Save the Males
It's boys, not girls, who are struggling in school
November/December 2000
Miriam Karmel Utne Reader
When a male student at Scarsdale (New York) High School told teachers attending a gender-equity meeting three years ago that girls do better than boys in the classroom, teachers were incredulous. Weren't they gathered to discuss how girls are shortchanged in the classroom? But when some of the teachers later looked at grading patterns, they found that the student was right: While boys and girls in advanced-placement social studies classes got about the same grades, in standard classes, girls outsmarted boys. Still, not everyone was convinced.
RELATED ARTICLES
Masses of Men Web Specials Archives Eric Utne Utne Reader Online What does it mean that many...
The Virtuous Male Web Specials Archives Keith Thompson Utne Reader Online More than a decade...
The: Dan Wolf (1915-1996) [co-founder and original editor of The Village Voice]...
For men, much ado about mirrors...
Beyond a 50-50 love life...
Christina Hoff Sommers tells the Scarsdale story in The Atlantic Monthly (May 2000) to prove a point: Teachers simply won't believe that girls are thriving in the classroom. Why? Because that would contradict what everyone is presumed to know: Girls are treated as the second sex in school, while boys are accorded privileges.
Citing data from the U.S. Department of Education, the National Center for Education Statistics, and several recent university studies, she argues that girls 'outshine boys' in everything from participation in advanced-placement classes and higher-level math and science courses to study-abroad programs. Girls read more books and get better grades. They enroll in college at a higher rate than boys do.
Boys, on the other hand, are more involved in crime, alcohol, and drugs. They are three times as likely to receive a diagnosis of attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder. And while girls attempt suicide at a higher rate, boys more often succeed.
Sommers traces this pervasive belief in girls' victimization to a 1982 book by Carol Gilligan, Harvard's first professor of gender studies, called In A Different Voice. In the book, which received widespread attention, Gilligan argued that America's adolescent girls were in crisis. But the research was flawed, Sommers says. It was anecdotal, lacked solid empirical evidence, and ignored the conventional protocols of social science research. Yet from it flowed a spate of 'victimology' literature, most notably Mary Pipher's Reviving Ophelia (1994), which argued that girls psychologically crash and burn in adolescence because of pressures to live up to unattainable standards of beauty and femininity. Polls conducted in the early '90s by the American Association of University Women seemed to confirm this view: Girls were being short-changed in the classroom.