|

VIEW FROM AUSTRALIA
What's going wrong for boys?
We heard recently that the NSW Department of Education
had prepared a boys’ education policy in 2002. But the Department was
anxious about releasing it and has kept it locked away in a vault in its
Bridge St office. What’s going wrong for boys? And why can’t the
Department of Education in Australia’s most populous State tell parents
what it plans for their boys?
In the April edition of People and Place journal, I set out the complex
history of gender education in Australia. Since the days of the Whitlam
Government, we have had policies to encourage girls. There is a National
Action Plan for the Education of Girls and there are many policies laid
down to encourage girls to achieve. Coincidentally, girls are
outperforming boys in Australian schools, beating boys academically and
achieving many other goals, such as participation in out-of-school
activities.
If the girls’ education policies are working, then
that is excellent. Perhaps some policies to encourage boys might get
boys achieving. Unfortunately, the idea of helping boys learn seems to
provoke some people in the Department who claim (according to a teacher
speaking on ABC radio) boys “have had it too good, for too long”.
Ideologues have captured key positions in educational bureaucracies. And
the NSW Department of Education gets edgy about more public controversy
about helping boys, or helping girls. And so nearly 400,000 boys in NSW
State schools are put in the too-hard basket.
Research around the world says that schools are not succeeding in
capturing the imagination and energy of many boys. Too many boys feel
that school is a combination of a hostile authority and meaningless
tasks. Dr Andrew Martin of the University of Western Sydney’s SELF
Centre writes:
There is now compelling evidence that there are
gender differences in students’ engagement, motivation, achievement and
students’ relationship to work and school. For the most part, the
differences are not in boys’ favour.
The PISA report from the OECD said governments
throughout the western world are concerned because schools are not
imparting to boys the values governments wish them to learn — such as
productivity, citizenship and helping the community. Boys and men at
risk cost the community in road deaths, suicide, and broken families.
Men are 90 per cent of the people kept at great cost in prisons.
Most (or many) girls will learn even under bad teachers. But most boys
will not: they get fed up, disengage and get into mischief. Being a boy,
with all its qualities of noisiness, risk and adventure, does not mesh
very well with what teachers expect of children who are in classrooms.
Boys sum this up as, “Sit still, shut up, write this down”.
Simple solutions won’t work. Who said this was going to be easy? Only
last week we heard that bus drivers are having trouble getting boys to
behave. We can’t wave a magic wand to make boys learn. Quite often, the
media suggest that boys should all be started later at school, or that
more male teachers is the answer. Role modelling has been shown to work
with groups such as black youth and females and it may well work with
boys. So some more male teachers might help — IF they are good teachers
dedicated to help children improve. But Ken Rowe of the Australian
Council for Educational Research says that no simple recipe will work. A
gender gap between the achievements of girls and boys exists in most
parts of the western world. Cambridge’s Raising Boys’ Achievement
Project could barely locate a school in which boys’ consistently
outmatched girls’.
The Federal Government’s report Boys: Getting it Right
surveyed parents, teachers and boys and girls around Australia. It found
that many people were concerned about boys’ too-frequent experience of
school as a hostile authority with meaningless work demands. It came up
with a ten-point plan for improving boys’ performance. These included
increasing expectations of boys, providing more praise, more active
learning, and clear instructions.
Fathers and other males should be involved in boys’ learning. And
computers should be used to catch boys’ interest. Naturally many girls
will be glad of such improvements. Girls in the UK have certainly
welcomed such innovations. And their learning improved as well as boys’.
Around Australia, many people have taken up the challenge
enthusiastically. Researchers are looking at better ways of learning
than chalk-and-talk. Individual schools are holding workshops, listening
to people who challenge them and getting the teachers themselves to
praise boys, asking more of them and using more humour in lessons. The
Federal Government has set up Lighthouse Schools to trial new techniques
and show other teachers how to improve learning for boys.
Parents want to know how they can help, for they are a
key part of the equation. Boys — and girls — want their views heard too.
In my research visits to schools, I find girls can express boys’ needs
better than boys can. We really know much more about all this than we
did 15 years ago.
Some black spots continue to be Aboriginal youth, working-class
children, and kids from the impoverished outer suburbs. Rural youth
still suffer from isolation and despair from confronting a future in
towns threatened by drought and population decline. While females and
males each have their problems, females often internalise. We don’t show
young males safe ways of expressing their feelings. Sebastian Kraemer
from the UK’s Tavistock Institute talks of alexythymia, or lack of an
emotional vocabulary for men.
Males more often turn to alcohol, drugs, drive wildly, have car
accidents and commit suicide. And boys are similar. At the same time
there are tremendous differences in the ways boys mature and find their
masculinity. In the process, many boys overcompensate for their
insecurities with a show of male bravado and a fear of not being
masculine enough. Academics call this homophobia and it is why we need a
better range of masculine role models available to boys other than the
machismo we get in Hollywood movies, or the “boofhead” antics of Rugby
League. There are many ways of being a good man but boys need some
guidance if they are to find their way and avoid the pitfalls of
alcohol, drugs and violence.
We all have different life experiences, and there is a range of ideas
about how to educate kids. We needn’t worry too much about extreme
views, crank journalists and noisy pressure groups. I hope the NSW
Department of Education will accept the challenge of getting all our
kids learning.
Boys grow up to be fathers, husbands, lovers: we want
them to be able to express themselves well as well as be knowledgeable
and skillful. It’s not a question of favouring girls or boys. And it
shouldn’t be about favouring one ideology or another. Improving teaching
and learning will benefit all students. If Australia is to be the clever
country, we want to see all Australian children learning.
Peter West
10 May 2005
http://www.onlineopinion.com.au/view.asp?article=3433
home
/
Previous
viewpoint |