Introduction and conceptual framework:
This paper seeks to understand how physical education (PE) knowledge and know-how evolve dynamically toward more equity within a participatory intervention research conducted according to an ‘activist approach’ (Oliver & Kirk, 2016) in a French preschool (3-6 years old). It considers the need to help children to recognize and deconstruct any forms of sex-stereotyping as a powerful knowledge that needs to be taught through pedagogical efforts to combat gendered inequalities.
The synthesis of research on gender in education highlights shared conclusions about the inequalities among girls and boys at school. Moreover, research in school subjects has recognized that pedagogical practices reproduce gendered aspects of the cultural heritage of societies (Duru-Bellat, 2017). Several authors have shown that differences in behaviour, values, attitudes, activities, work, leisure and social roles between men and women are the result of a gendered socialization, transmitted by parents, peers, the media and all educational institutions from an early age. According to Cromer, Dauphin and Naudier (2010), the childhood could be considered a laboratory of its kind where all gendered learning begins. Davies’ works (1989) concludes that gendered interactions and discourse in preschool and primary school reinforce a clear, relational dichotomy of male/female duality. With the purpose of deconstructing and even more challenging the dominant gender norms that pervade ways of acquiring PE knowledge and know-how of body movements in at early ages, the aim of this study is to describe how an experimental design, co-constructed with preschool teachers during a participatory intervention research, helps at deconstructing the dominant PE sex-stereotypes. Here, ‘knowledge’ is understood as having a potential power to move towards emancipation (Sensevy, 2007). Speaking of deconstruction emphasizes the purpose of an activist approach that challenges the ways students integrate gender norms within interactions at French preschool.
In this paper, the concept of gender should be understood as a fluid, multiple and shifting category. Gender is performed depending on the context and within social interactions. It cannot be reduced to the traditional male and female binary.
School as other cultural institutions participate in the social reproduction of sex stereotypes, which are constructed in interactions with learning environments. This leads us to consider that 'the recognition of sex-stereotypes” is an emancipatory knowledge that needs to be taught. For example, when children are specifically asked about if “girls and boys can do the same thing” they commonly answer that ‘everyone can do everything’. Nevertheless in practice, their young children’ reactions may include forms of rejection of activities traditionally connoted as feminine or as masculine. From an early age the body is a mark of social positions and the locus of masculine domination embodiment (Bourdieu, 1998; Duru-Bellat, 2017). That is why, during this three years long participatory intervention research in a French preschool (for a presentation see Verscheure, in this conference NtW 27) both researchers and schoolteachers decided to focus on body movements as a place of memory and of learning culturally constructed habits.
The research concerns children’ emancipation from dominant sex-norms of behaviour as socially and traditionally expected in PE. Its purpose is to investigate the effects of a didactical design dedicated to the recognition and deconstruction of sex-stereotyping related to basic motor skills within specific teaching contents. In France, little research has focused on classroom practices through qualitative and empirical approaches in relation to the gendered contents taught and how these practices impact student learning. Verscheure and Vinson (2018) pointed out that within verbal or non-verbal interactions between teachers and students, a dynamic process emerges which, over didactic time, has an effect in terms of students’ body knowledge constructions and their gendered learning trajectories.