Many of us have a lightbulb moment when it comes to finding our vocation, but for Dr Victoria Rawlings (BEd (Hons) 鈥07, PhD (Education) 鈥13), the road has been more circuitous than linear. Partly this is because her career is so multifaceted. She is an academic, specialising in bullying behaviour; she鈥檚 worked with the Australian Football League to make the game more inclusive of women and girls; she was one of the country鈥檚 top female umpires for a time; and then there was stint as a high school physical education teacher.
鈥淪port has always been part of my identity,鈥 Dr Rawlings says, 鈥渨hich is funny, as my parents aren鈥檛 sporty 鈥 and being English-born, they don鈥檛 have historical ties with Australian sport.鈥
At 11, Dr Rawlings began fencing 鈥 an unusual choice, she says now, thinking back 鈥 and went on to represent Australia in the Youth Olympic Games.聽At high school she added rowing, and cricket and soccer followed later in life. But it was in her first year of university that Dr Rawlings found the game she truly loved: Australian Rules football.
鈥淚 was so bad at it, and kept breaking bones. I wanted to be involved but thought, this will kill me. So, I became an umpire.鈥
It was a complete game changer for me. It was the most fun and social game that I had encountered.鈥 But while she loved the sport, it did not love her back. 鈥淚 was so bad at it, and kept breaking bones. I wanted to be involved but thought, this will kill me. So, I became an umpire.鈥
This is underselling it somewhat. Working with her coach, Dr Rawlings improved her fitness and skills to such a level that she became one of the country鈥檚 leading female umpires. She had just returned to Australia after a two-year research position in the United Kingdom when she was called on to umpire for the first season of the AFL Womens. This allowed her to contribute to the game that had brought her so much joy, and it would eventually bring her two worlds together.
In May this year, Dr Rawlings released her research report, Girls and women in Australian football umpiring: Understanding registration, participation and retention, outlining the need for聽change throughout the Australian Rules football community. Her research contributed to the AFL鈥檚 action plan to foster the development of women and girls throughout every level of the game and to also ensure that unacceptable behaviour is dealt with appropriately.
Dr Rawlings hung up her boots a few years ago, but remains a fan of the game and eager for it to modernise.
鈥淏efore I came to university, I really hadn鈥檛 found any queer people to interact with,鈥 she says. 鈥淧laying AFL at the Uni gave me that. Not everyone was queer, of course, but a lot were, and it was a lovely, inclusive place to be.鈥 Being part of a team, Dr Rawlings found camaraderie and support like never before. It is something she is keen to see replicated in sporting communities everywhere.
For the Sydney-born-and-raised lecturer, sport and schools are two sides of the same coin. She says both institutions聽have the benefits and drawbacks of their heritage and history. Both have been welcoming to her, but she says that from her perspective as a young queer woman, she has been able to see ways in which they need to be changed and modernised.
鈥淚 had a really tough time at school myself 鈥 not due to the school or my friends, who were supportive 鈥 but I had difficulties coming to terms with my sexuality, simply due to the environment and the times,鈥 Dr Rawlings says. 鈥淎s an undergraduate at the University of Sydney, I became interested in school environments, youth cultures, sexuality and inclusivity. I was intrigued by what makes students happy 鈥 or not so happy.鈥
Supported by a Thomas and Mary Ethel Ewing Doctoral Scholarship, which was founded by a bequest in 1964, she explored the connection between gender, sexuality and bullying in her PhD thesis. Now a Senior Lecturer in the School of Education and Social Work, Dr Rawlings is continuing her partnership with school communities, with the support of an Australian Research Council Discovery Early Career Researcher Award.
Broadly, she says, her goal is to make 鈥渋nstitutions be more open to everyone, not just a few.鈥
Dr Rawlings鈥 bullying research has seen her travel to several high schools across New South Wales and Victoria, where she embeds herself with students. It is, she says, illuminating.
鈥淲hat I commonly find is that kids feel like they are being talked at, rather than to,鈥 she says. 鈥淲hen it comes to challenging topics, like bullying, we need to include rather than judge. These kids know they need to be part of the solution. They don鈥檛 want to be part of the problem. But it is complex.鈥
Part of Dr Rawlings鈥 research has been exploring the ways language and communication impact behaviour 鈥 a neat intersection of theory affecting the real world. 鈥淲hen you know the theory, you make better decisions,鈥 she says.
鈥淔or instance, at one of the schools I was working at, there was an event advertised on Facebook which promoted violence towards girls.
鈥淏oys were emboldened by the event to kick girls in the head 鈥 something that started tentatively around lunchtime, then escalated,鈥 Dr Rawlings recalls 鈥淥n the way home, a girl was waiting for the bus when boys kicked her, and continued to beat her when she was lying on the ground. Students later told me, 鈥榃ell, that鈥檚 what boys are like,鈥 and, 鈥楽he kind of deserved it.鈥 Or, 鈥業t was just a joke.鈥欌
For Dr Rawlings, who is 鈥渙bsessed鈥 with language, it was a clarion call for change. 鈥淭his told us so much about how this devastating event came to be. The way people spoke about that event showed that there were expectations around how boys behave, that girls have to 鈥榙o鈥 their gender and sexuality in a certain way to avoid violence, and that there is pressure to laugh this off. If they had said, 鈥楾his is unacceptable, we won鈥檛 stand for this,鈥 they would have been socially outcast. Even teachers said, 鈥業t鈥檚 not bullying, it鈥檚 only happened once.鈥 There is so much to unpack there 鈥 but also so much hope to change things.鈥
In a country of over 25 million people, it doesn鈥檛 sound like a lot to change the behaviour of one classroom, but it is real-world, demonstrable change that has impacts on other behaviour, other conversations. We will see the impact.
When it comes to progress, Dr Rawlings is upbeat.
鈥淚 talk to students who say, 鈥業 don鈥檛 know how I鈥檝e survived this place.鈥 But as we go into the schools and start those conversations, things really do change.鈥
It is not seismic, she says 鈥 or not yet anyway. But day by day, conversations are opening up and being modified. Dr Rawlings has noticed a gap between how teens want to be and how they are 鈥 and this, she says, is the sweet spot. Figuring out how to capitalise on this desire to change will be her key to success, even if it is a slow process.
鈥淚n a country of over 25 million people, it doesn鈥檛 sound like a lot to change the behaviour of one classroom, but it is real-world, demonstrable change that has impacts on other behaviour, other conversations. We will see the impact.鈥
Written by Lauren Sams for聽Sydney Alumni Magazine.聽Photography by聽Stefanie Zingsheim