Gender and leadership: factors influencing election into student representative council and implications for sustainable development

The underrepresentation of women in leadership positions is symptomatic of every known society, and this is a matter of concern, at least when considered in the context of the equal opportunities discourse. The present study investigated the influence of gender on access to leadership positions in t...

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Main Author: Gwirayi, Pesanayi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Journal of Social Development in Africa 2021
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Online Access:https://www.africabib.org/rec.php?RID=31614908X
https://jsd-africa.com/Jsda/V12No2_Spring2010_B/PDF/Gender%20and%20Leadership.pdf
http://hdl.handle.net/11408/4227
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author Gwirayi, Pesanayi
author_facet Gwirayi, Pesanayi
author_sort Gwirayi, Pesanayi
collection DSpace
description The underrepresentation of women in leadership positions is symptomatic of every known society, and this is a matter of concern, at least when considered in the context of the equal opportunities discourse. The present study investigated the influence of gender on access to leadership positions in the Student Representative Council (SRC) among final year student teachers at a college in the Harare province of Zimbabwe. The study established the criteria that student teachers used when electing a fellow student to take up a position of leadership in the SRC, and analysed the explanations the students gave for considering a position as being suitable for male or female students or both sexes. Ninety students (50 male and 40 female) participated in the survey. An open-ended questionnaire was used to gather both quantitative and qualitative data. The results suggest that students have gendered perceptions towards particular SRC positions. Thus, a male student was more likely to be elected to the positions of SRC president or secretary general, while a female student was more likely to be elected to the positions of catering officer or treasurer. This appeared to confirm the prevailing view that males tended to control dominant and influential positions in the structures. The study however, concludes that, gender deconstruction is not only desirable, but feasible. The paper makes recommendations aimed essentially at further promoting the discourse on equal opportunities.
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spelling ir-11408-42272022-06-27T13:49:06Z Gender and leadership: factors influencing election into student representative council and implications for sustainable development Gwirayi, Pesanayi Sex discrimination Gender roles The underrepresentation of women in leadership positions is symptomatic of every known society, and this is a matter of concern, at least when considered in the context of the equal opportunities discourse. The present study investigated the influence of gender on access to leadership positions in the Student Representative Council (SRC) among final year student teachers at a college in the Harare province of Zimbabwe. The study established the criteria that student teachers used when electing a fellow student to take up a position of leadership in the SRC, and analysed the explanations the students gave for considering a position as being suitable for male or female students or both sexes. Ninety students (50 male and 40 female) participated in the survey. An open-ended questionnaire was used to gather both quantitative and qualitative data. The results suggest that students have gendered perceptions towards particular SRC positions. Thus, a male student was more likely to be elected to the positions of SRC president or secretary general, while a female student was more likely to be elected to the positions of catering officer or treasurer. This appeared to confirm the prevailing view that males tended to control dominant and influential positions in the structures. The study however, concludes that, gender deconstruction is not only desirable, but feasible. The paper makes recommendations aimed essentially at further promoting the discourse on equal opportunities. 2021-05-21T09:54:20Z 2021-05-21T09:54:20Z 2007 Article 1012-1080 https://www.africabib.org/rec.php?RID=31614908X https://jsd-africa.com/Jsda/V12No2_Spring2010_B/PDF/Gender%20and%20Leadership.pdf http://hdl.handle.net/11408/4227 en Journal of Social Development in Africa;Vol. 22; No. 2: p. 137-155 open Journal of Social Development in Africa
spellingShingle Sex discrimination
Gender roles
Gwirayi, Pesanayi
Gender and leadership: factors influencing election into student representative council and implications for sustainable development
title Gender and leadership: factors influencing election into student representative council and implications for sustainable development
title_full Gender and leadership: factors influencing election into student representative council and implications for sustainable development
title_fullStr Gender and leadership: factors influencing election into student representative council and implications for sustainable development
title_full_unstemmed Gender and leadership: factors influencing election into student representative council and implications for sustainable development
title_short Gender and leadership: factors influencing election into student representative council and implications for sustainable development
title_sort gender and leadership: factors influencing election into student representative council and implications for sustainable development
topic Sex discrimination
Gender roles
url https://www.africabib.org/rec.php?RID=31614908X
https://jsd-africa.com/Jsda/V12No2_Spring2010_B/PDF/Gender%20and%20Leadership.pdf
http://hdl.handle.net/11408/4227
work_keys_str_mv AT gwirayipesanayi genderandleadershipfactorsinfluencingelectionintostudentrepresentativecouncilandimplicationsforsustainabledevelopment