpersonal Violence, 2008
Attitudes toward intimate partner violence (IPV) were compared between Zambian and Kenyan men on sociodemographic, attitudinal, and structural predictors of such attitudes. Data were retrieved from the latest Demographic and Health Surveys in each country. The results showed that many men in Zambia (71%) and Kenya (68%) justified IPV to punish a…
Descriptors: Family Violence, Access to Information, Foreign Countries, Comparative Analysis
Miyajima, Tomomi – Journal of Education for Teaching: International Research and Pedagogy, 2008
This study explores gender inequality in the occupational culture of Japanese high school teachers with special focus on women teachers' resistance to gender-biased practices. It examines the effectiveness of official and informal teacher training programmes in raising awareness of gender issues. Through an ethnographic case study conducted in…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Gender Bias, Work Environment, Organizational Culture
Srimulyani, Eka – Asia Pacific Journal of Education, 2007
The "pondok pesantren" education is a "traditional" form of Muslim education in Indonesia. This boarding school system can be traced back to the 18th century or further. However, it was not until 1930 that the "pesantren" officially admitted female students, beginning with the Pesantren Denanyar of Jombang. The…
Descriptors: Muslims, Females, Boarding Schools, Educational Quality