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Main Authors: Gonick, Marnina, Shannon, Laura, Allison, Amy
Format: Recurso educativo Open Access
Language:en
Published: 2006
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ738313
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author Gonick, Marnina
Shannon, Laura
Allison, Amy
author_facet Gonick, Marnina
Shannon, Laura
Allison, Amy
Gonick, Marnina
Shannon, Laura
Allison, Amy
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents A Room of Our Own: Girls, Feminism, and Schooling Gonick, Marnina Shannon, Laura Allison, Amy Females Personal Narratives Gender Issues Feminism Nontraditional Education Creativity Privacy Resource Centers High School Students Student Projects Personal Space Health Services Program Development Space Utilization Written in the early twentieth century, Virginia Woolf's essay, "A Room of One's Own," invites its readers to join her in search of the answer to the question of "women and fiction," and in the process the readers are treated to a piercingly articulate perspective on the condition of women in a world culture built on women's exclusion and subordination. Although it is true that unlike in Woolf's time, girls' education is no longer dependent on the fortunes of a Mrs. Seton who might bequeath a college and library for young women. The issues of the relationships between education, creativity, and women's access to privacy, space, and resources remain deeply relevant. This article tells the story of the creation of a Women's Health Resource Center in an alternative high school in State College, Pennsylvania, from three perspectives. Laura, a twelfth-grade student at the time, decided to establish the center as part of her graduation requirements. Her English teacher, Amy, supervised her project, and a recently-hired faculty member in the College of Education and Women's Studies Program at Pennsylvania State University, Marnina, served as a resource person to the center. Shifting and merging between and among the voices and narrative, theories and practices of engaging in feminist work in schools are woven together, and in the process both are inflected with powerful contradictions and possibilities. (Contains 7 endnotes.)
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_EJ738313
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 2006
record_format eric
spellingShingle A Room of Our Own: Girls, Feminism, and Schooling
Gonick, Marnina
Shannon, Laura
Allison, Amy
Females
Personal Narratives
Gender Issues
Feminism
Nontraditional Education
Creativity
Privacy
Resource Centers
High School Students
Student Projects
Personal Space
Health Services
Program Development
Space Utilization
A Room of Our Own: Girls, Feminism, and Schooling Gonick, Marnina Shannon, Laura Allison, Amy Females Personal Narratives Gender Issues Feminism Nontraditional Education Creativity Privacy Resource Centers High School Students Student Projects Personal Space Health Services Program Development Space Utilization Written in the early twentieth century, Virginia Woolf's essay, "A Room of One's Own," invites its readers to join her in search of the answer to the question of "women and fiction," and in the process the readers are treated to a piercingly articulate perspective on the condition of women in a world culture built on women's exclusion and subordination. Although it is true that unlike in Woolf's time, girls' education is no longer dependent on the fortunes of a Mrs. Seton who might bequeath a college and library for young women. The issues of the relationships between education, creativity, and women's access to privacy, space, and resources remain deeply relevant. This article tells the story of the creation of a Women's Health Resource Center in an alternative high school in State College, Pennsylvania, from three perspectives. Laura, a twelfth-grade student at the time, decided to establish the center as part of her graduation requirements. Her English teacher, Amy, supervised her project, and a recently-hired faculty member in the College of Education and Women's Studies Program at Pennsylvania State University, Marnina, served as a resource person to the center. Shifting and merging between and among the voices and narrative, theories and practices of engaging in feminist work in schools are woven together, and in the process both are inflected with powerful contradictions and possibilities. (Contains 7 endnotes.)
title A Room of Our Own: Girls, Feminism, and Schooling
topic Females
Personal Narratives
Gender Issues
Feminism
Nontraditional Education
Creativity
Privacy
Resource Centers
High School Students
Student Projects
Personal Space
Health Services
Program Development
Space Utilization
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ738313