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Florentyna
By Florentyna Jul 29th 2008 at 5:33 am EDT
I think I got diverted to your site from Youreable,
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No, Really, There Isn't A Boy Crisis

In response to the study done by the Association of University Women detailing the lack of a boys crisis in education, many have pointed two possible methodological flaws. One, the group doing the research is self-interested - in 1992, they did a study decrying the state of girls in public education, and it's impossible to imagine them publishing research saying that there is a boy crisis. The second line of criticism is that the study focuses on high school testing and other federally recognized measures of achievement as opposed to more "meaningful" metrics like GPAs and bachelor degrees awarded.

The first criticism could be important, if less obviously self-interested parties hadn't come to virtually identical conclusions. But Sara Mead, in a paper for Education Sector, reached much the same conclusions. So let's just deal with the second criticism, that the AAUW and Mead are using the wrong metrics. The main point that Mead makes in her paper is that both boys and girls are improving their academic achievement, it's just that girls are doing so faster. In math and reading, boys - especially younger ones - have either been holding steady since the 1970s, or have actually improved (on math especially).

And even though much boy crisis rhetoric is framed as a relative decline to girls, the fact that there's no evidence of a real decline in absolute measures like test scores certainly takes out the dire urgency that many boy crisis believers have. And even when you compare boys and girls, Mead concludes that "there has been no radical or recent decline in boys' per­form­ance relative to girls. Nor is there a clear overall trend—boys score higher in some areas, girls in others." And in so much as there is stagnation in achievement, it occurs at around 17 ( the oldest age the NAEP tests at) for both genders. So it's not that high schools have to be fixed for boys, it's for both genders.

But what Ronald Bailey and others point out is that perhaps we should look at GPAs, drop out rates and college performance instead of high school academic achievement, the gap emerges. But when it comes to college enrollment, we see that men have been going to college more, just at slower rates than women. When two groups are improving, and one is doing so faster, the proportions are always going to change. And when it comes to graduate degrees - which are a good indicator of educational and occupational achievement and status - women get less than half of the professional and doctorate degrees.

Basically, the data is muddled as to how real or important any educational gender gaps are. What we do know is that there are very real gaps when it comes to women's earnings in the workplace as well as real educational achievement gaps based on race and class. Those should be the disparities that we focus on, not the phantom of a boy crisis.


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