Schoolyards’ Design and Students’ Needs from Gender Perspective: The Case of Palestine

Type
article
Year
2018
This study focuses on the relationship between gender, students’ needs and the physical form of schoolyards. It investigates whether and how the needs of both male and female students influence the physical form of schoolyards in Palestine, as a Middle Eastern country. The aim is to develop a better theoretical understanding of the relationship between the students’ needs based on their gender, and the physical form of schoolyards. The study follows an environmental approach, which is based on the concept of behavioral setting, to analyse the physical form of schoolyards in relation to students' needs.  For the validity of results, both quantitative (questionnaire) and qualitative approaches (observations, interviews with planners, and school principals, mental maps drawn by students) are used.   Different techniques, such as Statistical Package for Social Sciences (SPSS), ethnographic (cultural) techniques, photos and written notes are used. The study finds that the components of the physical form of schoolyards (design, use and rules) are influenced by gender, particularly the design components.  There are differences between design, use and rules components of females’ schoolyards and males’ schoolyards.  These differences are due to differences between needs of female and male students in schoolyards.  Therefore, the study recommends that the components of schoolyards should support different needs of both male and female students.

Citation

Al-Bishawi, Manal, Soheil Salaha and Shaden Awad. "Schoolyards’ Design and Students’ Needs from Gender Perspective: The Case of Palestine." Archnet-IJAR: International Journal of Architectural Research. 12, 2 (2018): 281-306

ISSN 1938-7806. OCLC 145980807; LOC 2007212183.

Parent Publications

Copyright

2018 Archnet-IJAR, Archnet, MIT- Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Country

Palestine

Language

English

Keywords