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Document Description
Title
The
status
of
women
in
educational
administration
:
a
comparative
analysis
of
variables
by
sex
and by
rank
Author
Gosse
,
Stella-Marie
Rideout
Description
Thesis
(M.Ed.)--Memorial
University
of
Newfoundland
,
1976.
Education
Date
1975
Pagination
xi, 180 leaves
Subject
Women
teachers--Newfoundland
and
Labrador;
School
administrators--Newfoundland
and
Labrador;
Women
supervisors--Newfoundland
and
Labrador;
Women
in
education--Newfoundland
and
Labrador
Degree
M.Ed.
Degree Grantor
Memorial University of Newfoundland. Faculty of Education
Discipline
Education
Language
eng
Spatial Coverage
Canada--Newfoundland and Labrador
Notes
Bibliography:
leaves
145-148
Abstract
A
profile
of
women
in
educational
administration
was
drawn
from
among
the
total
population
of
teachers
in
Newfoundland-and
Labrador
(1973-74)
and
set
against
a
status
profile
of the
male
administrators
in the
province.
Categorization
by
denominational
systems
in this
preliminary
survey
,
resulted
in the
selection
of the
largest
denominational
system
for an in
depth
study.
--
This
problematic
probe
,
conducted
through
questionnaires
and
interviews
,
consisted
of a
comparison
of
women
principals
with
men
principals
and
women
teachers
with
women
principals
in an
effort
to
determine
what.barriers
, if
any
,
contributed
to there
being
no
more
than
44
female
principals
administering
407
schools
of
more
than
one
classroom.
Also
questioned
were
school
board
superintendents
and
male
teachers.
Frequency
tabulations
,
percentages
, and
statistical
testing
were
included
in the
processing
and
analysis
, of
data
,
along
with
summaries
of
both
free-response
answers
and
interview
recordings.
--
The
following
conclusions
are
based
on the
findings
of this
study:
1.
Women
teachers
are not
sufficiently
competitive.
2.
Women
principals
trail
their
male
colleagues
in
certificate
grade-qualifications.
3.
Generally
,
women
obtain
principalship
status
as a
result
of
many
years
of
teaching
which
is
eventually
recognized
by their
school
boards.
4.
Boards
generally
prefer
women
only
for
primary
schools.
Males
are
preferred
to a
greater
extent
for
high
schools
,
both
for
teaching
and for
administration.
5.
Women
are not
preferred
as
principals
by
teachers
to the
extent
that
males
are
, but they are
preferred
to a
greater
extent
by
teachers
who
have
worked
with
female
administrators.
6.
Superintendents
,
principals
and
teachers
agree
that there are
fewer
women
principals
simply
because
women
do
not
wish
to
become
principals.
This
is
seen
as the
effects
of
traditional
practices
which
lead
to a
conditioning
of
acceptance
of the
social
order.
Women
teachers
compare
favorably
with
women
principals
on
all
relevant
characteristics
except
years
, of
teaching
experience.
8.
For
women
teachers
and
women
principals
,
career
breaks
and
maternity
leaves
are not
significantly
related
to
professional
status
,
nor
are
family
size
and
professional
work
load.
9.
Women
principals
feel
very
strongly
that
women
are
capable
administrators
, that
discipline
is
the
least
real
barrier
, and that
more
effort
should
come
from
women
themselves
as
well
as from the
'system'
to
make
administration
more
accessible
to
women.
Discrimination
is
fairly
high
on the
list
of
reasons
for the
low
profile
of
women
in
educational
administration.
10.
While
Jay
women
are
confined
to
small
schools
teaching
lower
grades
,
women
of
religious
orders
have
acquired
status
more
equivalent
to that of their
male
colleagues
signifying
that
opportunity
is
an
important
factor
to
women
proving
their
ability
to
administer
schools
of
all
sizes
and
all
grades.
Follow-up
studies
might
be
extended
to
,
include
the
sexist
discrimination
in the
schools
and
, to
include
internal
barriers
to
achievement
in
women
themselves.
Type
Text
Resource Type
Electronic
thesis
or
dissertation
Format
Image/jpeg;
Application/pdf
Source
Paper copy kept in the Centre for Newfoundland Studies, Memorial University Libraries
Local Identifier
75362796
Rights
The author retains copyright ownership and moral rights in this thesis. Neither the thesis nor substantial extracts from it may be printed or otherwise reproduced without the author's permission.
Collection
Electronic
Theses
and
Dissertations
Scanning Status
Completed
PDF File
(27.73
MB)
--
http://collections.mun.ca/PDFs/theses/Gosse_Stella-Marie.pdf
CONTENTdm file name
31157.cpd