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Men 'winning' caring profession sex
war
Men working in traditionally female-dominated caring
professions such as nursing and teaching are winning a new gender war
with their female colleagues, according to a study.
Research from Brunel University's business school found that men in
caring careers believe they get more respect and more challenging roles
than their women counterparts.
Male primary teachers and nurses are carving out niche
areas, opting for more typically “masculine” activities and emotionally
demanding specialisms, the study found.
Ruth Simpson, author of the report, said: “Women are definitely losing
the gender war in the caring professions. ”While the caring performed by
a woman is often devalued as a 'natural' part of femininity, the
emotional labour performed by men is often seen as an asset.”
The majority of male nurses interviewed in the study had chosen to
specialise in mental health — traditionally a more male-dominated area
of nursing — and accident and emergency care.
Male primary school teachers stressed their involvement in sports
development, particularly of boys.
The 30 men interviewed as part of the study revealed
that they believed their masculinity led them to be given more
responsible or difficult roles than women colleagues and that patients
and others appreciated them.
In comments which will be likely to frustrate many female workers — long
struggling in caring professions against low pay and lack of status —
male nurses reported being often given the testing task of breaking bad
news to relatives or dealing with suicidal patients.
“I think people prefer to be given bad news by a man rather than a woman
— it seems as if they are being taken more seriously,” one said.
One teacher reported: “With all children, being a bloke gets you a lot
more kudos.” A nurse said that “if the charge nurse is male, he gains
more respect than the ward sister”.
Dr Simpson said male nurses were “moving away from a subordinate role”
and raising the status of their jobs to equality with the role of a
doctor.
Female nurses were seen as “too deferential and unassertive” to be taken
seriously enough by medical staff to make a similar shift, as well as
being unable to take part in the socialising and “male bonding” with
senior male doctors which helped cement male nurses' apparently higher
status.
In teaching, meanwhile, men were often called on to
take the role of disciplinarian and authority figure.
Outside work, too, male workers often sought to play down the
“feminine”, caring aspects of their jobs, emphasising their sports
coaching role in school, for example, to be seen as “one of the boys”.
Many confessed to changing their job title if describing their work to
an acquaintance in the pub — “I always emphasise the sports side,” said
one teacher, while another confessed: “I say I work for a cancer
charity.”
Dr Simpson acknowledged that women workers might find the views of men
interviewed frustrating. But she added: “If we want to encourage men
into caring occupations we need to understand some of the difficulties
and challenges they face in being seen to be a man in a female role.
It's not easy for them.”
Very few boys leaving school went into nursing, she said — men tended to
choose nursing at 25 to 30 after more typically male jobs in banking or
the army. As a result some resisted the pressure to climb the career
ladder and wanted to remain with pupils or patients.
Men in caring professions did encounter pockets of
resistance from female colleagues, but were generally made welcome, Dr
Simpson found.
Lucy Ward
26 July 2005
http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk_news/story/0,3604,1536107,00.html
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