Course Content
CHAPTER 1: Exploring Women’s Experiences in Leadership
💡 Guiding Questions: • How do women’s leadership experiences differ from those of men, both in perception and in practice? • What barriers continue to shape their professional journeys despite formal equality? • How can greater awareness among male leaders help remove these barriers within organisations?
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CHAPTER 2: Understanding and Deconstructing Gender Bias in Leadership
💡 Guiding Questions: • Why is it essential for men in leadership to take an active role in promoting gender equality? • What does meaningful allyship look like beyond words and symbolic gestures? • How can men use their influence to create systemic rather than superficial change?
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CHAPTER 3: Building Inclusive Leadership Practices
💡 Guiding Questions: • How does communication shape perceptions of leadership, authority, and collaboration across genders? • What communication habits can male leaders develop to foster equity and inclusion? • How can we ensure that communication not only informs but also empowers?
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Psycho-education for Men in Higher Positions Regarding Women’s Leadership Challenges

Reflect on the experiences and patterns discussed in this chapter. Consider how they might appear in your own workplace or leadership environment.

Scenario 1 – Everyday Leadership Bias
You are part of a management team evaluating employees for promotion. A female candidate is described as “capable but not assertive enough,” while a male candidate with similar behaviour is praised for being “balanced and collaborative.”

  • What assumptions are embedded in this evaluation?
  • How might you question or reframe this narrative in a constructive way?
  • What changes could make your organisation’s evaluation criteria more equitable?

 

Scenario 2 – Emotional Labour and Leadership
A senior female colleague spends extra time mediating conflicts, mentoring younger staff, and maintaining team morale—tasks that go unnoticed in formal evaluations.

  • Why is this emotional labour often invisible or undervalued?
  • How can leaders acknowledge and distribute this work more fairly?
  • What systems could better recognise contributions beyond measurable outcomes?

 

Scenario 3 – Male Allyship in Practice
As a male leader, you witness a woman being interrupted repeatedly in a meeting.

  • What are effective ways to intervene in the moment?
  • How can you create structures that prevent such dynamics from recurring?
  • How might allyship look different depending on your level of authority?

 

Reflection prompts:

  • What new insights did this chapter give you about women’s leadership experiences?
  • How do unconscious biases appear in your professional environment?
  • What actions can you take to contribute to a culture of inclusion and fairness?