صفحه اصلی
نقشه سایت
ورود اعضاء
العربیه
English
۱۴۰۳ شنبه ۲۹ دي
دوباره تلاش کنید
!!!b1!!!
!!!b1!!!
صفحه اصلی
معرفی
معرفی کتابخانه
اهداف
رئیس
کارشناسان مرکز
کتابخانه نابینایان
جستجو در منابع
سامانه جستجو کتاب
سامانه آرشیو دیجیتال
سامانه جستجوی یکپارچه دانشگاه ها (باغ دانش)
سامانه فروش الکترونیکی کتاب
بانک های اطلاعاتی
بانک های اطلاعاتی پیوسته
بانک های اطالاعاتی دسترسی آزاد
لیست مجلات نامعتبر (مجلات یغماگر)
تازه های کتابخانه
تازه های خریداری شده
تازه های فهرست نویسی
نمایشگاه دائمی کتاب
مدیریت سبز
منابع
پایان نامه
کتاب های لاتین
کتاب های فارسی
سایر منابع
فرایند کتابخانه
سفارش کتاب
اهدا کتاب
CHAPTER 2: Female Education in the Islamic Republic of Iran: Understanding the Paradox of Tradition and Modernity
ارسال شده در تاریخ
1400/10/22
ساعت
10:34
CHAPTER 2: Female Education in the Islamic Republic of Iran: Understanding the Paradox of Tradition and Modernity
Golnar Mehran & Fariba Adli
Book: Women, Islam, and Education in Iran
Edition1st Edition
First Published: 2019
ABSTRACT
There has been much discussion about the status of female education in the Middle East and North Africa in past decades (Atashak, 2012; El-Sanabary, 1993; Fereidouni, Mehran, & Mansourian, 2015; Jones, 1982; Massialas & Jarrar, 1991; Rezai-Rashti, 2011; Rezai-Rashti & Moghadam, 2011; Rihani, 1993; Shavarini, 2006, 2009; Velloso, 1996). The available statistics illustrate that at the primary education level, gender parity (equal enrollment ratios for girls and boys) in the region (0.92) lags behind other regions in the world. Comparative studies also show that at the secondary education level, the lowest levels of gender parity exists in the Middle East and North Africa (0.93), South and West Asia (0.92), and Sub-Saharan Africa (0.83) (UNESCO, 2014, p. 76). Many studies have identified traditional norms and cultural beliefs as the primary cause of low gender parity in the region, which at the core is said to inhibit religious values that impede female education. As the dominant religion across the Middle East and North Africa, scholars and laymen alike perceive Islam as prohibiting women and girls’ education, as was the case in Afghanistan under Taliban rule. While such explanations have disregarded the Islamic tenet attributed to Prophet Muhammad that “the pursuit of knowledge is an obligation of every Muslim [man or woman],” such rhetoric has also overlooked the negative impact of other factors impeding access to education, such as poverty, civil war, global affairs, extremism, and the absence of a political will toward educational attainment in the region for both men and women. Furthermore, such a critique of Islam cannot explain the case of education in Iran, where female educational attainment peaked in the aftermath of the 1979 Revolution and the establishment of an Islamic government.
ارسال کننده:
تعداد بازدید:
778
تصاویر مرتبط:
tempShow
برچسب ها
فیلم مرتبط
فیلم مرتبط
فیلم مرتبط
صوت