Female underrepresentation in postcompulsory physics is an ongoing issue for science education research, policy, and practice. In this article, we apply Bourdieusian and Butlerian conceptual lenses to qualitative and quantitative data collected as part of a wider longitudinal study of students’ science and career aspirations age 10–16. Drawing on survey data from more than 13,000 year 11 (age 15/16) students and interviews with 70 students (who had been tracked from age 10 to 16), we focus in particular on seven girls who aspired to continue with physics post-16, discussing how the cultural arbitrary of physics requires these girls to be highly “exceptional,” undertaking considerable identity work and deployment of capital in order to “poss...
Unlike many other countries, physics is highly popular in secondary education in Scotland, with larg...
Women from working class and some ethnic minority backgrounds continue to be underrepresented in sci...
Women remain underrepresented in science professions. Studies have shown that students are more like...
ABSTRACT: There is international concern over persistent low rates of participation in postcompulsor...
There is international concern over persistent low rates of participation in postcompulsory science—...
Internationally, there is widespread concern about the need to increase participation in the science...
The article discusses selected findings of a narrative review,funded by the Institute of Physics,in ...
The reasons that fewer girls than boys choose to study physics have, with few national exceptions, b...
Despite the fact that approximately half of high school physics students are female, only 21% of phy...
Philosophiae Doctor - PhDThe literature on the manner in which gender influences the participation a...
Background Prompted by fewer females compared to males enrolling in physics and advanced mathematic...
[This paper is part of the Focused Collection on Gender in Physics.] In this article, we draw on pre...
This paper addresses students’ interest in physics in relation to different demographic variab...
Background: Prompted by fewer females compared to males enrolling in physics and advanced mathematic...
Women from working class and some ethnic minority backgrounds continue to be underrepresented in sci...
Unlike many other countries, physics is highly popular in secondary education in Scotland, with larg...
Women from working class and some ethnic minority backgrounds continue to be underrepresented in sci...
Women remain underrepresented in science professions. Studies have shown that students are more like...
ABSTRACT: There is international concern over persistent low rates of participation in postcompulsor...
There is international concern over persistent low rates of participation in postcompulsory science—...
Internationally, there is widespread concern about the need to increase participation in the science...
The article discusses selected findings of a narrative review,funded by the Institute of Physics,in ...
The reasons that fewer girls than boys choose to study physics have, with few national exceptions, b...
Despite the fact that approximately half of high school physics students are female, only 21% of phy...
Philosophiae Doctor - PhDThe literature on the manner in which gender influences the participation a...
Background Prompted by fewer females compared to males enrolling in physics and advanced mathematic...
[This paper is part of the Focused Collection on Gender in Physics.] In this article, we draw on pre...
This paper addresses students’ interest in physics in relation to different demographic variab...
Background: Prompted by fewer females compared to males enrolling in physics and advanced mathematic...
Women from working class and some ethnic minority backgrounds continue to be underrepresented in sci...
Unlike many other countries, physics is highly popular in secondary education in Scotland, with larg...
Women from working class and some ethnic minority backgrounds continue to be underrepresented in sci...
Women remain underrepresented in science professions. Studies have shown that students are more like...