Examining Student Gendered Experiences with Parent Involvement in The Bahamas

A. Bowe
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Abstract

Within English-speaking Caribbean K-12 schooling systems, there has been a consistent trend of boys performing at a lower academic standard than girls. Caribbean scholars suggest approaching gendered achievement patterns from multiple perspectives, dimensions, and methodologies to help clarify the inequities that are prevalent in Caribbean schooling. To address this call, I narrow attention onto the Bahamian family context and raise the question as to whether parent involvement with schooling in The Bahamas differs for boys versus girls. Survey data (parents, n = 377) came from a comprehensive study on parent involvement with schooling that took place in Grand Bahama during summer of 2018. Multivariate analysis of factor scores using two scales, Basic Needs Involvement (11-item scale) and Academic Involvement (3-item scale), showed that parental involvement was similar for boys and girls. Like previous findings in The Bahamas, there were more girls enrolled in private schools than boys. Findings are discussed in terms of societal perceptions about whose education is valued, mandates for gender parity, the impact global trends have on local trends, and moving towards empirical-based theories for gendered achievement patterns within Caribbean societies.
考察巴哈马学生在家长参与方面的性别体验
在讲英语的加勒比地区 K-12 学校教育体系中,男生的学习成绩一直低于女生。加勒比地区的学者建议从多角度、多层面和多方法来研究性别成就模式,以帮助澄清加勒比地区学校教育中普遍存在的不平等现象。为了响应这一号召,我将注意力缩小到巴哈马的家庭背景上,并提出这样一个问题:在巴哈马,男孩和女孩的家长参与学校教育的情况是否有所不同。调查数据(家长,n = 377)来自 2018 年夏季在大巴哈马进行的一项关于家长参与学校教育的综合研究。使用 "基本需求参与"(11 项量表)和 "学业参与"(3 项量表)两个量表对因子得分进行的多变量分析表明,男孩和女孩的家长参与情况相似。与巴哈马以往的调查结果一样,私立学校的女生人数多于男生。研究结果从以下方面进行了讨论:社会对谁的教育更有价值的看法、两性均等的规定、全球趋势对地方趋势的影响,以及在加勒比社会中逐步形成基于经验的性别成就模式理论。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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