AU - Abdullah, Fatma.
AU - Ridge, Natasha
AB - The issue of access to higher education in development literature has been largely examined from the perspective of unequal access for women. Global trends reveal that although some countries continue to lag behind others in female representation in higher education, the majority shows higher female participation. In the Middle East, a region traditionally associated with male privilege, women’s participation in higher education has also been increasing at far greater rates than that of men, to the point where over 70% of students in tertiary education in the United Arab Emirates are women. While research has been conducted on male participation rates in some OECD countries, very little research has been conducted in the Middle East despite even lower male participation rates. This paper covers the case of the United Arab Emirates and uses the literature on access to examine male participation in higher education from an economic and sociological perspective. It explores why so many Emirati men are failing to enroll in higher education. Key factors for the low male participation rates identified in this paper include the disconnect between educational effort and probable rewards, social and educational stratification and poor prior academic attainment of Emirati men.The paper concludes by recommending further research into the causes of low male participation rates in higher education in the UAE with particular attention to socioeconomic influences on student achievement. http://search.shamaa.org/abstract_en.gif
ID - 041467
OP - pp. 125-136
T1 - Where are all the men? : gender, participation and higher education in the United Arab Emirates [Chapter]
UL - 1 http://search.shamaa.org/fulltext.gif http://search.shamaa.org/PDF/41452/AbdullahEn41467.pdf Full text (PDF)