Monday 29 April 2013

Education as a Means to Empower Women



Empowerment consist of various levels and dimensions. In order to be empowered it requires both changes at the individual level and the societal level. We believe that it is possible to empower women, at the individual level. Being able to read and write and
gain new knowledge, are important factors that enhance self-esteem of the individual, and is a prerequisite for generating change and empowerment. Participating in education is an expression of psychological and cognitive components of the empowerment process. An educated woman is more likely to send her children to school. This is an illustration of cognitive empowerment because the woman becomes capable of making important decisions about health and educational matters on behalf of her children. This illustrates the woman as an active agent, being able to improve and change the life conditions of her children.

But it is not enough to challenge structures of gender inequality at societal level. Collective action has a greater potential in creating more widespread change. It can exert more pressure, and being a group gives more visibility and a stronger voice and provide a stronger challenge to discriminatory factors. The collective awareness of their common subordination as women creates a “we”, - a collective identity.

Non-formal education programmes strive to create a critical awareness of the ideological mechanisms that construct the ideas of women’s subordination as natural. That is why non-formal education programmes are particularly significant, because they are based on the active participation of the women. They focus primarily on the local experiences and concerns of the individuals, and thus enable women to formulate collective demands regarding their position as women. An illustration of collective participation and action was shown in the previous section, where a group of women succeeded in getting men prosecuted for wife beating. This case is an expression of political empowerment.

The limitations of many non-formal/popular education programmes are their inability to link local level concerns with broader policies and practices. They often fail to transfer their success into macro level efforts. Collaboration among organizations is vital to bridge the gap between the micro scale projects and macro scale programmes, in order to get resources from national governments and international organizations, and to exchange knowledge and experiences.

But it is not only within the non-formal educational sector that programs exist which try to change status quo. Experimental and consciousness-raising programmes within the formal educational system also exist. The teacher training programme from Argentina mentioned in section eight, aimed at changing the attitudes of teachers, that is, their
stereotyped perceptions of men and women. During the programme the teachers became aware of their discriminating behaviour. Through the process, the attitudes changed, and participants were determined to change inequalities when returning to their schools. But they faced resistance in their efforts to introduce their new perspectives on gender. Although they faced difficulties, we believe that this is an indication of the individual teachers becoming empowered during the programme, because of their efforts to transmit the new knowledge. But although the individual teachers can become empowered, they can not fulfill their desires and wishes for change, because of the rigid patriarchal structure of the formal educational system. There are too few of these experimental teacher training programmes with the goal of changing the contemporary schooling system. We thus find it important to implement teacher training programmes, in the formal teaching training colleges, that aim at educating teachers at all levels in the educational system to have far-reaching effects.

Teachers are essential agents in the socialization process of boys and girls in their function as role models. Already in primary school are girls influenced indirectly, by the teachers’ stereotyped expectations of girls. But if teachers participate in experimental training programmes where they become empowered, they can as important transmitters of knowledge, values and norms empower girls even in primary school. The empowerment of girls may become particularly visible when girls reach puberty (Bonder 1992; 243).

Equally important are the effects that teachers have on boys. If boys early in school life are socialized into perceiving girls as equals, these attitudes and values might become naturalized and incorporated into the habitues of the boys. This was attempted in the school in New Delhi, India, as mentioned earlier. Thus, long term change will only occur if both boys and girls, men and women are incorporated and targeted in the change processes.

Although teachers might be positive towards creating equal terms for boys and girls, some norms and values regarding gender roles are very hard to overcome. At the end of the teacher training programme in Argentina, teachers discussed, -on the basis of their new knowledge- norms and behavior relating to the labour market. They agreed that competition within professions between men and women is acceptable but women should avoid defeating men. In case of defeating them, women should seek to hide their
satisfaction, (ibid;246). This shows that although equal gender relations might be acknowledged, there are still some norms and values which are so deeply rooted in people’s habits that they are very difficult to transform. This is why it is necessary to start changing attitudes and perceptions early in life.
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