Educational Dissatainment On The Grounds Of Sex
Evaluation The results from our observation and from the context analysis of
the story clearly support the growing international notion that boys are simply
underachieving at school. Whilst many think that boys are achieving no less
there is definitely a growth in the gap between the sexes at all levels of
education from secondary to primary schooling and possibly even from birth.
Ultimately the figures speak for themselves with a noticeable gap being
recognized at the age of 7 with girls leading in writing and reading, At 11 the
gap then continues with girls out performing boys in all subjects including
traditional “male” topics such as Math and Science. By the time of G.C.S.E
results girls are again ahead disproving the idea that boys simply mature later.
With girls dominance in traditional “male” subjects such as C.D.T. as a national
survey showed (girls were two thirds better than boys were) and all over the
board averaging 8% over the boys at G.C.S.E (Arnot et al, 1996). So what is the
future for boys in society, is it possible for them to regain the ground or is
it all societies fault? In this explanation we hope to explain some of the
sociological theories which have been offered to explain this and ultimately why
this gap has grown so suddenly with the help of both named studies and external
statistical data. First of all to explain why women are suddenly out striping
boys it is important to realise that this may not be a recent phenomenon which
has suddenly occurred recently. For many feminists this is the view they have
held for some time saying that prior to this growth female students were simply
restricted from growing. A change in the female ideology has thus taken place as
shown in Sue Sharpe’s study “Just like a Girl” in which girls reactions and
thoughts on life were recorded in 1976 and later in 1994. From these results she
concluded the 1976 pupils were simply worried about “love, marriage, husbands,
children, jobs, career, in that order” whilst in 1994 she highlighted that they
were “a job, career & being able to support themselves”. So what changed in the
space of time between the first and second collection of data and how did these
affect women`.
Historically this time was one of great change in education and
after Margaret Thatcher’s election success in 1976 the idea of comprehensives
were scrapped and slowly but surely the tri-partite system that was stacked
against women giving them higher pass rates into the better educational
faculties of grammar schools was disbanded; as power was taken away from the L.E.A’s (1988-Eductaion Reform Act). The attempts to improve schooling and
especially the class and gender differences were then pushed heavily in the
introduction of G.C.S.E.’s, S.A.T.’s and the National Curriculum, which helped
created the equality of learning originally, suggested in the 1944-Education
Act. So the teaching methods also evolved to help women and the choice of
subjects was increased so that girls no longer had to choose “female” subjects
such as humanities giving them worse qualification and a lower chance of good
jobs. This was shown in the 1980’s as women first stepped into the workplace
threatening previously safe male jobs in high-earning occupation. Spender’s
study the “Invisible Woman” supports this idea that before the previously
mentioned legislation women simply suffered at the hands of the education. As
supported by our observation this is still evident but now before this offered
women little chance of furthering themselves. Spender found a patriarchy in
education claiming that the context was both unbalanced and the teaching methods
of teachers unfair. Through overt observation (like our test) she found girls
received less attention in the class, were not pushed as much and sub
consciously taught to be submissive. She also noticed that this was not
surprising as all the information is checked and invidulated by men controlling
the topics taught by all the country. A point clearly supported in Stanworths’:
Gender differences in Further Education (which noted the large numbers of men in
controlling education faculties and higher paid teaching). So this argument
suggests that with more opportunities for women in the work place, a change in
the female ideology and with a fairer education system women simply passed the
boys as suggested in Panorama’s: The Future is Female by Hannon. He quotes:
“Boys are not actually doing worse than they have done in the past, they are
improving, but girls improvement outstrips boys” Hannan, The Future is Female,
1994 With father opportunities of women it is easy to realize the origins of the
current masculinity crisis, as there is no set role. Boys are no longer thought
of as maturing later and comfortably walking into sustainable education. Instead
men are expected to work hard throughout education to reap the rewards later but
this is against the gender stereotype portrayed through the agents of
socialisation. With this problem the “new man” was created producing a crisis
for men on which to evolve into. Both published in socialisation agents boys
have the problem of evolving into fulfilling the “laddish stereotype” or one in
which they draw away from the idea that it is not male to work hard in
education. This is shown in Susan Faludi’s work looking at men in relationship
to typically male and sometimes female subjects. Gauging the answers and
viewpoints she found a deep resentment at not being “taught how to be men” and
the problems that this new gender stereotype created and the variety of medians
that tried to push one or the other type i.e the lad’s magazine. As Faludi
concluded in her study “Stiffed: The Betrayal of the Modern Man” “as men
struggle to free themselves from their crisis their task is not, in the end, to
figure out how to be masculine- rather, their masculinity lies in figuring out
how to be human. The men who worked in shipyard and coalmines didn’t learn their
crafts to be masculine… the sense of their own masculinity flowed out of their
utility in society” something that no longer s
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