English-medium education and the perpetuation of girls’ disadvantage: Parental investment and gendered aspirations in Nepal
Artikel i vetenskaplig tidskrift, 2024
Interview with male teacher
Nepal is classified as a low-middle income country (World Bank, 2023), and like other such countries, it is under international pressure to attain gender equality targets in order to receive international aid. However, Nepal is also permeated by widespread perceptions that girls are subordinate to boys, which influences girls’ access to education, information, health and the labour market (Upadhaya & Sah, 2019). Women face restrictions in terms of their basic ability to ‘independently venture outside the household, maintain the privacy of their bank accounts, use mobile phones, or become employed’ (Karki & Mix, 2022: 413). Illiteracy disproportionately affects females, with 58.95% of illiterates being women and girls (UNESCO, 2021). Notwithstanding this, recent years have seen some progress in enhancing gender equality in Nepal, and females currently enjoy higher enrolment rates than males across secondary education (UNESCO, 2023). This article, however, provides evidence that the recent trend to offer English-medium education risks setting back progress made by creating a gender-differentiated system that could yield different outcomes for boys and girls and potentially restrict girls’ future trajectories post school and contribute to broader gender inequality in society.
Författare
Anna Kristina Hultgren
The Open University
Anu Upadhaya
Simon Fraser University
Lauren O'Hagan
The Open University
Peter Wingrove
The Open University
Amina Adamu
Bayero University
Mari Greenfield
The Open University
Lorena Lombardozzi
The Open University
Pramod Sah
The Education University of Hong Kong
Ismaila A. Tsiga
The Open University
Aishat Umar
The Open University
Freda Wolfenden
The Open University
English Today
0266-0784 (ISSN)
Vol. 40 3Ämneskategorier (SSIF 2025)
Utbildningsvetenskap
DOI
10.1017/S0266078424000075