Zusammenfassung der Ressource
GENDER DIFFERENCES IN ACHIEVEMENT PART I
- GENDER PATTERNS IN ACHIEVEMENT
- Girls do better than
boys KS1-3
- Especially in English however the
gap in maths and science is
narrower
- At GCSE girls are
around 10 percentage
points ahead of boys
- At AS and A level,
girls are more likely to
pass and get higher
grades however the
gap is narrower than
GCSE
- Girls even do better in
traditional boys subjects
like science
- More girls than boys go into higher education
- In the past, boys outperformed
girls but since the 1980's girls
have improved rapidly and now
do better than boys in all areas
of education
- Reasons for girls improvements - External factors outside of the education system e.g home and
family background. wider society, job market. Internal factors within schools and the education
system such as the schools equal opportunities policies
- EXTERNAL FACTORS
- Influence of feminism
- Feminists have had an impact on
womens rights and opportunities
through campaigns to win changes in
the law e.g equal pay, outlawing rape
and divorce etc
- Feminist ideas about independence and
freedom from male domination have
affected how girls view themselves and
also their aspirations. As a result they are
more motivated to do well in education
- Changes in the family
- Major
changes in
the family
since the
70's
- Increase in the
divorce rate - 40%
marriages end in
divorce
- More lone
parent families,
990% of which
are female
headed
- More
cohabitation
and a decrease
in first
marriages
- Smaller families
and more women
staying single
- There changes have lead to women
having more need and more opportunity
to be more independent
- Girls changing ambitions
- Links to the
influence of
feminism
- Sharpe - interviewed girls in
the 1970's and the 1990's
- Their aspirations
shifted from "love,
marriage, children.
jobs" to "careers,
independence,
marriage etc"
- Francis - (2001) found that girls
now have high career aspirations
which required success in the
education system
- Changes in womens employment
- There are now employment
opportunities for women that
were previously unavailable
- This is due to the expansion of
the service sector - traditionally an
area of womens work
- Womens
employment has
risen from under
half married
women in the 50's
to about three
quarters today
- Changes in the law has improved
the position of working women and
gave them employment rights:
- Equal Pay Act
- Sex
Discrimination
Act
- As a result these changes have given girls more incentive
to see their future in terms of paid work and this creates
motivation for them to gain qualification
- INTERNAL FACTORS
- Equal opportunities policies
- Feminist
influence -
boys and girls
are equally
capable and
should be
given equal
opportunities
- this is now
a social norm
- This has lead to educational
policies aimed at giving girls
and boys equal opportunities:
- GIST & WISE
encourage girls into
science, technology and
engineering
- National Curriculum - girls
and boys largely study the
same subjects
- Meritocracy is a result
of such policies Now
that girls have more
equal opportunities than
the past they are able
to do better
- Role models
- More female teachers and
headteachers to provide
positive, pro-educational role
models to girls
- "feminises" the education system
and girls see educational success as a
desirablefemale characteristic
- Encourages girls to see school as
a female "gender domain"
- Coursework
- Mitsos and Browne - girls do
better in coursework than boys
because they are more
conscientious and better organised
- Girls mature earlier and can
concentrate for longer
- Introduction of coursework to the
exam system has lead to a greater
gender gap in achievement
- Stereotypes in learning
materials
- Studies of reading schemes, textbooks etc IN THE PAST have shown
that females were under-represented and portrayed as subordinate
to male domestic roles or unsuited to certain subjects like science
- NOW sexist images have been removed - replaced with positive images
of females which may raise girls self esteem and aspirations
- Teacher attention
- IN THE PAST studies have
shown that teachers spent
more attention on boys
than girls
- NOW - French & French -boys and girls paid
similar amounts of academic attention
however boys more overall due to behaviour
- NOW - Francis - boys
disciplined more harshly and
teachers had lower
expectations of them
- NOW - Swann - boys
dominate class discussions but
girls better at listening and
cooperation - teachers like this
- give them more attention
and encouragement
- Selection and league tables
- Marketisation
policies increase
competition
between
schools
- Girls are more successful than boys, so they
are more attractive to schools
- As a result girls are more
likely to get places in top
schools - receive a better
education and achieve more
- BOYS UNDERACHIEVEMENT
- Literacy
- Parents spend less
time reading to sons
than daughters
- Mothers read so its
seen as a feminine
activity
- Boys leisure interests do
not require communication
and language skills
- Globalisation and
decline of
traditional 'mens
jobs'
- Since the 80's
globalisation has led
to much industry
relocating to
developing countries
- This has led to a decline in UK manufacturing industries
- Coal mining
- Ship building
- Decline in male employment opportunities - identity
crisis, loss of motivation and self esteem
- Many boys see little prospect in getting jobs
and therefore are not motivated to succeed
- Feminisation of schooling
- Sewell - schools no longer nurture masculine traits e.g competition and leadership
- Introduction of coursework
disadvantages boys
- 1 in 6 primary school teachers are men, 60% of
primary school boys have no lessons with men - may
give boys the idea that school is a feminine activity
- Lack of male role
models at home
- 1.5 million female
headed lone
parent families
- No male role model to go out to
work and support a family - boys
see less value for employment and
therefore for qualifications
- Laddish
subcultures
- Peer pressure on boys to
show their masculinity and
anti-school attitude
- Francis - boys more concerned then
girls about being labelled 'swots' as it
threatens their masculine identity
- Francis - working class
subculture sees
non-manual work as
womanish
- Epstein - pro-school working class boys were likely
to be bullied, labelled 'gay' and verbally abused
- As girls move into more 'masculine' areas such as paid work, boys become more laddish in an effort to identify themselves as non-feminine and this leads to underachievement
- Policies to raise
boys achievement
- Using male role models and boys leisure interests to
improve boys literacy skills and motivate them to succeed -
Raising Boys, Reading Champions and Playing for Success