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What about the boys? Reconsidering gender equitable education Why now? Which boys? What are the strategies that have been tried? Where should we go from here? – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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1
What about the boys?
  • Reconsidering gender equitable education

2
  • Janice Wallace
  • Educational Policy Studies
  • University of Alberta
  • wallacej_at_ualberta.ca

3
  • Why now?
  • Which boys?
  • What are the strategies that have been tried?
  • Where should we go from here?

4
Why now?
  • Growing attention to high stakes standardized
    tests
  • Media attention to failing and disadvantaged
    boys increases political pressure to act

5
? Growing attention to high stakes
standardized tests ?Media attention to failing
and disadvantaged boys increases political
pressure to act ? Does not recognize that boys
have not being doing well in literacy measures
relative to girls for decades (e.g. Stanchfield,
1973)nor that reading scores for both boys
and girls have been improving overall.
6
Influential theories
  • Traditional
  • war against boys
  • toxic gender roles
  • biological brain differences
  • failure to produce real men
  • Criticaltraditional theories are
  • strategies of the right and economic interests to
    naturalize preferred ways of being a boy
  • do not explore the complexity of boys
    lives/multiple ways of being

7
Questions to consider
  • Who is best prepared to work with boys?
  • What do we understand about forms of masculinity?
  • What forms of masculinity are preferred and why?
  • Whose interests are served by preferred forms of
    masculinity?
  • How are these forms linked to particular social,
    political, ideological, and economic interests?

8
Which boys?
  • Traditional arguments that are shaping changes in
    school practices portray all boys as an
    undifferentiated group of underachievers, who
    are all victims of their own biology (Greig,
    2003, p. 39) or feminism, or liberal parenting
    orthe list goes on.
  • BUT research tells us that it is particular boys
    who are less likely to succeed

9
  • Race and social class have a greater
    impact on achievement than gender.
    (Weaver-Hightower, 2005)
  • In high migrant density working-class suburbs in
    western Melbourne, for instance, one in three
    boys could expect to fail university-accredited
    English if he chose to take it, compared with an
    anticipated failure rate for girls of one in
    five. And yet boys from the wealthy inner east
    suburbs do better than groups of girls from
    working-class and rural areas, their results
    being exceeded only by girls from similar
    socio- economic backgrounds
    (Gilbert Gilbert, 1998)

10
  • The sons of doctors, accountants and other
    professionals will continue to make it into
    university. But Coulter points out that in the
    past, people didn't worry much about the boys of
    working class families because in so many cases,
    as soon as they were old enough and strong
    enough, they joined their fathers working in
    factories. But as unskilled jobs dwindle,
    opportunities for boys to leave high school and
    land good jobs that provide a foundation for the
    future are becoming rare. More parents are
    pinning their children's future on them getting
    a university education.
  • (Rebecca Coulter in London Free Press,
    Saturday, October 29, 2005, accessed on-line)

11
  • Gay boys and boys with disabilities have
    profoundly different experiences of school
    than heterosexual and non-disabled students.
    If researchers are not careful and nuanced in
    their examination of the issues, they may
    misrecognize disadvantages as affecting all boys,
    when really boys who are white, heterosexual,
    able-bodied, middle class, and traditionally
    masculine tend on average to do quite well.
    For boys of color (e.g., Ferguson, 2000 Sewell,
    1997) and gay boys (e.g., Friend, 1993), however,
    the conditions are much more grim.
    (Weaver-Hightower, 2005)

12
Changing definitions of literacy
  • Blair and Sanford (2004) argue, traditional
    definitions of literacy do not factor in the
    forms of technological literacy in which many
    boys engage outside the classroom. It could be,
    they argue, that some boys have moved on to other
    forms of literacy that are not privileged in the
    classroom but with which they exhibit higher
    levels of competency than girls.

13
What are the strategies that have been tried?
  • Boy friendly books
  • Technology and boys
  • Increase the number of male teachers and male
    role models
  • Single sex settings

14
What about boy friendly books?
  • essentializes boys i.e., suggests that all boys
    prefer action-oriented or information books and
    no boys like to read poetry or fiction
  • does not recognize that differences between boys
    and boys, and girls and girls are just as
    significant as those between boys and girls
  • considers only the interests of traditional
    notions of masculinity and does not at all
    consider the affirmation and expression of
    other ways of doing masculinity.

15
boy friendly books continued
  • perpetuates a rigid binary between fixed gender
    identities. (Greig, 2003, p. 43)
  • may valorize violence or physical aggressiveness
    without questioning these behaviors as normative
    for males.
  • females and non-traditional males may be
    alienated and boys may not be encouraged to
    explore multiple ways of being

16
Technology and boys
  • Technology is not neutral pedagogical terrain
  • Pedagogy often perpetuates narrowly defined
    masculine norms to the exclusion of females and
    multiple expressions of masculinity.
  • Schools may actually be perpetuating inequity at
    the same time that they are pursuing it.

17
Increase the number of male elementary teachers
and male role models
  • Studies designed to support these ideas provide
    little support. Instead, boys who have male
    teachers do not have fewer problems in school and
    are not better adjusted than other boys.
    (Coulter McNay, 1995)
  • Presumes a homogenous category that does not
    recognize the many performances of masculinity
    that a male teacher may bring with him to the
    classroom

18
  • There are a complex set of inter-related
    economic, social, and political factors that are
    at play in the choices males and females make
    when considering a career in education.
  • Males contemplating teaching positions that are
    most stereotypically attached to female interests
    are caught between the feminized expectations
    for working with young children, traditional
    masculine ideals, and unchallenged homophobia
    that fuel fears about men working with young
    children.

19
  • Male and female teachers working together need
    to foster more reflective dialogue and debates
    regarding the construction of gender. It means
    men and women, through conversations and dialogue
    with students to raise awareness and promote
    discussions about acceptable male behaviour, must
    raise critical questions about the performance of
    gender, challenge the privileged position of
    hegemonic masculinity, and create safe, equitable
    places for all students. (Greig, 2003)

20
Single sex schooling
  • Is immediately pro-active, therefore politically
    desirable
  • Associated with a long history of prestigious
    male institutions
  • BUT there is no significant advantage according
    to research
  • May respond to perceptions that boys are more
    talkative and active with stricter discipline, a
    competitive atmosphere, and more physical
    activities.

21
  • strategy may negate the very male characteristics
    they have been set up to accommodate
  • may further marginalize boys who are already not
    succeeding because they do not fit into
    traditional male behaviours
  • may reinforce the very behaviours that do not
    serve boys well in school.

22
Where should we go from here?
  • We have a moral obligation to act in the best
    interests of all students
  • We need to actbut wisely rather than
    precipitously
  • There is no one simple solution, no tips for
    teachers (Lingard et al., 2002) that can fix
    boys. Nor do all boys need fixing
    (Weaver-Hightower, 2003).

23
  • Find out which boys are truly in need, find out
    what their problems are and what the roots of the
    problems are, and develop smart,
    non-stereotypical ways to help boys live in a
    world that demands masculinity to be
    reconceptualized as something more inclusive
    (Weaver-Hightower, 2003).

24
  • Politicians, school administrators and parents
    need to listen to what boys have to say about
    education. If they did, he says they'd learn that
    boys aren't yearning for more action-packed
    reading materials or more male teachers. "It's
    what the teacher actually does in the classroom"
    that makes the difference for boys, Martino says.
  • He said student success comes from the capacity
    of a teacher to engage students in learning, how
    well teachers of either gender explain and how
    well they listen. (Helen Connell quoting Wayne
    Martino (UWO),London Free Press, Saturday,
    October 29, 2005)

25
Strategies to consider
  • Encourage in your students a sense of competence,
    control, and challenge
  • Design literacy tasks that have a clear and
    immediate purpose
  • Respond to students personally and with genuine
    interest

26
  • Encourage students to develop self-efficacy
    through allowing them to have some control of the
    knowledge they acquire
  • Allow for inquiry based learning, individual
    choice, and accommodation of students interests
  • Make learning relevant to real life contexts

27
In other words, excellent teaching strategies
work for boys and for other students in your
class!
  • Promote dialogue, model, and act in ways that
    affirm genuine and multiple possibilities for
    young boys (Greig, 2003)
  • In English classes, add explicit attention to
    boys emotional vocabulary
  • Use critical literacy strategies
  • Develop action research projects to develop a
    deeper understanding of how particular boys are
    taking up literacy strategies
    (Weaver-Hightower, 2005)

28
  • Basing plans on deep knowledge of the
    particular students and contexts, we can as a
    profession, avoid entrenching harmful versions of
    masculinity, wasting time on gimmicks, and
    rolling back the gains of girls.
  • (Weaver-Hightower, 2005)
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