“她们只是女人,她们知道什么?”:南非大学数学学科非洲女博士生的生活经历

Q3 Social Sciences
Zamambo Mkhize
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:非洲女性在数学领域的存在几乎是隐形的。非洲妇女在这一领域的代表性不足是她们历史上被社会政治边缘化的结果。数学学科被政治化、种族化和性别化,以系统地压迫非洲妇女。数学领域仍然是一个男性化和白人男性主导的领域,这加强并保留了对女性充满敌意和不欢迎的男性文化。非洲女数学家因为她们的种族和性别身份而受到进一步的压迫,而这些领域在意识形态上是以证明非洲人在种族、性别、社会、文化和智力上的劣势为基础的。目的:本文旨在举例说明南非大学数学学科非洲女博士生的生活经历。本文批判性地探讨了影响非洲女博士生在数学学科中的参与、进步和保留的因素。背景:这篇文章来自一项更大的研究,该研究调查了非洲博士生在南非大学获得科学、技术、工程和数学(STEM)学科的博士学位后没有成为学者的原因。本文以南非五所大学的10名非洲女博士生的经历为研究对象。这些大学入选是因为它们在南非排名前五。其中两所大学是历史上的黑人大学,其余的是历史上的白人大学,还有一所历史上的阿非利卡语大学,在2019-2021年之间。方法:本文采用定性研究方法,对南非五所大学数学学科的10名非洲女性博士进行了半结构访谈,并以交叉性理论为基础。结果:研究结果揭示了相互关联的压迫系统如何继续影响数学学科中女性的招聘、保留和发展,从而深入了解了需要改变和/或实施的机制,以积极招募非洲女博士生并将她们留在学术职位上。结论:文章的结论是,尽管数学领域宣称中立和客观,但非洲妇女仍然遭受种族主义,性别歧视和阶级歧视。非洲妇女在数学领域的经历对于理解为什么非洲妇女在学术界的数学学科中流失率很高以及为什么当她们可以改变这一学科时却没有成为学者至关重要。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
‘They are just women, what do they know?’: The lived experiences of African women doctoral students in the mathematics discipline in South African universities
Background: The presence of African women in mathematics has been nearly invisible. The underrepresentation of African women in this field is a result of their historical socio-political marginalisation. The mathematics discipline is politicised, racialised, and gendered to systematically oppress African women. The mathematics fields continue to be a masculine and white male dominated field, which reinforces and preserves masculine culture which is hostile and unwelcoming to women. African women mathematicians are further oppressed because of their racial and gendered identities in fields that are ideologically founded on proving the racial, gendered, social, cultural, and intellectual inferiority of Africans.Aim: The article aims to exemplify the lived experiences of African women doctoral students in the mathematics disciplines in South African universities. The article critically interrogates the factors that influence the participation, progression, and retention of African female doctoral students in the mathematics disciplines.Setting: The article comes from a larger study which investigated the reasons why African doctorate students do not become academics after they receive their doctorates in science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) disciplines in South African universities. This paper focuses on the experiences of 10 African female doctoral students at five universities in South Africa. The universities were selected because they ranked in the top five in South Africa. Two of the institutions are historically Black universities and the rest are historically white institutions, with one historically Afrikaner-speaking university—between 2019–2021.Methods: This article employed a qualitative research methodology, where semi-structures interviews were conducted with 10 African female doctoral participants in mathematics disciplines in five South African universities and is underpinned by the theory of intersectionality.Results: The findings reveal how interlocking systems of oppression continue to influence the recruitment, retention, and progression of women in the mathematics discipline, thereby providing insight into the mechanisms that need to be altered and/or put in place to actively recruit African female doctoral students and retain them in academic positions.Conclusion: The article concludes that despite the mathematics field proclaiming neutrality and objectivity nevertheless, African women still experience racism, sexism, and classism. The experiences of African women in mathematics are vital to understanding the reasons why there is a high attrition rate of African women in the mathematics discipline in academia and why they do not become academics when they could transform this discipline.
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来源期刊
Transformation in Higher Education
Transformation in Higher Education Social Sciences-Education
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2.00
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