The University of the West Indies Press
Males and Tertiary Education in Jamaica
Herbert Gayle, Peisha Bryan
Males and Tertiary Education in Jamaica
US$ 29.99
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Males and Tertiary Education in Jamaica is the result of five years' qualitative research examining the relationship between men and tertiary education. Herbert Gayle and Peisha Bryan focus on the lived experiences and perceptions of three sets of young men: those who did not qualify to enter university; those who qualified but bypassed tertiary education; and those who qualified but for varying reasons have delayed entry into university. Using rigorous, in-depth interviews to capture the lived experiences of 186 males between the ages of eighteen and thirty-nine years, compared to those of 74 females of the same comparative age group, the authors examine the realities of males regarding their wish or ability to attend university in Jamaica. They found that men's comparative absence from universities in Jamaica is cultural. Spurred by the world phenomenon of women's liberation, Jamaican families shifted their support towards educating women to the effect that female enrolment in tertiary institutions increased from 64 per cent of men in 1971 to 228 per cent of men in 2011. Participation in tertiary education in Jamaica is unquestionably gendered and this work is the first and book-length scholarly response to the question of why men are not attracted to tertiary education in Jamaica.

Language
English
ISBN
9789766407315
Copyright
Contents
List of Tables
List of Figures
List of Charts
Preface
Acknowledgements
Abbreviations
Introduction
1. Background to the Study
2. Not Qualified for Tertiary Education
3. Qualified for Tertiary Education but Bypassed
4. Qualified for Tertiary Education but Delaying Entry
5. Summary and Discussion of Findings
Notes
References
Index
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