The Routledge International Handbook of Gender Beliefs, Stereotype Threat, and Teacher Expectations presents, for the first time, the work of leading researchers exploring the synergies and interrelationships between these fields, and provides a catalytic platform for advancing theory, practice, policy and research from an integrated perspective.
An understanding of how gender beliefs, stereotype threat, and teacher expectations interrelate is vital to creating safe, equitable, and encouraging learning spaces. The collection summarises how gender beliefs, stereotype threat, and teacher expectations act in association to influence gendered student achievement, engagement, and self-beliefs, and suggests ways toward rectifying their negative effects. The chapters are organised into four sections:
Gender Beliefs, Identity, Stereotypes, and Student Futures
Stereotype Threat
Teacher Expectations
Synergies and Solutions
By examining synergies and solutions shared between the three fields, this book creates more meaningful, consistent, and permanent approaches to achieving gender identity safety, gendered scholastic equity, well-being, and positive futures for students.
This comprehensive publication brings together cutting-edge research at the intersection of gender beliefs, stereotype threat, and teacher expectations. It is an essential reference for researchers and postgraduate students in education and gender studies as well as educational, social, and developmental psychology.
An understanding of how gender beliefs, stereotype threat, and teacher expectations interrelate is vital to creating safe, equitable, and encouraging learning spaces. The collection summarises how gender beliefs, stereotype threat, and teacher expectations act in association to influence gendered student achievement, engagement, and self-beliefs, and suggests ways toward rectifying their negative effects. The chapters are organised into four sections:
Gender Beliefs, Identity, Stereotypes, and Student Futures
Stereotype Threat
Teacher Expectations
Synergies and Solutions
By examining synergies and solutions shared between the three fields, this book creates more meaningful, consistent, and permanent approaches to achieving gender identity safety, gendered scholastic equity, well-being, and positive futures for students.
This comprehensive publication brings together cutting-edge research at the intersection of gender beliefs, stereotype threat, and teacher expectations. It is an essential reference for researchers and postgraduate students in education and gender studies as well as educational, social, and developmental psychology.
"This handbook brings together the best to outline their research, discuss the links between the three big topics of gender, stereotype threat, and expectations, and provide directions for moving forward. The handbook is voluminous, rich in explanation, up-to-date in asking the right questions, vast in depth, and evidence-informed."
John Hattie, Melbourne Laureate Professor Emeritus, Melbourne Graduate School of Education Chair, Board of the Australian Institute for Teaching and School Leadership.
"Researchers and practitioners have been gifted with a comprehensive and thought-provoking volume that examines three of the most important, timely, and challenging topics confronting contemporary education. This book should be on the "must-read" list for every educational researcher, aspiring or practicing teacher, or concerned citizen who wants to understand how teachers' beliefs about gender, stereotype threats, and their expectations of students shape the learning environment for better or for worse."
Patricia Alexander, Distinguished University Professor, University of Maryland College Park.
John Hattie, Melbourne Laureate Professor Emeritus, Melbourne Graduate School of Education Chair, Board of the Australian Institute for Teaching and School Leadership.
"Researchers and practitioners have been gifted with a comprehensive and thought-provoking volume that examines three of the most important, timely, and challenging topics confronting contemporary education. This book should be on the "must-read" list for every educational researcher, aspiring or practicing teacher, or concerned citizen who wants to understand how teachers' beliefs about gender, stereotype threats, and their expectations of students shape the learning environment for better or for worse."
Patricia Alexander, Distinguished University Professor, University of Maryland College Park.