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Women’s Ways of Knowing. Tacy Costanzo November 2004. The Development of Self, Voice, and Mind. By Mary Belenky, Blythe Clinchy, Nancy Goldberger, Jill Tarule Women did not fit into traditional development theory which was based on research done predominately on white men of privilege.
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Women’s Ways of Knowing Tacy Costanzo November 2004
The Development of Self, Voice, and Mind • By Mary Belenky, Blythe Clinchy, Nancy Goldberger, Jill Tarule • Women did not fit into traditional development theory • which was based on research done predominately on white men of privilege
Theory Basis • Built on William Perry’s Theory of Intellectual Development • Also Kohlberg’s Theory of Moral Development • And Gilligan’s Theory of Women’s Moral Development
Research Methods • 135 young women from various social, ethnic, economic, educational backgrounds • Extensive interviews on self-image, morality, learning style, life experiences • Themes emerged from their stories • Epistemological patterns noted • Five perspectives described
Five EpistemologicalPerspectives • Silence • Received Knowledge • Subjective Knowledge • Procedural Knowledge • Constructed Knowledge
Silence • All authority over knowledge exists outside one’s self • Disconnection between the known and the knower • Only broken by validation of the individual • Characterized by low self esteem, lack of self worth
Received Knowledge • Knowledge is dualistic, either right or wrong, black or white • There is only one correct answer to each question • The recipient, not the creator of knowledge • Requires external validation to believe in self
Subjective Knowledge • The truth finally resides within • The power of knowing is internal • Analyzing the past to understand the future • A new voice, barely a whisper, begins to speak
Procedural Knowledge • Ability to objectively express and receive knowledge (two kinds) • Separate knowledge is analytical and reasonable, critical thinking • Connected knowing is based on intuition and ‘gut feeling’ • Begins integrating separate and connected knowing into a single voice
Constructed Knowledge • Assimilate and integrate objective and subjective knowledge • All knowledge is constructed, one becomes part of their own knowledge • Believe in another’s beliefs, while not adopting them • Hear another’s voice without losing their own voice • Making a space for one’s self where her voice will always be heard
Major Findings • Women think differently than men • Women need to know that they are already smart in order to learn • Women acquire knowledge more readily through experience than instruction • Validation of self by a women’s community fuels further development and fosters learning • Women feel their way into learning and make sense of their world from the inside out
Theory to Practice • Teach the teachers • Understand students’ development level • Let them try their wings • Support the journey of self discovery • Engage the students in the process of their own education • Facilitate ‘active’ learning environments
Future Research • Larger, more diverse population • Strive to eliminate gender & cultural bias • Explore new research methodologies • Be open-minded to see and hear what hasn’t been seen or heard before • Longitudinal studies on perspective shifts Click to finish