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Girls and physics: the role of culture and pedagogies in widening
participation for girls in the physical sciences
“Why is it I can do hours of physics revision and still not know a thing, but when I read heat I
memorise everything? You couldn’t print a story about radiation or electromagnetic waves, could
you?”
Lucy, Staffordshire
(Heat magazine, 27 March 2010, p 56)
“The eye that directs a needle in the delicate meshes of embroidery will equally well bisect a star
with the spider web of the micrometer”
Maria Mitchell (1818 - 1889)
Astronomer and mathematician
Introduction
In this essay I set out to discuss the relationship between women and physics. Women are
notoriously underrepresented in physics (and science as a whole) Murphy and Whitelegg (2006). Out
of all the sciences, physics has the lowest participation rate for women and in addition, those that do
participate often leave (Barbosa, 2003). Hazari and Potvin (2005) reproduce a graph which shows a
decline in the percentage of women participating in physics in the United States, from just above
45% at high school to around 20% at undergraduate level and then around 5% at full professor level.
In Sweden, 6% of professors of physics in are women and parti cipation rates by women in physics at
undergraduate level ranges from between 20 to 35% (Danielsson and Linder, 2009).
I was curious about the low participation rates and wanted to investigate the reasons for them. I
was also curious about feminism and the nature of science as both had been issues that I had
wondered about if I should think and more know more about. In fact, until I started writing this
essay and studying SEH806 I had not even considered the difference between biological sex and
gender, to me the two were the same. I did not understand that ‘gender’ was a social construct and
that by some gender could be considered a culture with its own sets of practices (Danielsson and
Linder, 2009).
Hazari and Potvin (2005) mention three ‘viewpoints’ that could account for low participation rates
for girls/females in physics. These were:
Inherent differences – there are biological differences between males and females that
make females less likely to study physics
Socialised differences – girls learn not to want to study physics.
Cultural bias – which brings the two above together because it “focuses on problems in the
community of physics that causes females to lose interest or opt out…”
This essay chose to focus on the last and in particular considers: how might the culture of physics
dissuade women from participating in physics?
The two quotes at the head of the essay, although separated by over 100 years, perhaps hint at the
issue of culture as being one of the reasons why girls/women are underrepresented in physics. Lucy
is obviously what we might call a ‘normal’ teenage girl. She reads Heat magazine. Heat is a weekly
publication whose main preoccupations are celebrity gossip and fashion, both subjects we would
expect many teenage girls and women to be interested in. Both subjects are firmly embedded into
what we might call ‘female/teenage’ culture. Lucy realises, however, that she finds it more difficult
to remember physics information than what is or is not in vogue and tongue in cheek asks the
magazine to include some physics information that might help her revision. Maria Mitchell also
speaks about a subject that was part of ‘female’ culture in the 1800s that being needlework and also
what was not part of a female culture, astronomy. Her quote tries to bridge the gap between what
is ‘female’ and what is not by emphasising that the skills required in both are of equal importance,
the same or very transferable.
Many things contribute to the establishment and maintenance of a culture, including traditions,
members of the culture and their practices, so I attempted to look at how to determine what the
gender of a ‘physics’ culture was by drawing on writings about gender and science both in the past
and in the present. There was very little material dealing with the culture of physics and given that
there was more material about gender and science I have used a good deal of that to support my
discussions. Does science have a gender? And if so, does physics? How does this ‘gender’ influence
the nature of science practice? Is there an impact of gender, either in terms of taking a feminist
viewpoint or being female, on the type of investigations that are performed in science? Does that
then impact on knowledge?
The perceptions of scientists by the public were also discussed in order to explore the idea that a
culture’s membership may also affect whether outsiders feel that they would be able to participate
in that culture. Do the perceived members of the ‘science culture’ dissuade women from
participating in it?
The culture of physics many women will be exposed to that will determine their future participation
in the subject will be that presented to them in educational contexts. Therefore, how physics is
taught to them is particularly important and in that context I discuss two disparate learning theories
and pedagogies. Do girls/women learn in a different way to men and if so how? What is the
dominant learning theory in operation at present? Does it encourage women to participate in
physics?
The readings and discussions that comprised Block Two of SEH806 were particularly important in this
regard. The two learning theories I looked were; the transmission model of learning and situated
cognition. The former is sometimes identified as being a ‘masculine’ pedagogy and the latter has
been identified by several writers (e.g. Brickhouse, (2001), Murphy and Whitelegg (2006), Danielsson
and Linder,(2009)), as being an appropriate feminist pedagogy. Situated cognition was particularly
interesting because it potentially united the two themes explored in the essay: culture and
pedagogy, as well as involving the concept of ‘identity’ in relation to memberships of cultures which
I discuss briefly.
I have used the term ‘culture’ rather than community because I wanted to discuss historical
influences that might influence the knowledge and practices of science, and I felt that ‘culture’
better represented this holistic view. However it is fair to say that ‘community’ as it is understood in
the social sciences could be used interchangeably with culture in many contexts.
It should also be recognised that the members of the female gender are themselves extremely
diverse. I realise I have taken a very general view of my own gender and this should be borne i n
mind when reading the essay.
(Introduction:997 words)
Approach
This essay has taken the form of a literature review and I used a variety of methods to track down
information. I had decided that I wanted to write an essay on girls and physics, so I started by
entering “girls and physics” into the Google search engine. This identified Murphy and Whitelegg’s
(2006) very thorough review of literature and I understood that it would be an excellent source for
references - even though the review itself presented challenges to me. It was so thorough itself
that I was worried that I would merely write an essay that would paraphrase that review. However,
as I undertook my reading I found that I could construct an essay that was my own voice because I
had become interested in cultures and pedagogy and I chose to pursue that line of enquiry rather
than produce an essay that merely detailed why females did not participate in physics. I also find
the Google search engine a very good source for more generic information, it was through Google
that I came across Fox-Keller’s and Barr and Birke’s books. By also entering “What is a Physics
culture” into Google I came across Danielsson and Linder (2009) and their very recent work which
also linked back to Brickhouse’s work on situated cognition.
I took the view that I wanted to explore what was interesting to me, so I did not consciously decide
that I would concentrate on using course material, although the course material was also very useful
for finding references of interest and several references were useful when I was discussing the
nature of science.
I probably rely far too much on Google as a way of finding information. However, I was very strict
about what sources of information I used in the essay. I avoided i nformation that was presented in
websites I was not familiar with and I preferred to track down information when it came from an
established academic journal, particularly if a subscription for the journal was held by the Open
University library.
I also used personal correspondence in one instance as I was having trouble tracking down a
definition of a male pedagogy. My source was very credible, having substantial experience in the
scholarship of teaching and learning and also being a science teacher in a University herself. I also
relied on personal observation for the claim that the transmission method is the predominate
method of teaching and learning in action. Although I have not made a systematic study of the use
of the transmission model, every academic (around 20) I have asked in the past year has confirmed
its dominance in our Universities. As I come into contact with senior academics who have strategic
responsibility for teaching and learning in Universities I consider them a good source.
The heat reference I found while taking a break from writing the essay and sitting down with a cup
of coffee and some chocolate. It was a serendipitous moment, it bridged two cultures and I make no
apologies for using it.
(Approach: 507 words)
Discussion
The gender of science
Science has a culture of its own that any individual have to join, live in and contribute to and as such
has its own defining features. As the subject of this essay is women and physics I focused on the
attributes of science culture that are connected with gender and I have focused on (i) the nature of
science and how scientific knowledge is perceived to be constructed including discussion about how
objectivity and subjectivity are perceived as being related to science, (ii) how gender may have
altered the ‘reality’ of scientific knowledge and (iii) views of the membership of those in science
culture.
(i) Gender and the nature of science and how scientific knowledge is constructed: objectivity and
subjectivity
The nature of science was explored in the SEH806 reading “What is science?: Teaching Science in
Secondary Schools” (Reiss, 2002). Reiss is concerned with science as taught at school and he argues
that in that context, science is often presented as immutable, universal and acultural. Science then
is seen by many people, including scientists, as being about ”scientists discovering eternal truths that
exist independently of them and of the cultural context in which these discoveries are made.” (p.4).
Science is then objective and not subjective; that is, removed from the individual and not subject to
social or cultural factors.
Fox-Keller (1996 p.6-7) also notes that there is a "deeply rooted popular mythology that casts
objectivity, reason, and mind as male, and subjectivity, feeling, and nature as female." Fox-Keller
writes very detailed accounts about the history of gender in science in her book “Reflections on
Gender and Science” most of which is too detailed to explore in this essay, but she postulates that
that a division between male/female, objectivity/subjectivity, reason/emotion in culture in general
seemed to happen at the time of the Enlightenment (Chapter 3) with the rational/male/objective
attributes identified firmly within ‘science’ and the emotional/female/subjective located outside
science.
Brick house (2001) also lays the blame for these dualistic definitions of ‘science’ and ‘not -science’
firmly at the door of the Enlightenment. Both Brickhouse and Fox-Keller argue convincingly that
‘’objective’ and ‘subjective’ as understood in this context, as part of the definition of the nature of
science, should be re-merged. As a model for achieving this, Brickhouse (2001) cites Harding's
(1991) 'theory' of strong objectivity which states 'we need an objectivity that is understood as part
of the natural and social worlds and therefore also accountable to them'. I.e. science is neither
objective or subjective, there is no split between the two and that good science would involve both
in a “strong objectivity”. In other words, when considering the nature of science knowledge one
should realise that it is partly objective (situated in the natural world) and partly subjective (situated
in the social world) i.e. there is no science knowledge that transcends culture and gender.
Hodson, (1998) explores the need for a more personalised science, one in which scientific knowledge
is built as part of social enterprise, through a ‘community’ and therefore links objectivity and
subjectivity:” If one takes the view that science is a communal activity, and that the ideas of
particular scientists only become accepted as scientific knowledge when they achieve consensus
within the community of scientists, it follows that many of the sociological, psychological, political
and economic issues that influence individuals could, and sometimes will, influence the decisions
that the community makes.” (p.16)
This historical separation of objective and subjective also has had consequences for how scientific
knowledge has become situated in science education. The knowledge itself is removed from any
kind of human or social context and presented almost as a self -contained package – it is made
abstract. Barr and Birke (1998) speak about the rise of abstraction in science education in their book
"Common Science? Women, Science and Knowledge" on page 28 and suggest "It taught a particular
kind of science, divorced from people's needs and minds."
Bruner (1996) also argues that there has been a divorce between human narratives and science
which has meant “logical-scientific thinking” has permeated science education. Bruner states “...it is
no secret that for many of the young now in school, ‘science’ has come to seem ‘inhuman’ and
‘uncaring’ and ‘off-putting’” He goes onto to say “The image of science as a human and cultural
undertaking might be improved if it were also conceived as a history of human beings overcoming
received ideas- whether Lavosier overcoming the dogma of phlogiston, Darwin rethinking
respectable creationism, or Freud daring to look under the smug surface of our self-satisfaction. We
may have erred in divorcing science from the narrative of culture. ” (Bruner, 1996, p.42) .
(ii) Gender effects and the ‘reality’ of scientific knowledge
In addition, to the separation of knowledge from context, there have also been studies that have
looked at how the ‘reality’ of scientific knowledge may have been changed as result of feminist or
female interventions. Fox-Keller (2004) ponders the impact feminism may have had on science
knowledge. She notes that in terms of participation in science in North America, that there had been
increases in the percentage of doctorates awarded to women in the natural sciences over the
previous 30 years. An increase had also been reflected in the numbers of profe ssorships now held by
women in the natural sciences (page 7). However, in the rest of the paper she describes cultural
feminist shifts in biological knowledge that were realised because a different perspective was used
to investigate particular subjects in reproductive and evolutionary biology, i.e. the researchers
discovered new findings about science “because they went looking for them" page 8. These involved
the importance of females or objects attributed to females i.e. ova in fertilisation, the sexual
behaviour of female animals. Fox-Keller suggests that the very accuracy of science knowledge may
have been compromised in the past by an overly masculine viewpoint which had been cultured out
of historical tradition and transmitted to scientists in the present.
Similarly, Fox-Keller (1986) page 139 chapter 7, speculates whether quantum mechanics can
adequately describe the nature of reality and that it may suffer from the same gender constraints as
exhibited around the role of the ova in fertilisation.
This illustrates how practice influenced by culture and historical tradition can influence the nature of
knowledge. This knowledge then percolates back into the culture and reinforces its cultural
traditions. If the knowledge created by the culture is not "female friendly" then why would females
be attracted to it? As Fox-Keller(1996 p. 11) says about Boyle’s Law, but equally relevant here
“Judgement about which phenomena are worth studying, which kinds of data are significant -as well
as which descriptions (or theories) of those phenomena and most adequate, satisfying, useful, and
even reliable - depend critically on the social, linguistic, unscientific practices of those making the
judgement in question” and this will include their gender.
(iii) Views of scientists: the members of the science culture
Members of a culture are as important to culture as historical traditions. It is also through the
actions of its members that cultures are defined. It follows then that the perceptions of what kinds
of people are members of that culture may influence whether those outside will wish to join it.
What do women think of scientists and how might that impact on their perception of science
culture?
In order to investigate the images of scientists that women might hold, Barr and Birke (1998 p. 29)
asked 120 women about their images of scientists. The responses they received could be matched
to six stereotypes of scientists previously identified by another researcher plus one extra that had
been identified by Barr and Birke. These were:
The mad scientist pursuing their work obsessively with no care for social consequences
The absent minded professor with little or no social skills
The emotionless scientist who values reason over emotion
The adventurer scientist pursuing glory and exploration
The helpless (and therefore inadequate) scientist whose experiments go out of control
The idealist scientist in search of a ‘scientific utopia’
The elitist scientist ‘motivated to maintain his/her place in social hierarchies’ and speaks in a
language that those outside the elite cannot understand.
Barr and Birke stress that although these are stereotypes that did not matter. What did matter was
“...the persistence of these images and their general negativity.” (p.30) Even those stereotypes with
more positive connotations, the adventurer and the idealist were identified by relativity few women
who took part in the study.
More recently in 2003, Sir Christopher Frayling undertook an exercise with schoolchildren to ‘draw a
scientist’. This was a similar exercise that had been undertaken almost 40 years before by the
educationalist Dwain Chambers. The results were as Frayling put it “depressing” , he says “...more
than half of the results featured buttoned lab coats with pockets containing pencils, pens or test
tubes; spectacles, mouth open and uneven teeth; frizzy, spiky/tufty hair or bald head; arms wide
open with each hand clutching a bubbling or smoking test tube, or in some cases a syringe.” At least
girls “... drew smiling scientists more often than the boys”, and Frayling notes that the numbers of
girls drawing female scientists had risen from 1.4% in the earlier to approximately 50%. (Frayling,
2006).
A trend can be seen from both these studies. This that scientists are seen as removed from society,
different and eccentric.
Pedagogy
The culture of physics many women will be exposed to that will determine their future participation
in the subject will be that presented to them in educational contexts. Therefore, how physics is
taught to them is particularly important and in that context I discuss two disparate learning theories
and pedagogies. Do girls/women learn in a different way to men and if so how? What is the
dominant learning theory in operation at present? Does it encourage women to participate in
physics?
Hazari and Potvin (2005) argue that any cultural bias of physics will be transmitted through three
routes, one of these being via pedagogy. They say “The cultural bias of physics is transmitted in
three ways: pedagogically, by transmitting a narrow message about what it means to do physics
rather than allowing for individuals to define it for themselves; academically by defining what is
acceptable physics research and what is not… and socially, through the structure, interactions and
treatment in the field”. I have dealt with some aspects of the last two in the previous section where
I discussed that physics culture is partly presented in terms of: the nature of the physics knowledge
and the views women will have of members of the physics cultures, physicists themselves. In this
section I will attempt to illustrate how the pedagogical treatment of physics, influenced by its
culture, may have impeded female participation in physics.
Gender and learning styles
Head (1996) investigated differences in learning styles between males and females and summarised
what he thought these were as oppositional pairs:
Males extract information (i.e. remove it from context) and females embed information (i.e.
relate it to other knowledge)
Males are more impulsive and willing to take risks, females are more cautious and reflective.
This is also reflected in the work of Danielsson and Linder (2009) who noted that male
students tend to launch themselves into experiments and tinker with equipment whereas
females tend to read the instructions and take more care before they start experimental
work (Danielsson and Linder, 2009)
Self-value – males tend to blame failure on external factors but attribute success to
themselves, girls do the opposite
Males tend to compete whereas females tend to co-operate.
These differences have implications for how physics could be taught and assessed. For example, it is
thought that multiple choice questions (MCQs) favour males because the tests use the extraction of
information model. This can be circumvented by devising MCQs that are complex and more than
straight forward identification of the correct answer. Classroom activities could be designed to
avoid competitive activities and encourage co-operation. (Head, 1996).
Stadler et al (2000) investigated the different learning styles of boys and girls who were studying
physics. They found that boys were more likely to find meaning and understanding of physics within
the bounds of the subject, whereas girls were more likely to seek understanding of physics by
attempting to relate the knowledge in a wider context. In other words “..boys appear to be more
interested in the internal coherence of physics (and technology) whereas the girls tend to look for an
external coherence...” (p.420). Murphy and Whitelegg (2006 p.4) also noted that, girls tended to
need to see the relevance of physics to themselves and the things that concern them more than
boys did. It should be noted that both these studies describe ‘tendencies’ and indeed Murphy and
Whitelegg (2006 p. 14) do specify that for some boys the abstraction of knowledge is not seen as an
issue and in some cases is considered as a challenge. However, it would seem that abstraction of
knowledge from context in course material would appear in general to favour the learning styles of
boys rather than that of girls. How does this relate to the way physics is taught and learnt and is this
gendered?
‘Male’ and ‘female’ pedagogies
An attempt was made to find a definition of a male pedagogy with little success. When one
undertakes a search using “Google” very little useful information emerges about a male pedagogy,
although feminist pedagogies abound. After such a search, this one quote was found in the College
English journal, in a paper which was detailing an academic discourse in relation to another paper.
The quote says “Let's identify a masculine pedagogy as any strategy which positions the teacher as
the center of authority in the classroom. At this center, the teacher knows the "truth" in a positivistic
sense. Her duty is to some-how give her students this "truth." In this framework, lectures are an
ideal way of transmitting large bodies of information to the awaiting students.” Ewald (1992) p.354.
In addition, a science lecturer colleague in correspondence came up with the following definition
“Male pedagogy relies on the notion that the lecturer is central to a teaching experience and the
students are (a) peripheral to the experience and (b) subordinate to the experience”. (Tierney,
2010, personal correspondence).
Murphy et al (2008 p.16) offer “a set of characteristics of a transmission model of teaching and
learning”, which connect the transmission model to the masculine pedagogies above. These
characteristics include the teacher being the authority that transmits knowledge with the student
being the passive receiver. The knowledge that is transmitted is entirely objective and therefore
outside and independent of the social, cultural and gender context of the learner. These
characteristics are also clearly resonant with the historical definitions of the cultures of science and
physics described in the previous section.
In my previous section, I argue that the separation of objectivity/subjectivity has resulted in the
separation of knowledge from context, i.e. science knowledge has become increasingly abstracted.
Barr and Birke (1998) also directly attribute abstraction to the transmission model of learning where
the learner is "a passive recipient of knowledge" (p.28). Coupled with the observations above
regarding males tending to extract knowledge (and therefore being able to cope with the abstract) it
would seem reasonable to assume that the transmission model may favour males over females.
Unfortunately, in many aspects of education (particularly higher education) the transmission model
is still the pre-dominant model of teaching (personal experience) and it can be considered a
masculine pedagogy.
Brickhouse (2001) sets out a strong argument for taking up ‘situated cognition’ as a suitable fe minist
pedagogy. She states that there are commonalities between feminist epistemologies and situated
cognition as both counteract the dualistic schism of knowledge and context encouraged by the
Enlightenment. Situated cognition does not assign special contexts for learning, learning happens all
the time in many different contexts. “Learning is happening all the time – whenever a person
engages in activity in the world. Learning is unavoidable. It is what is required in the process of
becoming a person” (p.286). Just by existing and interacting with the world, the person learns.
More importantly in terms of knowledge, situated cognition argues that knowledge is not abstracted
from the learner but constructed by the learner locally, individually and socially - “Knowledge,
including scientific knowledge is not merely influenced by its context, it is co-constitutive of
context”. (Brickhouse, p 285). This would seem to be the antithesis of the abstract and objective
way knowledge is presented in the transmission model. The learner is situated at the centre of their
own learning; if learning happens all the time the emphasis on the teacher as being the source and
authority for knowledge is diminished. This is consistent with the pedagogies that feminists have
sought to develop (Brickhouse, p. 283).
Another important characteristic of the situated cognition theory is its emphasis on learner identity
and how identity can be transformed by learning. Additionally, situated cognitists believe that
“Learning is not merely a matter of acquiring knowledge, it is a matter of deciding what kind of
person you are and want to be and engaging in those activities that make one part of the relevant
communities” (Brickhouse, 2009 emphasis mine). In other words, joining a new community (or
culture) might require a change in personal identity or at least, might require that a comparison be
made between self and the community in question to ascertain the degree of ‘fit’. If so, this would
have consequences for women who may find the masculine culture of physics offputting.
Brickhouse’s article is fundamentally a theoretical one and how the integration of situated cognition
and gender theory can actually be achieved in practice is not developed by her. However, Danielsson
and Linder (2009) suggests a way of doing this by merging situated cognition and post-structural
gender identity into a conceptual framework. This framework uses data obtained from student
undergoing physics laboratory work to theorise that gender identity is an active process that
changes as the student develops their ‘emerging physicist identity’. Danielsson and Linder treat
both genders, masculine and feminine as being ‘communities of practice’ in similar ways as physics
can be considered a community of practice. When students start to learn physics they in effect join
a community (or culture) and in order to succeed in that community (or even just become a
member), they must learn the community's rules and adapt themselves to them, perhaps develop a
‘physics identity’.
Danielsson and Linder (2009) went on to explore the idea of women having a ‘physics identity’ they
found the women they interviewed often saw themselves as not participating in "traditional
femininity". They often saw themselves as one of the boys or as ‘tomboys’. This could be seen as a
sacrifice between the conflicting demands of two cultures – ‘traditional feminine’ on one hand and
‘physics’ on the other. Danielsson says “This positioning as a non--participation in a traditional
femininity is common to many women within science and technology; they tend to explain their
presence in such a masculine subject by constructing themselves as different from other women,
i.e., as "being one of the boys -- as participating in a masculinity". In other words, participation in
physics may require some a kind of femininity that has masculine aspects.
(Discussion: 3,220 words)
Conclusion
This essay has sought to examine the role of culture and pedagogy as reasons for the low
participation rate of women in physics. I have looked at culture from a variety of viewpoints; these
being the nature of science and knowledge, perceptions of the members of the physics culture and
pedagogy. For me there is one uniting theme through all of these viewpoints; that is physics seems
to attract a process that acts to exclude it and those that participate from what are perceived to be
the main human cultures and activities. Physics (and indeed science) itself in the nature in which it is
constructed, practiced and taught is exclusive. It is through this process that I believe women are
particularly marginalised from physics, although I would also argue that this process also acts to
marginalise some men from physics as well.
There is a serious message underpinning the potential for schoolchildren to cause hilarity in their
depictions of scientists (Frayling 2006). Scientists are still being perceived as ‘outsiders’ to
mainstream culture, as being different, removed, non-social and sometimes not even human or
showing humanity. In a way, we see a mirror process with images of scientists that we do with
science knowledge, it is almost like there is a view there that society has been removed from
scientists and science (or vica versa), and that scientists are also not people, not normal, warm,
compassionate human beings. Pehaps it is time we “put people back into science” (Hodson, 1998
p.20). Hodson argues passionately “I want the curriculum to show students that these people
(scientists) can be warm, sensitive, humorous and passionate. More importantly, I want them to
realize that people who are warm, sensitive, humorous and passionate can still become scientists,
though they are required to conduct their work in accordance with codes of practice established,
scrutinized and maintained by the community of scientists.” Hodson (1998) p. 20.
As noted above the nature of science has long been projected as being objective and somehow
removed from experience. This emphasis on objectivity, the removal of knowledge from context
suggest that physics as it is presently practiced has what would be termed in sociological circles as
having a ‘masculine’ gender.
The dominant pedagogy in operation at the moment, the transmission model, treats the learner as
relatively unimportant in the learning process as well as encouraging the abstraction of knowledge
from context. This method seems to suit some males (but not all) and does not particularly support
female learning processes either. Social cognition learning theories, aim to situate knowledge in
the context of the learner, because it places the learner at the centre of their own learning process
and therefore encourages the learner to make their own meaning of knowledge. As observations
show (Head (1996), Murphy and Whitelegg (2006)) this pedagogy may better suit women because it
might allow them to value their own experiences and make sense of what they are learning through
their own processes. It could also be argued that situated cognition may also benefit those male
students who may struggle with abstracted knowledge.
It is easy to see, that women might not relate themselves as being potential members of the physics
culture, not only is it taught in a manner that they tend not to relate to, it has also expressed
scientific knowledge in ways that do not appear to value females from any species or those things in
science that are attributed to the feminine i.e. ova and female role in sexual activity (Fox-Keller,
2004).It is also a culture that has a high percentage of male participation and that also values ‘male’
characteristics such as ‘objectivity’, competiveness over so-called ‘female’ characteristics such as
‘subjectivity’ and collaboration. There is also some evidence that women experience discrimination
in the physics workplace and negative attitudes about their presence (Ivie and Guo (2006)). Women
who do participate in physics may have to undergo some reconciliation between their female
cultural identities with the cultural identity they perceive exists for physics, e.g., the women perceive
themselves as not being like ‘other’ women, they are ‘tomboys’ or ‘one of the boys’. (Danielsson
(2009)) It may then follow is the case then that those women who see themselves as belonging to
traditional feminine communities cannot reconcile enough to take part in the physics community.
I approached this essay with a fairly neutral attitude about feminism and in many ways I have had to
re-position my own thoughts as I read deeper into the subjects of gender, f eminism and culture.
However, it seems to me on reading much of this material that the notions of feminising cultures or
a feminist culture are just more realistic views or perceptions of how humans as a whole learn and
participate in the various cultures in their lives. I wonder if labelling these ideas as "feminist"
creations alienates many people in the science community from embracing these ideas in a similar
way to how science may alienate women. The situation is a serious one, the culture of physics w ill
not change if those responsible for setting research agendas, designing curricula, devising pedagogic
strategies, teaching future physicists and hiring academics feel threatened by the feminist agenda.
Perhaps there is also a potential for ‘feminist’ cultures to re-situate themselves in the context of
physics which might include refining language and messages.
(Discussion: 888 words)
Total word count: 5623)
References
Barbosa, M. (2003) Equity for women in physics, Physics World July 2003 pp.14-15
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