Nine Indian Schools. That’s what it took to know that casual sexism in education is more casual and guaranteed than action on Tinder.
We got lucky, never dipping a toe into the uphill battle for equal rights to girls’ education. Despite the healthy tone set by schools, little girls are susceptible to the institutionalized misogyny that sticks on. Here’s how it seeps in and why it should have no place.
Waking up to your gender in high school
My last school was proudly ultra conservative. Strictly monitored by the ‘ministry of education’ in the MiddleEast, the only goal was to keep the girls and the boys apart, so far as to stagger the exam timings. In high school, we started two hours earlier than the boys and took the same bus as the juniors in the morning. After,
we waited two hours till the boys finished their exams and took the same bus back. We just hung around, exhausted, because the school couldn’t be bothered arranging extra buses.
The boys, they never had to wait, it was an efficient experience.
And things escalated in the three years, as no amount of segregation appeased this obsession. One day, a window somewhere in the block shattered and soon enough there was a fence along the footprint of the girls’ block. Stringent guards raised their voices if any girl was found even looking through it. Meanwhile, the boys couldn’t be bothered with inconveniences like fences. Who dared question teenage boys, hyper-vigilant about
losing their privilege?
Boys will be boys.
We had no permission to step out of the block or go to the canteen because the boys had recess. We obliged, because we had to be nice and comply. We agreed to limited mobility because it was time for the boys to go out and play.
Middle School PE lessons
Speaking of playing, back in middle school, we had the weirdest practice that took place each trimester.
Alongside the boys, the girls had to line up to the medical room to record our height and weight on our report cards. So us girls, with bodies attuned to hormonal will, unsure if our crush will ever look back at us, lined up for the ultimate embarrassment. One by one, the nurse called out our height and weight, for the nurse across the room of teenagers, to record it.
Year after year, this preceded our regular PE lessons, where commenting and body-shaming followed, all in good fun of course. The funny thing is, it was uncomfortable but not enough to complain. There was endurance, but it was fleeting. We looked at the mirror, feeling a little less sure than yesterday, but we let it go.
We began wilting instead of blossoming. And years later, it was impossible to pinpoint why girls just don’t speak up. Why it’s obvious that for equal work, girls will accept a paycheck not as bling as their male counterpart.
The dress code phenomenon
Back in India, ‘dress code’ was an important part of the curriculum of engineering colleges. So disastrous was the impact of calf-length jeans on a girl, that she had to be pulled out of class into a barrage of humiliation for distracting the fragile attention of the boys. Would you question the boys who later believe that everything should be tailored to their whim? Or would you blame the girls, tired of facing nonsensical hurdles, that they simply give in?
Good news is, our Dean had a solution- he decided to tour every department to scrutinize what the girls are wearing.
I remember the day he walked into our class, with three male sidekicks. A sixty year old self appointed moral messiah scanning women in their early twenties with an authoritative perversion that was beyond sick. I looked straight back at him, only to feel how demeaning the gaze of reinforced male entitlement could be. Luckily, in less than a year he was forced to resign- on charges of plagiarism.
Boy or girl or anyone that walks
Girls are never enough. If she has good grades and modest clothes, she is a prude. If she is pretty, smart and wears the wrong clothes she lacks decency. If she is pretty, smart, dressed right and has opinions, she is arrogant.
As I write about sexism in education, thousands of thirteen year olds must quit school because they’re born with the wrong genitalia. The girls who can go, are being broken down internally because nobody tells them as they grow up, that they are enough. No matter what they look like and how they behave, they are always enough.
Education is being non-compliant when anyone has the audacity to shame you for your personal choices. Education is accepting that not everyday you will be everything you set out to be and that’s okay. Education is taking pride in knowing your imperfections.
We love to destroy a little girl, maiming her systematically, with unrealistic expectations. We strive to spoil a little boy, with a life of no consequence. We do so by bleating societal norms that protect him instead of holding him accountable.
So, in the wake of the #Metoo movement, I stand for all the girls, the boys and the non-conformists who are now receiving an education they will struggle to unlearn when the time comes.
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