Gendered Vocational Identities – Female Students' Strategies for Identity Formation During Workplace-Based Learning in Male-Dominated Work

IF 1.5 Q2 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH International Journal for Research in Vocational Education and Training Pub Date : 2021-12-21 DOI:10.13152/ijrvet.8.3.4
Lisa Ferm, M. Gustavsson
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Abstract

Purpose: This article investigates female vocational students' strategies for becoming part of a workplace community, what these strategies are and how they are tied to the formation of vocational identities within male-dominated industrial work. Of particular interest is how female students enrolled on Swedish upper secondary industrial programmes experience workplace-based learning at industrial workplaces as part of their vocational education. The theoretical framework derives from Wenger's concept of community of practice, but his theoretical concept does not explicitly include gender dimensions. Therefore, the concept of community of practice is also combined with Paechter's assumption of gender, whereby femininity and masculinity can be considered as different communities of practice. Methods: The article draws on evidence from a Swedish study based on interviews with 20 female students enrolled on the industrial programme at six upper secondary schools. In this vocational programme, there is a distinct gender distribution and only a small minority of the students on the programme are girls. In the analysis, the focus is on the female students' strategies used during workplace-based learning to become part of the work community which consists almost exclusively of male workers.Findings: The female students deliberately negotiated vocational identities as female industrial workers to become accepted in the male-dominated work community. The findings highlight three specific strategies that the female students used: Acting like gender does not matter, acting like boys (not like drama queens), and acting tough and joking around. The female students' strategies were part of – and tied to – a complex vocational identity formation process that featured contradictory requirements. By taking individual responsibility, they identified relevant information for becoming industrial workers and chose to act like boys. The female students saw no problem with being a girl, yet they struggled with implicit, diffuse and hidden gender structures and prejudices in the male-dominated industrial companies. Nevertheless, they strived for what they perceived to be an attractive vocational identity as industrial workers; it was an alternative, atypically feminine way of being that attracted the female students. Conclusions: The study concludes that female students mostly rely on their individual agency when interacting with others in the male-dominated workplace community. A "gendered vocational identity" is formed which shows that the identity formation of female students is a complex double process, in which vocational and gender identities are formed simultaneously and in parallel within the male-dominated workplace. 
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性别职业认同——女性学生在男性主导的职场学习中认同形成的策略
目的:本文调查了女职业学生成为工作场所社区一部分的策略,这些策略是什么,以及它们如何与男性主导的工业工作中职业身份的形成联系在一起。特别令人感兴趣的是,参加瑞典高中工业课程的女学生如何在工业工作场所进行以工作场所为基础的学习,作为其职业教育的一部分。其理论框架源于温格的实践共同体概念,但其理论概念并未明确包含性别维度。因此,实践共同体的概念也与Paechter的性别假设相结合,女性化和男性化可以被视为不同的实践共同体。方法:本文从瑞典的一项研究中获得证据,该研究基于对六所高中就读工业课程的20名女学生的访谈。在这个职业方案中,有明显的性别分布,方案中的学生中只有少数是女孩。在分析中,重点是女学生在基于工作场所的学习中使用的策略,以成为几乎完全由男性工人组成的工作社区的一部分。研究发现:女学生刻意协商职业认同为女性产业工人,以被男性主导的工作社区所接受。研究结果强调了女学生使用的三种具体策略:表现得像性别无关紧要,表现得像男孩(而不是像戏剧女王),表现得强硬和开玩笑。女学生的策略是一个复杂的职业认同形成过程的一部分,这个过程的特点是相互矛盾的要求。通过承担个人责任,他们确定了成为产业工人的相关信息,并选择像男孩一样行事。女学生认为作为一个女孩没有问题,但她们在男性主导的工业公司中挣扎于隐含的,分散的和隐藏的性别结构和偏见。然而,作为产业工人,他们努力争取他们认为有吸引力的职业身份;这是一种另类的、非典型的女性化的存在方式,吸引了女学生。结论:该研究得出结论,在男性主导的职场社区中,女学生在与他人互动时,大多依赖于她们的个人能动性。“性别职业认同”的形成表明女大学生的身份形成是一个复杂的双重过程,在男性主导的工作场所中,职业认同和性别认同是同时形成的。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.90
自引率
23.10%
发文量
14
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