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Originally published in 1985. This book describes the Girls Into Science and Technology (GIST) Project, an action research programme carried out in co-educational comprehensive schools in Greater Manchester. GIST simultaneously took action to redress the balance of girls in science and technology and investigated the reasons for the shortfall. The book highlights the world of the typical school science lab and craft workshop where boys and girls compete with each other and teachers treat the two sexes differently. It reveals how boys and girls view science and sex roles and how their attitudes changed during the course of the project. The GIST team worked with science and craft teachers to alter school factors which discourage girls from continuing with scientific and technical subjects. The author describes the reactions of teachers and pupils to intervention strategies, which included visits to schools by women working in technical jobs, development of teaching material more orientated towards girls’ interests and a humanistic view of science, observations in school labs and workshops, and careers education linked to option choices in school. In the final chapters she spells out the lessons to be learned for teachers and those engaged in training, and evaluates the national impact of the GIST project.

Acknowledgments xi
Introduction 1(8)
Part I The need for GIST
9(56)
1 The need for GIST
11(14)
2 Edging girls out
25(14)
3 The first year
39(26)
Part II The VISTA intervention
65(38)
4 VISTA
67(13)
5 Response to VISTA
80(10)
6 Girl friendly science
90(13)
Part III The GIST children
103(16)
7 The GIST children: attributes and attitudes
105(14)
Part IV Other interventions
119(38)
8 The roadshows
121(9)
9 Craft, design and technology: a hard nut to crack
130(13)
10 Girls only?
143(14)
Part V The GIST teachers
157(42)
11 The teachers' perceptions of GIST
159(20)
12 The teachers' response to the GIST project
179(20)
Part VI Conclusions
199(51)
13 The effects of GIST
201(27)
14 Implications
228(22)
Appendix 1 GIST questionnaire: VISTA visits 250(2)
Appendix 2 Intervention strategies 252(3)
Appendix 3 Action research 255(13)
Endpiece 268(3)
Bibliography 271(7)
List of works relating to the GIST project 278(3)
Index 281
Judith Whyte