Men in Early Childhood: A Moral Panic? A research report from a UK University

Significant changes in the role fathers play in their children’s care alongside the increased interest shown by teenage boys in working with young children has so far resulted in no noticeable increase in the numbers of men working in Early Childhood in the UK. Previous research has identified how t...

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Main Author: Cronin Mark
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Sciendo 2014-07-01
Series:Social Change Review
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.2478/scr-2014-0001
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author Cronin Mark
author_facet Cronin Mark
author_sort Cronin Mark
collection DOAJ
description Significant changes in the role fathers play in their children’s care alongside the increased interest shown by teenage boys in working with young children has so far resulted in no noticeable increase in the numbers of men working in Early Childhood in the UK. Previous research has identified how the gendered nature of this workforce presents significant barriers to men’s involvement combined with an increasingly dogmatic media discourse which represents men solely as a threat to young children. The research reported in this paper explored the experiences of a group of undergraduate male students in their pursuit of a career working with young children and to what degree the dynamics of being othered had impacted them. It also sought to consider the rhetoric and reality of recent UK government attempts to address the imbalance in the Early Childhood workforce. Thirteen male students from two undergraduate programmes at a UK University were interviewed for this study. The research data identified a number of risk factors which present barriers to men’s involvement in Early Childhood such as gender stereotyping, marginalisation or ‘othering’ of men and negative media discourses. It also identified potential protective factors which enable men’s involvement such as supportive family and friends, male role-models and a sense of social responsibility. Broader reflections also identified the significant difference between the UK government rhetoric in support of increasing men’s participation in Early Childhood and the reality of the active indifference shown to challenging the barriers to participation driven by political motives which has effectively generated a new ‘moral panic’ around men working with young children.
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spelling doaj.art-b0f4063babb34f03a082fb4fa7903e602022-12-21T18:29:30ZengSciendoSocial Change Review2068-80162014-07-0112132410.2478/scr-2014-0001scr-2014-0001Men in Early Childhood: A Moral Panic? A research report from a UK UniversityCronin Mark0Newman University, Genners Lane, Bartley Green, Birmingham, B32 3NT, EnglandSignificant changes in the role fathers play in their children’s care alongside the increased interest shown by teenage boys in working with young children has so far resulted in no noticeable increase in the numbers of men working in Early Childhood in the UK. Previous research has identified how the gendered nature of this workforce presents significant barriers to men’s involvement combined with an increasingly dogmatic media discourse which represents men solely as a threat to young children. The research reported in this paper explored the experiences of a group of undergraduate male students in their pursuit of a career working with young children and to what degree the dynamics of being othered had impacted them. It also sought to consider the rhetoric and reality of recent UK government attempts to address the imbalance in the Early Childhood workforce. Thirteen male students from two undergraduate programmes at a UK University were interviewed for this study. The research data identified a number of risk factors which present barriers to men’s involvement in Early Childhood such as gender stereotyping, marginalisation or ‘othering’ of men and negative media discourses. It also identified potential protective factors which enable men’s involvement such as supportive family and friends, male role-models and a sense of social responsibility. Broader reflections also identified the significant difference between the UK government rhetoric in support of increasing men’s participation in Early Childhood and the reality of the active indifference shown to challenging the barriers to participation driven by political motives which has effectively generated a new ‘moral panic’ around men working with young children.https://doi.org/10.2478/scr-2014-0001early childhoodmale workersmoral panicothering
spellingShingle Cronin Mark
Men in Early Childhood: A Moral Panic? A research report from a UK University
Social Change Review
early childhood
male workers
moral panic
othering
title Men in Early Childhood: A Moral Panic? A research report from a UK University
title_full Men in Early Childhood: A Moral Panic? A research report from a UK University
title_fullStr Men in Early Childhood: A Moral Panic? A research report from a UK University
title_full_unstemmed Men in Early Childhood: A Moral Panic? A research report from a UK University
title_short Men in Early Childhood: A Moral Panic? A research report from a UK University
title_sort men in early childhood a moral panic a research report from a uk university
topic early childhood
male workers
moral panic
othering
url https://doi.org/10.2478/scr-2014-0001
work_keys_str_mv AT croninmark meninearlychildhoodamoralpanicaresearchreportfromaukuniversity