Waka Tsion Yohannes, Umucyo Deborah, Nishimwe Arlene, Yoon Abigail J, Neil Kara L
University of Global Health Equity, Butaro, Rwanda.
King Faisal Hospital Rwanda, Kigali, Rwanda.
BMC Med Educ. 2025 Jan 28;25(1):133. doi: 10.1186/s12909-025-06714-w.
Through progressive policies, Rwanda has made significant strides in promoting girls' education and empowerment. However, female enrollment in Bachelor of Medicine and Bachelor of Surgery (MBBS) programs remains disproportionately low. This cross-sectional study investigates the influence of gender stereotypes and girls' self-perceptions on female engagement in MBBS programs in Rwanda. The data analyzed for this study has been used and published in BMC Medical Education in a study with a different but clearly related focus, under the title "Gender-based support systems influencing female students to pursue a bachelor of medicine, bachelor of surgery (MBBS) in Rwanda" (Neil KL, BMC Med Educ 24:641,2024). While the previous analysis focused on the presence and gaps in gender-based support systems, the current research has a new focus on gender based self-perceptions influence in girls interest in pursuing medical school training. Conducted across 13 secondary schools and 3 universities offering MBBS degrees, the study engaged 8-12 students, parents/guardians, and teachers in each focus group discussion in a total of thirty-four focus group discussions and sixteen semi-structured interviews. Twenty-eight discussions took place at the secondary school level, and six were conducted at the MBBS level. Data analysis utilized inductive coding to identify recurring themes. The study identified three overarching themes: society's role in shaping gendered expectations about domestic and professional roles, girls' self-perceptions regarding their ability to pursue sciences and MBBS within these norms, and internalized stereotypes affecting girls' career aspirations. Drawing on gender schema and social cognitive theory, the research underscores how societal expectations and stereotypes shape and constrain girls' career choices. The findings highlight the necessity of dismantling gender-based perceptions that hinder girls' participation in scientific disciplines, including MBBS.
通过一系列进步政策,卢旺达在促进女童教育和赋权方面取得了重大进展。然而,医学学士和外科学士(MBBS)课程的女性入学率仍然极低。这项横断面研究调查了性别刻板印象和女孩的自我认知对卢旺达女性参与MBBS课程的影响。本研究分析的数据已在《BMC医学教育》上发表的一项研究中使用,该研究标题为“影响卢旺达女学生攻读医学学士、外科学士(MBBS)的基于性别的支持系统”(Neil KL,BMC Med Educ 24:641,2024),研究重点虽不同但明显相关。虽然之前的分析侧重于基于性别的支持系统的存在和差距,但当前的研究新聚焦于基于性别的自我认知对女孩追求医学院培训兴趣的影响。该研究在13所中学和3所提供MBBS学位的大学中进行,在总共34次焦点小组讨论和16次半结构化访谈中,每个焦点小组讨论邀请了8 - 12名学生、家长/监护人及教师参与。28次讨论在中学层面进行,6次在MBBS层面进行。数据分析采用归纳编码来识别反复出现的主题。该研究确定了三个总体主题:社会在塑造对家庭和职业角色的性别期望方面的作用;女孩在这些规范内对自己追求科学和MBBS能力的自我认知;以及影响女孩职业抱负的内化刻板印象。借鉴性别图式和社会认知理论,该研究强调了社会期望和刻板印象如何塑造和限制女孩的职业选择。研究结果凸显了消除阻碍女孩参与包括MBBS在内的科学学科的基于性别的观念的必要性。