Title: Gender and Achievement:
1DcSF The Gender Agenda 9th July
Gender and Achievement Issues for Research Dr
Gemma Moss Institute of Education, University of
London
2Gender and Achievement Issues for Research
- Gender and the policy context how attention to
boys underachievement has emerged as a policy
problem - Performance data and the policy context - gains
and losses for research - Gender and literacy as a telling case
3Gender and achievement in context
- Policy-driven educational reform in England runs
with and in response to performance data - The gap between girls and boys achievement is
one of a repertoire of policy problems that
emerge from analysis of that data
4Establishing priorities from a policy
perspective
- Gender is not the strongest predictor of
attainment - The social class attainment gap at Key Stage 4
(as measured by percentage point difference in
attainment between those eligible and not
eligible for free school meals) is three times as
wide as the gender gap. - White British FSM boys are a group with
particularly low attainment_ Only 24 percent
gain 5 A-C GCSEs (33 percentage points less
well than average attainment at GCSE). - _ However, Black Caribbean FSM boys and White
British FSM girls are also doing significantly
less well than the national average
(respectively, 30 and 26 percentage points less
well than average attainment at GCSE).
Source DfES (2007) Gender and Education The
evidence on pupils in England
5Gender and achievement in context
- In policy contexts, fixing gender is primarily
about fixing educational product. - The preferred solution is uniformity of outcome
- Performance data are not transparent they do
not provide an explanation for the different
patterns they reveal
6Date Organisation Publication 93 Ofsted Boys
and English. 98 QCA Can Do Better - Raising
boys' achievement in English 03 Ofsted Yes
he can - schools where boys write
well 03 Ofsted Literature search on
improving boys writing 03 Ofsted English
Improving boys writing at Key
Stages 2 and 3 03 DfES/DoH Using the National
Healthy School Standard to Raise Boys
Achievement.
7Date Organisation Publication 03 DfES Gender
and Achievement - The Standards
Website 04 PNS/UKLA Raising boys' achievements
in writing 05 PNS Boys' writing
flyers 05 DfES Raising Boys
Achievement 07 DfES Gender and Education The
evidence on pupils in England 08 SLA
Riveting Reads Boys into Books 11-14
8Gender, literacy and achievement the policy way
gains and losses
- Gains
- Little support for boy-friendly pedagogies
- The debate over boys performance is contained by
the call for good pedagogy for all - In some quarters, this has led to greater clarity
over the need to expand rather than constrict
definitions of what counts as literacy in school
(Ofsted, 2003)
9Gender, literacy and achievement the policy way
gains and losses
- Losses
- Solutions are driven by the need to fix
performance outcomes - There is
- A loss of space in which to test competing
explanations or their necessary scope - A confusing welter of different advice, in which
being seen to act fast counts most - A muting of gender politics the social
construction of gender is not centre stage
10What can research say to policy in this context?
Refocus on gender politics?
- Francis, B. Perspectives on Gender and
Achievement. - Key explanations for the gender gap
- Boys and girls are naturally different and this
explains discrepancies in achievement - Feminisation of schooling and bias towards girls
disadvantages boys - Pupils constructions of gender produce
different behaviours which impact on achievement -
- http//www.kenttrustweb.org.uk/docs/eot_becky_fran
cis.pdf
11What can research say to policy in this context?
New forms of data analysis?
- Machin, S and McNally, S. Gender and
Educational Attainment in Schools - At what stage in education is the gender gap
most important? - How is gender gap related to changes at
school/exam system or wider social and economic
changes, e.g. higher education and labour market
participation of women decline in male teachers
cultural changes - Can policy make a difference?
- How does gap in school attainment affect
differences in post-compulsory schooling, labour
market outcomes? - http//www.iza.org/essle/essle2003/papers/mcnally
.ppt.
12What can research say to policy in this context?
The search for best practice?
- Younger, Warrington et al, 2005, Raising Boys
Achievement - The schools we initially worked with did not
always know .. why their gender gap had closed.
Certainly all schools had put into effect certain
measures to raise improvement, but these were not
necessarily gender specific, nor indeed boy
specific. Thus, although there was often an
intuitive grasp of why the gap was narrowing,
there was little analysis of the process of
impact which would enable the strategy to be
transferred, with confidence, to other schools. - http//www.dfes.gov.uk/research/data/uploadfiles/R
R636.pdf
13New narratives about gender, literacy and
schooling Slow thinking in fast times
- Research projects
- Fact and Fiction Boys development as readers in
the 7-9 age range. 1996-8. - Mixed Methods in the Study of Pattern and
Variation in Childrens Reading Habits. 2001 - Building a New Literacy Practice through the
Adoption of the NLS. 2002-3 - Researchers
- Gemma Moss, Dena Attar, John McDonald.
- Funder ESRC
14Gender, literacy and achievement turning
explanations into questions
- Starting from the quantitative data
- Boys do less well than girls at reading and
writing - Boys read less
- Boys prefer non-fiction (Barrs, 1993)
- What do these correlations in the data suggest?
15Gender, literacy and achievement turning
explanations into questions
- Hypothesis Boys preference for non-fiction
takes them to texts which are linguistically more
complex and therefore more difficult for
beginning readers to read. This increases the
gap between failure and success. - Question Why do boys prefer non-fiction?
- Research question Where and how is boys
preference for non-fiction formed? Inside and/ or
outside of school?
16Looking at reading as a social practice what do
you see?
- Childrens perceived proficiency as readers is
made highly visible in classrooms - Proficiency judgements about reading structure
access to most areas of the curriculum, not just
literacy. - Fiction texts reflect their readers designated
level of proficiency through their design
characteristics. - Many non-fiction texts do not.
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19Looking at reading as a social practice what do
you see?
- Readers divide into these three categories
- Can/ do Can/ dont Cant yet/ dont
- Gender differences emerge within rather than
ahead of these categories. - More girls fall into the can/do category
- More boys fall into can/dont or cant
yet/dont categories - Boys in the cant yet category are most likely
to chose to read non-fiction in class
20Differences between underachieving boys and
underachieving girls
- Girls and boys designated weak readers adopt
different strategies in class - Girls strategies keep them on task, even if
others underestimate what they can do and seldom
challenge them they coast along - Boys strategies increasingly take them off task
as they struggle to disguise their relatively
poor standing and seek status and recognition
with peers in other ways
21Girls and boys who pass the proficiency
threshold Can, do?
- Children who read read fiction
- Girls network more round their reading than boys
- Avid boy readers often seem to get considerable
support from home to keep them reading - Performance-driven classrooms create few spaces
for supporting wider reading or sustaining
networks of readers - Yet wide reading enhances writing (Barrs and
Cork, 2001)
22Conclusions
- This explanation can be tested
- It puts schooling as well as gender into the
frame - It provides a means of reviewing the literacy
curriculum and what it offers to whom, as it
changes over time - What happens to those at the bottom of the
reading hierarchy? (Cant yet/ dont) - How are those who have acquired basic competence
supported or stretched? (Can/dont)
23Gender and the Literacy Curriculum Principles
for future action
- We need to find ways to
- build an inclusive learning culture which can
address the social standing of those at the
bottom of the literacy hierarchy, whether girls
or boys - build a self-sustaining reading culture which
encourages and significantly expands the choices
children make - provide more opportunities for childrens reading
to feed their writing in unexpected ways
24Researching texts, contexts and readers
25References
- Barrs, M and Pidgeon, S. (1993) Reading the
difference, CLPE - Barrs, M and Cork, V. (2001) The Reader in the
Writer - DfES (2007) Gender and Education The evidence on
pupils in England. - Francis, B. Perspectives on Gender and
Achievement - Machin, S and McNally, S. Gender and Educational
Attainment in Schools - Moss, G. (2007) Literacy and Gender
Researching texts, contexts and readers.
Routledge - Younger, M. Warrington, M. et al, (2005) Raising
Boys Achievement. DfES