Zimbabwean female participation in physics: the use of drawings in documenting students' images of scientists

The study investigated the Zimbabwean Advanced Level female adolescent students’ images of a scientist and the influence of female students perceived images on their participation in the subject. Three high schools that were offering physics at A’ level in the Midlands Province were targeted. Four f...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Gudyanga, Anna
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: LAR Centre Press 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.18533/rss.v2i1.74
http://hdl.handle.net/11408/3721
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1779905206914383872
author Gudyanga, Anna
author_facet Gudyanga, Anna
author_sort Gudyanga, Anna
collection DSpace
description The study investigated the Zimbabwean Advanced Level female adolescent students’ images of a scientist and the influence of female students perceived images on their participation in the subject. Three high schools that were offering physics at A’ level in the Midlands Province were targeted. Four female students eighteen years and above: three doing mathematics and physics and one doing physics without mathematics were purposively chosen. The data generating instruments were classroom observation and drawing. Findings show that two out of four female students drew stereotypical image of a male scientist and listed Eurocentric names of male scientists The other two female students, gave African names to the scientists that they drew and this may suggest that scientists are not only Eurocentric but can also be Afrocentric. Their diagrams might denote a positive physics perception which may have resulted in the construction of a positive identity formation regarding physics. The positive physics identity in turn may indicate that the female participants were more attuned to continue studying physics. However, the female students did not seem to perceive scientists as ordinary people but as famous inventive people they encountered in their science text books.This study also contributes to the strengthening of educational research in Zimbabwe, especially research aimed at emancipation of female students. The findings may create the need in heads of schools to sensitise academic staff on the gender dimensions of teaching and learning, which is an important first step towards the transformation of cultural perceptions in order to enable female students to realise their full potential.
format Article
id ir-11408-3721
institution My University
language English
publishDate 2019
publisher LAR Centre Press
record_format dspace
spelling ir-11408-37212022-06-27T13:49:06Z Zimbabwean female participation in physics: the use of drawings in documenting students' images of scientists Gudyanga, Anna Drawing Identity Formation Physics Identity Scientist. The study investigated the Zimbabwean Advanced Level female adolescent students’ images of a scientist and the influence of female students perceived images on their participation in the subject. Three high schools that were offering physics at A’ level in the Midlands Province were targeted. Four female students eighteen years and above: three doing mathematics and physics and one doing physics without mathematics were purposively chosen. The data generating instruments were classroom observation and drawing. Findings show that two out of four female students drew stereotypical image of a male scientist and listed Eurocentric names of male scientists The other two female students, gave African names to the scientists that they drew and this may suggest that scientists are not only Eurocentric but can also be Afrocentric. Their diagrams might denote a positive physics perception which may have resulted in the construction of a positive identity formation regarding physics. The positive physics identity in turn may indicate that the female participants were more attuned to continue studying physics. However, the female students did not seem to perceive scientists as ordinary people but as famous inventive people they encountered in their science text books.This study also contributes to the strengthening of educational research in Zimbabwe, especially research aimed at emancipation of female students. The findings may create the need in heads of schools to sensitise academic staff on the gender dimensions of teaching and learning, which is an important first step towards the transformation of cultural perceptions in order to enable female students to realise their full potential. 2019-10-01T07:45:56Z 2019-10-01T07:45:56Z 2017 Article 2378-8569 http://dx.doi.org/10.18533/rss.v2i1.74 http://hdl.handle.net/11408/3721 en Review of Social Sciences;Vol. 2; No. 1: p. 18-35 open LAR Centre Press
spellingShingle Drawing
Identity Formation
Physics Identity
Scientist.
Gudyanga, Anna
Zimbabwean female participation in physics: the use of drawings in documenting students' images of scientists
title Zimbabwean female participation in physics: the use of drawings in documenting students' images of scientists
title_full Zimbabwean female participation in physics: the use of drawings in documenting students' images of scientists
title_fullStr Zimbabwean female participation in physics: the use of drawings in documenting students' images of scientists
title_full_unstemmed Zimbabwean female participation in physics: the use of drawings in documenting students' images of scientists
title_short Zimbabwean female participation in physics: the use of drawings in documenting students' images of scientists
title_sort zimbabwean female participation in physics: the use of drawings in documenting students' images of scientists
topic Drawing
Identity Formation
Physics Identity
Scientist.
url http://dx.doi.org/10.18533/rss.v2i1.74
http://hdl.handle.net/11408/3721
work_keys_str_mv AT gudyangaanna zimbabweanfemaleparticipationinphysicstheuseofdrawingsindocumentingstudentsimagesofscientists