Closing the Gap: A Mixed-Methods Study on Aligning Explicit and Hidden Curriculum for Gender Equity and Teen Dating Violence Prevention in Upper Secondary Schools
Abstract
1. Introduction
1.1. Theoretical Framework: Ecological Model and Levels of Risk/Protection
1.2. School, Stereotypes, and Sexism: Rationale for Studying Explicit and Implicit Curricula
1.3. Explicit and Hidden Curriculum
2. The Present Study
Aims and Hypotheses
3. Methodology
3.1. Participants
3.2. Instruments and Procedure
- Explicit curriculum, aimed at exploring how teaching contents, materials, and instructional practices integrate—or omit—topics related to gender equality, respect, and the valorization of differences.
- Hidden (implicit) curriculum, focused on less visible but equally meaningful aspects of school life, such as everyday language, classroom climate, interactions, and unwritten norms that can foster or hinder an affirmative environment.
- Affective relationships and the role of the school, a section intended to investigate how and/or if topics such as consent, jealousy, control, or conflict management in adolescents’ romantic relationships are addressed, recognized, and discussed at school.
3.3. Analysis of Responses
Mixed-Methods Integration and Meta-Inferences
4. Results
4.1. The Explicit Curriculum
4.1.1. Quantitative Data
4.1.2. Qualitative Data
4.2. The Hidden (Implicit) Curriculum
4.2.1. Quantitative Data
4.2.2. Qualitative Data
4.3. Affective Relationships and the Role of the School
4.3.1. Quantitative Data
4.3.2. Qualitative Data
5. Discussion
5.1. Explicit Curriculum
5.2. Hidden Curriculum
5.3. Affective Relationships and the Role of the School
5.4. Integration Summary and Meta-Inferences
6. Conclusions
Limitations and Future Developments
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
| TDV | Teen Dating Violence |
| SGMY J | Sexual and Gender Minority Youth |
| TGD | Trans and Gender Diverse |
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| Teachers | Students | |
|---|---|---|
| How? | Italian: text book reading (1); debate (1) | Italian: video viewing (1); debate (1); reading and text analysis (2) |
| Examples? | “More could be done in every subject. As an Italian teacher, I hope that literature texts will include more and more women writers and increasingly inclusive themes.” (woman, 28) “In my subject, hospitality and tourism, it is possible to do so, because it trains the figure of a receptionist, who can be either a man or a woman.” (woman, 49) Discussion—Is what they perceive as equity truly equity? “With my subject, mathematics, it is more difficult because of the course program itself, which makes it harder to approach this topic. That said, I have not avoided addressing it when the need has arisen.” (man, 58) Discussion—Mathematics alone may not seem suited to addressing equity, at least if we consider the explicit curriculum separate from the implicit “Yes, I teach science and mathematics and there are many women who have made an enormous contribution to the advancement of knowledge.” (woman, 48) “I think physical education can contribute and help everyone achieve their own success.” (man, 31) | “The difference between past and present”; “Civic Education (women’s right to vote)”; “Religion, when the teacher spoke about love”; “Religion, when we talk about foreign people without jobs on the street.” Italian: “For example, in literature we often talk a lot about gender equality—when we started studying Boccaccio we observed that he was the first to give a voice to a woman in his texts, also giving voice to her thoughts and feelings.” (girl, 16) “The subjects that speak a lot about gender equality are mainly Italian and History because they always mention both male and female figures—for example, in Italian we learn about the poets and their lives, or in History we study conquests of empires or of the throne.” (girl, 17) Discussion—Woman as muse? Woman as wife/queen? Is what they perceive as equity truly equity? |
| Teachers | Students | |
|---|---|---|
| Codes | Themes | Codes |
| Dialogue (7) Intervening in discussions (1) Talking to understand one another (1) Reflecting (1) | Talking about it, better and more (4) (6) | Intervening in discussions (3) Dialogue (30) Perceived absence of dialogue (1) Improving listening (2) Talking to understand one another (1) Engagement in conflicts (1) |
| Promoting awareness (4) Promotion activities (3) Videos (1) Structured in-depth activities (1) Modeling (1) Role-playing (1) “Real-life tasks” (1) Group work (1) Promoting cohesion (1) More structured projects for teachers (1) Working on empathy (1) Working on emotions (1) Working on language (1) Teaching materials (1) | Going beyond traditional teaching (14) (10) | Structured in-depth activities (20) More projects (4) Awareness-raising (8) Dedicated days (1) Group work (3) Interactive lesson (1) Games (1) Mixed-group work (1) Practical experiences (1) Link between pedagogical practices and social diversity (1) |
| Civic good and moral norms (1) Teaching respect for differences (3) Respect toward others (3) No judgment (2) Open-mindedness (2) Conveying equality (4) Greater inclusivity (2) Pre-existing respect (2) Understanding students’ opinions and needs (1) Supporting students (2) “there is a need for further awareness-raising, particularly within families” (1) “I wish to extend sexual and emotional education to all educational institutions, both public and private” (1) Fostering personal strengths and competencies (1) | Self-perceived promotion (13) (13) | Greater justice (1) Greater inclusivity (1) Greater respect for students’ identity (2) Understanding students’ opinions and needs (2) No judgment (2) Normalizing diversity (2) Avoiding the invisibilization of minorities (1) Do not ignore (2) Respecting diversity (2) Respect toward others (1) Change starting from school and spreading outward (1) Teaching respect for differences (2) Raising awareness (1) |
| I don’t know (2) | Negative attitude (1) (9) | I don’t know (8) Distrust (1) Perceived gender equity (2) Unnecessary proposals (2) No proposals (4) “they should not promote it” (1) “it ends up only being talked about” (1) Perceived teacher belief that addressing the topic is unnecessary (1) Classmates’ cognitive resistance to change (1) |
| Codes | Themes | N |
|---|---|---|
| Promotion regardless of leadership or policies (4) No (10) Feeling supported by leadership (2) School perceived as inclusive (1) Perception of progress (1) Teaching subject perceived as more influential than leadership (1) | “I do it regardless/because I do not perceive influence/because I perceive the school as more inclusive and progressing.” | (6) |
| Yes (8) Risk of bans (2) Perception of lack of freedom (1) Partial influence (1) | Perceived total or partial influence hindering action | (4) |
| Teachers | Students | |
|---|---|---|
| Codes | Themes | Codes |
| No (19) | No (1) (1) | No (71) |
| Yes (28) | Yes, generic assent + where/from whom specified (7) (3) | Yes (3) |
| Colleagues (1) | Yes, if it was “toxic jealousy” (3) | |
| Students (8) | Yes, from students (2) | |
| Yes, especially among women (3) | ||
| Within reflections on femicide (1) | ||
| Parental relationships (1) | ||
| School collaborator/caretaker staff (1) | ||
| Covering up/“dress more modestly” (1) | Jealousy, control, and/or violence behaviors in relationships (11) (0) | |
| Ex-boyfriend messages (1) | ||
| Conflicts (1) | ||
| Relational modalities (1) | ||
| Answering the phone promptly (1) | ||
| Jealousy masked as “morality” (1) | ||
| “he cares too much, he saw you grow up, you are always his world” (1) | ||
| “she wears a non-existent miniskirt, she asked for it” (1) | ||
| “it’s not easy to understand me” (1) | ||
| Physical violence (1) | ||
| Excessive freedom (1) | ||
| “Teachers don’t care” (1) |
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Lavanga, A.; Leone, S.A.; Merafina, N.; Fiorentino, G.; Sulla, F. Closing the Gap: A Mixed-Methods Study on Aligning Explicit and Hidden Curriculum for Gender Equity and Teen Dating Violence Prevention in Upper Secondary Schools. Educ. Sci. 2026, 16, 362. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci16030362
Lavanga A, Leone SA, Merafina N, Fiorentino G, Sulla F. Closing the Gap: A Mixed-Methods Study on Aligning Explicit and Hidden Curriculum for Gender Equity and Teen Dating Violence Prevention in Upper Secondary Schools. Education Sciences. 2026; 16(3):362. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci16030362
Chicago/Turabian StyleLavanga, Andreana, Salvatore Adam Leone, Nunzia Merafina, Giulia Fiorentino, and Francesco Sulla. 2026. "Closing the Gap: A Mixed-Methods Study on Aligning Explicit and Hidden Curriculum for Gender Equity and Teen Dating Violence Prevention in Upper Secondary Schools" Education Sciences 16, no. 3: 362. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci16030362
APA StyleLavanga, A., Leone, S. A., Merafina, N., Fiorentino, G., & Sulla, F. (2026). Closing the Gap: A Mixed-Methods Study on Aligning Explicit and Hidden Curriculum for Gender Equity and Teen Dating Violence Prevention in Upper Secondary Schools. Education Sciences, 16(3), 362. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci16030362

