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Advantages
for Boys
What about the boys?
Take a look at the cover story of Business Week for May 26
2003: The
New Gender Gap: why boys are falling behind girls in education.
The article documents "a stunning gender reversal in
American education": Boys are
falling behind in school, with the result that a smaller
and smaller proportion of boys are going
on to college. As that article makes clear, the problem
is not that the girls are doing better; the real urgency derives
from the fact that boys are doing worse, relative to the performance
of boys 15 or 20 years ago. A growing percentage of boys are
losing interest, giving up, and/or dropping out.
Business Week concluded that a root cause of the decline in
boys' academic performance is that "educators [have]
lost sight of the learning style of boys. . . Instead of catering
to boys' learning styles, many schools are force-fitting them
into an unnatural mold. . . Educators also haven't done nearly
enough to keep up with the recent findings in brain
research about developmental differences."
In another
recent article, columnist Jen Horsey agrees that the failure
of the education establishment to understand that girls and
boys learn differently may underlie the growing gender gap.
She suggests that single-sex education may be the most cost-effective
remedy for the problem.
Does single-sex education work for boys?
You'll occasionally hear people claim that single-sex education
is "good for girls, but not for boys." In fact,
recent research has demonstrated that single-gender classrooms
benefit boys as well. Researchers at Cambridge University
(in the UK) examined the effects of single-sex classrooms
in schools in four different neighborhoods, including rural,
suburban and inner-city schools. They found that "using
single-sex groups was a significant factor in establishing
a school culture that would raise educational achievement."
For example, at Morley High School in Leeds, only one-third
of boys had been earning passing grades in German and French
prior to institution of the program. After the change to single-sex
classes, 100% of boys earned passing grades. Click on the
link to read the story which appeared in the Sunday Telegraph
March 30, 2003.
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At coed schools, many boys will tell you that only
geeks study hard. At single-sex schools, it's cool
to study , even for jocks. |
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| Studies
by Margrét Pála Ólafsdóttir, and others, demonstrate
that single-sex education broadens boys' educational
horizons. Boys in single-sex classrooms are more
likely to explore interests in art, painting, etc. |
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The Cambridge
study is not unique. Graham Able, of Dulwich College (in
London, England) studied the performance of girls and
boys in 30 single-sex and coeducational schools in England.
He found that while both girls and boys did better in
single-sex schools than they did in coeducational schools,
the single-sex advantage was greater for the boys than
it was for the girls.
This report was widely publicized in British newspapers:
see for example Alison Gordon's article for the Daily
Mail, "In a class of their own: boys benefit even
more than girls from single-sex schools, A-level grades
study reveals," June 11 2000. But, as near as we
can tell, this study has never been reported or even mentioned
in any American newspaper or magazine. Here's a quotation
from Graham Able's report:
The unsubstantiated mythology of the educational
establishment has been that girls do better in single
sex schools but that boys are "brought on" by
the more studious girls in a co-educational environment.
This mythology has never been supported by any objective
evidence, and any policy derived from it must presumably
sacrifice the advantages to one sex in order to promote
the cause of the other. . . [Our] results suggest that
single sex schools give an even greater academic advantage
to boys than for girls. This directly contradicts the
popular educational myth that boys do better in the classroom
if girls are present to set them a good example. One could
reasonably conclude from this study that both boys and
girls are academically disadvantaged in co-educational
schools, but that the disadvantage is greater for the
boys.
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If you'd like to read Graham Able's report, you can obtain
a copy by contacting
us.
A "before-and-after" experiment right here in
the United States also suggests that single-sex education
may be more beneficial for boys than for girls, at least
in the elementary school age group. Two years ago, Benjamin
Wright -- principal of the Thurgood Marshall Elementary
School, a public school in a low-income area of Seattle,
Washington -- segregated his school by sex. Nothing else
changed: the class sizes remained the same, the teacher
salaries remained the same, etc. The only change was that
the classes were now single-sex. That simple change had
a dramatic effect. As Mr. Wright described it in May 2002,
"In the [coed] environment that we had before, we
spent most of our time taking care of crises. Now we're
actually teaching kids. In terms of bullying: we've almost
completely stopped that. Once we split the classes, the
boys went from the 10th percentile to the 73rd percentile
[on the Washington Assessment of Student Learning]. The
girls remained pretty stable. They stayed in the same
percentile that they were in." In this case, the
single-sex environment was dramatically effective for
boys, but apparently had little effect -- at least in
terms of standardized test scores -- for the girls (keep
in mind that the girls were already scoring substantially
higher than the boys).
So what makes single-sex education so effective for boys?
The advantages of single-sex education for boys fall into
two basic categories: (i) a more diverse and well-rounded
educational experience, and (ii) custom-tailored instruction.
Let's look at each of these in turn.
A more diverse and well-rounded educational experience
If you've visited many coed public schools, you've certainly
encountered many rigid gender stereotypes, particularly
with regard to boys. A boy at a coed public high school,
for example, can be either a "geek" or a jock,
but rarely both. When's the last time you heard about
a star high school football player who was also the class
valedictorian? When's the last time you heard about a
star high school football player who would even talk to
the class valedictorian? At a coed high school, if you're
a boy, you're either a "geek" or a jock, but
not both.
Joe Coleman, director of admissions at the Woodberry Forest
School in Virginia (an all-boys' school), shared this
story with us. Last year, twelve of the players on the
varsity football team also were in the school musical
the following winter. They went to auditions right after
the football season ended! That's amazing, really. We
challenge anyone to find a coed school, public or private,
anywhere in the United States, where even two of the varsity
football players were in the school musical. Or even just
one player! It just doesn't happen. At a coed school,
a boy can be either a "jock" or a "drama
geek" but never both. In fact, at coed schools, the
jocks don't even talk to the drama geeks, and the drama
geeks despise and disdain the jocks. The jocks and the
drama geeks don't sit together, they don't eat together,
they don't even know each others' names. The football
players don't go to see the musicals, and the drama geeks
don't go to the football games. But at a single-sex school,
those gender stereotypes can just melt away. At a single-sex
school, it's fine for an athlete to go out for the musical.
It's not even a big deal, really. At a single-sex school,
kids have much greater freedom to find out who they really
are, without the pressure of what Diane Ruble (at NYU)
and others have referred to as gender intensification:
the pressure to behave and act in accordance with the
particular gender stereotype you've adopted. And this
leads to the great irony: Coed schools tend to reinforce
gender stereotypes, while single-sex schools allow kids
to break free from gender stereotypes. It's ironic,
because one might intuitively expect just the opposite.
But in fact all the research supports what we have just
said: boys at single-sex schools are much more likely
to pursue interests in art, music, drama, and foreign
languages, whereas girls at single-sex schools are much
more likely to take courses in advanced math, physics,
information technology, etc.
You'll sometimes hear critics say, "Maybe boys do
better academically in single-gender schools, but surely
boys do better in terms of social adjustment at coed schools."
Maybe not. Educators at a conference in Sydney, Australia
in July 2003 heard several speakers prevent evidence that
boys who attend single-sex schools may do better in terms
of maturity and social adjustment, than boys who attend
coed schools. Dr. Bruce Cook, principal of the Southport
School on the Gold Coast, told the audience that boys
educated in single-sex schools end up being more confident
around girls. "In coed schools, boys tend to adopt
a 'masculine' attitude because girls are there,"
he said. "They feel they have to demonstrate their
emerging masculinity by gross macho over-reaction."
Boys in single-sex schools "become more sensitive
men," and they're more polite, according to an article
published July 6 2003 in the
Sydney Morning Herald .
Historian Steven Millies shared with us how attending
a single-sex high school changed his life. "I began
high school more shy than most adolescents," he recalls.
"But I did take the enormous step of joining the
speech team, and that opened a new world to me. It led
me to other activities, and eventually to writing a column
for the school paper. The capstone came during my senior
year when I debated a fiery teacher about the Vietnam
War in front of four history classes. The event drew so
much attention that other people wanted to attend. By
the end of the day, we had been seen by practically everyone
in the school. These experiences were an awakening. I
strongly believe that they made possible the development
of interests and skills that led me to undertake a PhD
in history. When I think back on the catalyst -- joining
the speech team -- and I consider the fact that forensics
in Illinois is dominated by girls, about 70/30, I cannot
imagine that I would have joined the team in a coed school.
Even leaving shyness out of the question, it would have
been a 'girls' thing.' Knowing the south side of Chicago
as I do, I have to believe that any boy who joined the
team would have been making himself a target. I needed
the chance to explore my own potential without worrying
about looking foolish in front of the girls."
Boys at single-sex schools have more diverse role models
of their own sex. Andrew Hunter, a school principal who
has taught at both coed and single-sex schools, says that
"there is a subtle pressure toward gender stereotyping
in mixed schools. In boys' schools, boys feel free to
be themselves, to follow their interests and talents in
what might be regarded as non-macho pursuits: music, arts,
drama." We've heard from many young men who have
shared how their interest in poetry, or history, etc.
only began after they enrolled in a single-sex school.
In the single-sex environment, they didn't feel any embarrassment
in showing an interest in those "non-macho"
activities.
Brian Walsh, who has been a principal at private boys'
schools and private coed schools in New England, made
this observation: "Boys ordinarily do not even try
to sing in a coed school, whereas they love choral singing
in a boys' school; in the coed setting they make fun of
French pronunciation, whereas in the single-sex setting
they enjoy becoming fluent in French; in drama, they muck
up or clown around to avoid seeming imperfect in a coed
setting, whereas they excel at drama when by themselves."
Custom-tailored instruction
A recent nationwide study by Marcia Gentry and her associates,
published in the Journal of Educational Psychology, confirmed
what many earlier studies had suggested: at every age,
boys in coed schools are less enthusiastic about school
than girls are. This finding holds whether you're looking
at urban schools or rural schools, affluent schools or
schools located in low-income communities. And, as boys
get older, the "enthusiasm gap" widens. The
older boys get, the more they tend to perceive doing well
in school as "geeky." Boys perceive the coed
school as an institution run largely by women and run
largely according to women's rules: sit still, don't make
too much noise, don't be disruptive. They see that the
top students are girls, and the "teacher's pet"
is either a girl or a "feminized male" (to use
Patricia Cayo Sexton's rather derogatory term). So, boys
come to devalue academic excellence. If you're a boy at
a coed school, being an "A" student does not
raise your status with other boys. At most coed schools,
being an "A" student will lower your status
with other boys.
Source: Marcia Gentry,
Robert Gable, and Mary Rizza, "Students' perceptions
of classroom activities: are there grade-level and gender
differences?" Journal of Educational Psychology,
volume 94, number 3 (September 2002), pages 539-544.
Boys' schools can tailor the curriculum to the way boys
learn. Experienced teachers know that the best way to
get boys energized to learn is to keep the classroom loud
and lively. The teacher never stops moving. A boy never
knows where that teacher will be 20 seconds from now.
The teacher roams the class, speaking in a loud voice,
involving every student. "Mr. Taylor! Tell us please
what your opinion is on this matter!" The experienced
teacher at a boys' school always addresses his students
as "Mr." -- even in third grade. "If you
treat them as men, they're more likely to behave as men,"
one teacher told us.
Most boys will perk up and show some interest if you talk
about things that are dangerous, or immense, or "yucky."
The boy who was bored by biology at the coed school will
be interested if you bring in some black garden snakes.
The boy who fell asleep in chemistry class will be energized
if you give him an assignment to do a PowerPoint presentation
on dynamite, with lots of pictures of things blowing up.
Most boys enjoy blowing things up (or at least imagining
blowing things up). The high school boy who says he doesn't
like to read might enjoy The Hot Zone (a non-fiction book
about an Ebola-like virus isolated near Washington, DC
several years ago).
The first task of any teacher who hopes to teach boys
is to get the boys interested. As recent research shows,
that's no easy task. Boys' schools have a natural advantage,
because they can tailor their curriculum to topics that
interest boys, and teach those topics in ways that keep
the boys engaged.
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