Dr Ella Taylor-Smith E.Taylor-Smith@napier.ac.uk
Senior Research Fellow
Gendered information landscapes and their impact on routes into and through apprenticeships
People Involved
Prof Sally Smith S.Smith@napier.ac.uk
Head of Graduate Apprenticeships and Skills Development and Professor
Dr Colin Smith Cf.Smith@napier.ac.uk
Associate Professor
Project Description
The aim is to understand the myriad sources of gender stereotyping that impact on young people’s choices around apprenticeships and work-based learning (WBL). First, by a policy and literature review around occupational segregation in apprenticeships, including data from other countries; then investigating young people’s situated experience of information related to apprenticeships and its influence on their choices. This will support Skills Development Scotland to build policies and strategies to promote equality in apprenticeships.
Scottish apprenticeships provide important new learner pathways, incorporating work experience, potentially from S5 to degree level. However, subjects, careers, and apprenticeships themselves are often seen in gendered terms, by potential apprentices and those involved in advice, recruitment, and delivery. Crucial sectors, such as STEM (science, technology, engineering, and mathematics) and HEED (health care, elementary education, and the domestic sphere) suffer from self-propagating gender imbalances, reflected in the related apprenticeships. Meanwhile, apprenticeships tend to be seen as stereotypically male, despite extensive modernisation.
By synthesising extant research and gathering new data, this research will map the information landscapes young people in Scotland move through, in terms of apprenticeships. The information landscapes paradigm recognises that people encounter and pay attention to different forms and sources of information, tacit or explicit, formal or informal, etc. Differences may be due to social groups, such as class or gender, or may be individual. Salient information is as likely to come from YouTube as from a careers advisor. Using a mixed methods approach, empirical data will be gathered from young people, including apprentices, about their experiences and perspectives, looking back on their choices and influences. The mapping paradigm encourages participatory and creative methods.
This doctoral study will provide a rich and accessible depiction of young people’s situated experience of gender stereotyping in terms of apprenticeships, informing effective strategies to promote workplace equality.
Status | Project Live |
---|---|
Funder(s) | Skills Development Scotland Economic and Social Research Council |
Value | £57,117.00 |
Project Dates | Oct 1, 2022 - Oct 31, 2025 |
You might also like
e-Placement Scotland Nov 1, 2010 - Jul 31, 2022
Between 2010 and 2014, e-Placement Scotland worked with industry to create over 800 paid placements for students in Scotland’s universities and colleges. The project team disseminated widely to both education and business sectors in order to maximise...
Read More about e-Placement Scotland.
Westmont Systems Ltd Jun 1, 1999 - May 31, 2001
To develop a design framework for integrating industrial control system networks with corporate knowledge based on distributed computer networks whilst allowing remote access to all data.
e-Representative: A virtual desktop to support the mobile elected Representative Jan 2, 2006 - Jan 31, 2008
The eRepresentative package is a virtual desktop for elected representatives. It enables them to continue their legislative and policy work anytime and from anywhere with secure access to relevant and appropriate information.
Prior to the project,...
Read More about e-Representative: A virtual desktop to support the mobile elected Representative.
Euro Petition Feb 1, 2009 - Jan 31, 2011
The EuroPetition project piloted the implementation of a trans-European Local Authority service providing distributed citizen engagement and interaction with the European Parliament’s PETI Petitions Committee and the European Citizens' Initiative. Th...
Read More about Euro Petition.
HUWY: Hub Website for Youth Participation Jan 1, 2009 - Mar 31, 2011
HUWY explored ways for the Internet to support young people’s involvement in decision-making and piloted a model of distributed discussions, which could be used by people of various ages, focused on a range of topics.
The HUWY project aimed to supp...
Read More about HUWY: Hub Website for Youth Participation.