Royal Genes


Safe For Kids





Gender Gap Worries Educators



18 Aug 2006 19:54:38 -0700 misc.education
previous


Dom...
http://www.courant.com/news/education/hc-masteryboys0814.artaug14,0,3398951.story?coll=hc-headlines-education

Gender Gap Worries Educators

Girls Outperform Boys In Reading, Writing

By ROBERT A. FRAHM, Courant Staff Writer

August 14 2006

While black, Hispanic and low-income children again lagged far behind
others on statewide mastery test scores, another group of students also
remained mired in a chronic - though often less noticed - achievement
gap.

Boys continued to trail girls by substantial margins in reading and
writing on the annual Connecticut Mastery Test. The pattern has
persisted since Connecticut first started keeping track of scores by
gender in 2000, and is consistent with longstanding patterns on
national tests.

The gap was particularly acute in writing, where just over half, 54
percent, of boys in grades 3 through 8 met the state goal, compared
with 71 percent of girls. On the reading test, 59 percent of boys met
the state goal, compared with 64 percent of girls.

"It doesn't surprise me," said Andrew DeLucia, a sixth-grade teacher at
Doolittle School in Cheshire. "I think girls are much more motivated to
write, and there are a lot more topics they're interested in." With
boys, he said, "If they're not writing about sports, they lose
interest."

Bob LeChevalier...
And I'll bet that same thing applies to the 3rd grade reading scores
in your last post. The kids who aren't interested in what they read
won't do well on the state tests. And why should a third grader give
a damn what his test score is? Even if there are direct consequences
for him (which there probably aren't), 3rd graders don't have a strong
idea of cause and effect.

Serial Killfiler...
State politicians have never considered the possibility that an 8 or 9
year old might not buy in to their agendas. I don't know about you,
but if I were an 8 year old whose parents didn't care how I did in
school, I'm not sure I'd make much of an effort on test day.



Across the nation, the achievement gaps for racial minorities and other
groups under the requirements of the federal No Child Left Behind Act
have been well chronicled, but the gap between boys and girls has been
largely a footnote. No Child Left Behind, for example, holds schools
accountable for achievement gaps by race, income, disability status and
English-speaking ability, but does not require schools to measure
results by gender.

"It's not a gap we have been focusing enough attention on," said
Frances Rabinowitz, an associate commissioner in the state Department
of Education.

Still, the gender gap has begun to emerge recently in research reports,
news reports and discussions among educators.

The issue has gained attention on America's college campuses, too,
where women now make up 57 percent of enrollment - a complete reversal
of enrollment patterns a generation ago.

For years, educators worried about an achievement gap for women in
science and mathematics, but that gap, at least in some cases, has
begun to close. Women are still underrepresented in many engineering
and technology fields, for example, but have made gains in areas such
as biology and medicine.

On the latest Connecticut Mastery Test, girls matched boys in
mathematics, with 58 percent of each group meeting the state goal.

"Boys have problems with reading and writing. Girls have had problems
with math and science. We've done something for the girls. We can do
the same for boys," said Judith Kleinfeld, a psychology professor at
the University of Alaska, Fairbanks, and director of a national
consortium known as The Boys Project.

In writing, "Boys of every ethnic and socioeconomic group are falling
far behind girls of similar backgrounds," Kleinfeld wrote in a recent
paper for the White House Conference on Helping America's Youth.

In elementary and secondary schools across the nation, girls still
trail boys in mathematics but outscore boys in reading and
significantly outperform them in writing, according to the National
Assessment of Educational Progress, also known as the Nation's Report
Card.

In 2002, for example, 42 percent of eighth-grade girls met the
proficiency standard in writing on that test, twice the rate of success
among boys.

And while the results of a new writing test required for the first time
last year as part of the SAT college entrance exam are not yet
available, girls outscored boys on an optional SAT subject area test in
writing taken in the past by some students.

"It's a huge problem," Kleinfeld said. The literacy gap between girls
and boys "has been very large since the beginning of time," she said.
"Think back to Tom Sawyer and Becky."

Most boys develop verbal skills later than girls do and may not be
ready for the intensive reading instruction that some schools are now
demanding as early as kindergarten, she said.

For boys who lag, she said, one strategy would be to "keep them in
kindergarten for two years, or keep them out of school until they're
ready."

Bob LeChevalier...
That just makes it more likely that they will drop out, when they turn
18 and are still a year or more short of graduation. Adulthood
beckons, and they answer (as I know personally).

Serial Killfiler...
I don't think this gap issue has as much to do with boys as it seems.
If it can be shown that changing cultural norms no longer stigmatize
"smart" girls as much, what we are seeing may simply be an adjustment
of a past imbalance in achievement. Anyway the gender of the students
should not be the issue. There are plenty of boys AND girls who write
poorly, and that should be the concern.



In addition, Kleinfeld and others say, boys' reading habits are geared
more toward non-fiction - subjects such as sports or adventure - while
girls often prefer novels and short stories.

"I like mystery books. I read the Nancy Drew series," said 11-year-old
Mary Margaret Stoll, who finished fifth grade at Thompson Brook School
in Avon this year. She also said she likes books such as "Natalie's
Secret," part of a series of books "that has, like, more girls' stuff
on the front, and boys don't like to read that."

Many teachers, aware of this, are starting to seek more literature that
appeals to boys, said Richard Sterling, executive director of the
National Writing Project at the University of California, Berkeley.

"As little as seven or eight years ago in the average elementary school
classroom, the majority of reading material was fiction," he said.

Barbara Snyder, a reading teacher at Buttonball Lane School in
Glastonbury, said, "One thing that interests boys more than girls is
reading informational texts.

"We've addressed that - teaching how to read non-fiction," she said.
"Because boys don't want to read books from beginning to end,
informational texts are ideal. They can read short sections."

In writing, too, educators see differences between girls and boys.

"Girls do more writing - no question about that," said Sterling, citing
a study last year by the PEW Internet & American Life Project, which
reported that girls between the ages of 15 and 17 are far more active
writers on Internet blogs than boys are.

Sterling said boys "often get more engaged in history and in technical
and scientific kinds of writing." Girls are more likely to bring a
richer context to their writing, examining a range of ideas, he said.
"It's personal writing. ... A lot of the [Internet] content females are
writing is what I would call situational writing, exploring the world
around them."

George Coleman, Connecticut's new interim education commissioner, said
that while boys appear to be "equally excited about the things around
them, they're not as prone as young women would be about recording
things. We need to think a little more strategically about how do we
encourage them ... to share some of their thoughts on paper."

Bob LeChevalier...
The testing requires them to share their thoughts on paper on a
particular topic that they may not give a damn about. Boys are
probably a little more likely than girls to evidence their disinterest
openly by making no effort at what they aren't interested in.

Serial Killfiler...
We cater too much to likes and wants, and it only yields us brats.

Serial Killfiler...
There is no evidence of this whatsoever. You are proving nothing but
the depth of your own misinformed prejudices.


Whether you care about a general subject or not, you ought to be able
to write a coherent paragraph or two. It's not the teacher or
school's job to transform the lazy and indifferent into something
else.


Contact Robert A. Frahm at rfrahm@courant.com.
next