Title: Underachievement, failing boys and moral panics
1Underachievement, failing boys and moral panics
- Dr Emma Smith
- School of Education
- University of Birmingham
- e.smith_at_bham.ac.uk
2- Girls trounce the boys in examination league
table - The Times, August 2000
- Sometimes it's hard to be a boy
- Times Educational Supplement, June 2001
- Is school biased against boys? Daily
Mail, December 2000 - White boys fail too
- The Guardian, June 2005
- Schools hit by death of discipline among boys
- Daily Mail, August 2007
- Failing boys put university drive in doubt
Sunday Telegraph, August 2006
3Evidence for underachievement
4Percentage of pupils achieving Level 3 or above
in Key Stage 1 teacher assessments, 2004-2006
5Participation in A-level chemistry
6Why are boys failing?
- Schools are sexist
- Too few male teachers
- Assessment is biased towards girls
- Crisis in masculinity
- Girl power
- They arent failing
7- What is underachievement?
8- Underachievement or low achievement?
- Reconsidering the evidence
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12Achievement gaps A-level Chemistry (grade C)
13Variation in gross annual earnings, male and
female full-time employees, 1999-2006
14Percentage of students achieving level 5 or
above at Key Stage 3 in the core subjects.Group
1
Boys Girls
15Percentage of students achieving level 5 or
above at Key Stage 3 in the core subjects.Group
2
White Black
16Percentage of students achieving level 5 or
above at Key Stage 3 in the core subjects.Group 3
Non EAL EAL
17Percentage of students achieving level 5 or
above at Key Stage 3 in the core subjects.Group 4
Non FSM FSM
18Summary
- Contemporary crisis of underachievement and
failure among boys - Evidence points to achievement gaps, especially
in literacy-based subjects - Explanations assessment practice, constructions
of gender, feminised schools, innate differences
between the sexes - Achievement gaps between boys and girls are not a
new phenomenon, they are consistent over time and
place, especially in literacy based subjects - They are dwarfed by achievement gaps between
wealthy/less wealthy and between some ethnic
majority/minority groups - Men still earn more money than women and hold the
most powerful jobs -
19Some questions
- Should we expect boys and girls to achieve the
same outcomes in school? - With the focus on boys underachievement, what
about the girls? - If achievement gaps between the sexes are long
established and may be related to innate
differences, what could (should) schools do about
it? - Which boys and which girls should we be concerned
about? - Does gender deserve the focus it currently
receives?