This paper, based on forty in‐depth interviews with teachers and principals in Hong Kong, utilizes the insights of feminist organization studies to explore the persistence of gender inequalities in primary school teaching. Two common practices, namely the assignment of women and men to teach lower and higher grades respectively and the monopoly of men in positions of disciplining and authority, are centered. The data suggest that schools and teachers actively construct and reproduce gender inequalities by trivializing teaching of young children as babysitting, naturalizing women as natural caregivers, and normalizing the use of threat in disciplinary control. My analysis also argues that these routine and pervasive gendering processes are not often acknowledged or challenged, which have the effects of marginalizing caring work, overlooking the emotional labor of women, valorizing a masculine view of authority, encouraging men and boys to compete for power via aggression, and hence producing a masculinist workplace.
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1 April 2004
This article was originally published in
Equal Opportunities International
Research Article|
April 01 2004
When women “baby‐sit” and men “transmit knowledge and discipline”: the construction of gender in Hong Kong’s primary schools
Anita Kit‐wa Chan
Anita Kit‐wa Chan
Department of Sociology, The University of Hong Kong, Pokfulam, Hong Kong. Email: chanakw@hku.hk
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Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Online ISSN: 1758-7093
Print ISSN: 0261-0159
© Emerald Group Publishing Limited
2004
Equal Opportunities International (2004) 23 (3-4-5): 7–28.
Citation
Kit‐wa Chan A (2004), "When women “baby‐sit” and men “transmit knowledge and discipline”: the construction of gender in Hong Kong’s primary schools". Equal Opportunities International, Vol. 23 No. 3-4-5 pp. 7–28, doi: https://doi.org/10.1108/02610150410787701
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