51³Ō¹Ļ

Student chants: harmless rivalry or plain misogyny?

The results of a study of ā€˜laddism’ on campus

Published on
February 13, 2014
Last updated
June 10, 2015

Source: Alamy

ā€˜Laddism’ culture: is some male students’ behaviour ā€˜educationally disruptive?’

Student chants, sexist ā€œbanterā€, ā€œstupid noisesā€ in class – and how such behaviour can be combated – 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 Sheffield’s School of English, is also co-convenor of the Society for Research into Higher Education’s Student Experience Network, which organised the event on 7 February.

His own paper drew on research he has been carrying out since 2005 on ā€œchanting studentsā€, many of them stirred up by Sheffield’s long-standing rivalry with Sheffield Hallam University.

51³Ō¹Ļ

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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 ā€œbinary divideā€ seem alive and well. Dr Cheeseman’s research has found some Sheffield Hallam students shouting chants such as ā€œI’d rather be a poly than a cuntā€, with Sheffield students responding ā€œI’d rather be a cunt than unemployedā€.

ā€œSheffield students (particularly women) are portrayed by Hallam as ugly, sexually inexperienced and arrogantā€, he said, while ā€œHallam 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 University’s department of educational research, and Steven Dempster, a research and teaching associate in the same department, noted that earlier concerns about ā€œladdismā€ undermining boys’ educational performance in secondary schools had now shifted to a focus on ā€œdrinking, sexism, misogyny, and in some cases rape-supportive culturesā€ within universities.

The National Union of Students’ 2013 report That’s what she said: Women students’ experiences of ā€œlad cultureā€ in higher education, for example, argued that sexual harassment and violence are ā€œvery much related to ā€˜lad cultureā€™ā€.

Meanwhile, Professor Jackson and Dr Dempster’s 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 scholars’ research project described ā€œladsā€ who ā€œjust think it’s cool to sit there and talk. Like the worst is a Monday morning because they’ll talk about football and you don’t really want to hear about football when you’re in an anatomy classā€.

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Another recalled male students who ā€œmake stupid noises, just silly noises that their friends will find funny – nobody else does – 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 Dempster’s research showed that ā€œeven [many] self-identified lads are at odds with extreme laddishnessā€, keen ā€œto avoid being tarred with the same beer-swilling, loutish and sexist brushes as the university’s men’s rugby and football teamsā€. Perhaps this meant that ā€œthose practising laddishness in its milder formsā€ could be taught that ā€œthe line between ā€˜banter’ and ā€˜harassment’ is a thin oneā€.

Richard Parry, campaigns officer at Newcastle University Students’ Union, suggested that efforts to combat laddism ā€œmust offer ā€˜lads’ an alternative model of masculinity…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 ā€œthe benefits of inclusivityā€ than an ā€œanti-lad messageā€.

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Also crucial, added Sophie van der Ham, welfare officer at the University of Sussex Students’ Union, was ā€œensuring 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.

matthew.reisz@tsleducation.com

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