Source: Alamy
āLaddismā culture: is some male studentsā behaviour āeducationally disruptive?ā
Student chants, sexist ābanterā, āstupid noisesā in class ā and how such behaviour can be combated ā were all up for discussion at Laddism and Higher Education, a symposium held in London last week.
Matthew Cheeseman, research fellow in the University of Sheffieldās School of English, is also co-convenor of the Society for Research into Higher Educationās Student Experience Network, which organised the event on 7 February.
His own paper drew on research he has been carrying out since 2005 on āchanting studentsā, many of them stirred up by Sheffieldās long-standing rivalry with Sheffield Hallam University.
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Even among those born after 1992, when Sheffield City Polytechnic was one of many such institutions to gain the university title, the old snobberies of the ābinary divideā seem alive and well. Dr Cheesemanās research has found some Sheffield Hallam students shouting chants such as āIād rather be a poly than a cuntā, with Sheffield students responding āIād rather be a cunt than unemployedā.
āSheffield students (particularly women) are portrayed by Hallam as ugly, sexually inexperienced and arrogantā, he said, while āHallam students (particularly women) are portrayed by [University of Sheffield students] as sexually attractive but permissive, stupid and poorā.
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Carolyn Jackson, a professor in Lancaster Universityās department of educational research, and Steven Dempster, a research and teaching associate in the same department, noted that earlier concerns about āladdismā undermining boysā educational performance in secondary schools had now shifted to a focus on ādrinking, sexism, misogyny, and in some cases rape-supportive culturesā within universities.
The National Union of Studentsā 2013 report Thatās what she said: Women studentsā experiences of ālad cultureā in higher education, for example, argued that sexual harassment and violence are āvery much related to ālad cultureāā.
Meanwhile, Professor Jackson and Dr Dempsterās own research on a sports science programme, as reported last month in 51³Ō¹Ļ, indicated how laddism could also be educationally disruptive.
One young woman interviewed for the Lancaster scholarsā research project described āladsā who ājust think itās cool to sit there and talk. Like the worst is a Monday morning because theyāll talk about football and you donāt really want to hear about football when youāre in an anatomy classā.
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Another recalled male students who āmake stupid noises, just silly noises that their friends will find funny ā nobody else does ā and that, again, would stop the classā.
Several speakers at the symposium went on to consider what could be done to discourage such behaviours.
Dr Dempsterās research showed that āeven [many] self-identified lads are at odds with extreme laddishnessā, keen āto avoid being tarred with the same beer-swilling, loutish and sexist brushes as the universityās menās rugby and football teamsā. Perhaps this meant that āthose practising laddishness in its milder formsā could be taught that āthe line between ābanterā and āharassmentā is a thin oneā.
Richard Parry, campaigns officer at Newcastle University Studentsā Union, suggested that efforts to combat laddism āmust offer āladsā an alternative model of masculinityā¦The language of feminism tends not to be effective in engaging lads with core messages.ā Sports clubs were likely to be more responsive to arguments about āthe benefits of inclusivityā than an āanti-lad messageā.
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Also crucial, added Sophie van der Ham, welfare officer at the University of Sussex Studentsā Union, was āensuring that frontline university staff are trained so that they know how to respond appropriately and sensitivelyā. Ms van der Ham now sits on the Brighton and Hove Sexual Violence Reference Group and works with the council to look at gaps in provision for students.
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