Abstract
This article presents an interview study with seven newlygraduated
male teachers in Icelandic compulsory schools. We
interviewed them five times during their first two years of teaching.
The focus is on the ways in which the gender of the novice
teachers mattered in the expectations that they experienced and
how these expectations interacted with the professional demands
of being a teacher. The interviews reveal that hegemonic masculinity
ideas have an impact on the minds of our interviewees as
they experienced various expectations, based in such masculinity.
The findings also suggest a tension between the expectations of
men as natural disciplinarians and the professional induction of
learning to become a teacher. Male-specific expectations included
that the school as well as parents expected that the students had
respect for them on the grounds that they were men. While such
expectations gave some a head start with positional authority, it
laid a burden on them as novices. Not all of our interviewees fitted
the male-specific expectations, which supports the importance of
breaking down gendered stereotypes. In recruiting teachers,
regardless of gender, we need individuals able to perform professional
practices of care and attention to detail in managing a classroom.
male teachers in Icelandic compulsory schools. We
interviewed them five times during their first two years of teaching.
The focus is on the ways in which the gender of the novice
teachers mattered in the expectations that they experienced and
how these expectations interacted with the professional demands
of being a teacher. The interviews reveal that hegemonic masculinity
ideas have an impact on the minds of our interviewees as
they experienced various expectations, based in such masculinity.
The findings also suggest a tension between the expectations of
men as natural disciplinarians and the professional induction of
learning to become a teacher. Male-specific expectations included
that the school as well as parents expected that the students had
respect for them on the grounds that they were men. While such
expectations gave some a head start with positional authority, it
laid a burden on them as novices. Not all of our interviewees fitted
the male-specific expectations, which supports the importance of
breaking down gendered stereotypes. In recruiting teachers,
regardless of gender, we need individuals able to perform professional
practices of care and attention to detail in managing a classroom.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 1-16 |
Number of pages | 16 |
Journal | Education Inquiry |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 26 May 2022 |
Bibliographical note
Funding Information:The study is supported by the Icelandic Gender Equality Fund and the Research Fund of the University of Iceland. Sunna K. Símonardóttir PhD assisted the authors with studying the research literature about male teachers.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 The Author(s). Published by Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.
Other keywords
- Male teachers
- Novise teachers
- Gender
- Masculinity
- Bodily resources