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posted by janrinok on Friday May 02 2014, @11:19AM   Printer-friendly
from the no-fighting-here-please-children dept.

Here's 100 Years of Proof That Girls Are Better Students Than Boys. In all subjects, even math and science.

In 2006, Newsweek magazine declared it, loud, on their cover: America's boys were in crisis. Boys were falling behind their female counterparts in school. They were getting worse grades, lagging on standardized tests, and not attending college in the same numbers as girls. "By almost every benchmark," Peg Tyre, the author of the cover story, wrote, "boys across the nation and in every demographic group are falling behind." And so it began-the end of men, but also an ongoing conversation on how to better boys' performance in the classroom. From the article:

This "boy crisis," however, was based on an assumption: that males had previously been on top. Granted, there was evidence to support that idea. For one, educational institutions for most of modern history have been openly sexist, favoring boys. And traditionally, males had outperformed girls in standardized tests and in math and science. But "by the mid-1990s, girls had reduced the gap in math, and more girls than boys were taking high-school-level biology and chemistry," Tyre wrote.

The assumption that boys had been the better students didn't seem right to (married) researchers Daniel and Susan Voyer of the University of New Brunswick in Canada. "I've been collecting grade data for a long time," Daniel Voyer says in a phone interview. "Typically if you find gender differences, they are in favor of girls - it doesn't matter what it is. So it started to kind of puzzle me." And so the pair set out to test, collecting every study they could find on grades and gender since 1914 and crunching the numbers in a mega-meta analysis, the first of its kind.

While the girls' advantage is largest in reading and language studies, it exists for all subjects, even math and science. And though they tested data from across the world, the Voyers found the gender gap was largest in the United States.

What's most striking is that the gender gap held across the decades. If the boy crisis existed, they would have seen boys' performance peak and fall over time. That wasn't the case. "Boys have been lagging for a long time and ... this is a fairly stable phenomenon," the paper concluded.

 
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  • (Score: 2, Interesting) by Dutchster on Friday May 02 2014, @12:32PM

    by Dutchster (3331) on Friday May 02 2014, @12:32PM (#38870)

    Schools have been historically openly sexist by favoring boys? Hmm, perhaps they were just ahead of the curve with their affirmative action programs :-)

    I, for one am not a fan of affirmative action programs but it stands to reason that if you're going to have them then it may be time to unapologetically favor boys in this regard.

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  • (Score: 1) by GeminiDomino on Friday May 02 2014, @12:43PM

    by GeminiDomino (661) on Friday May 02 2014, @12:43PM (#38879)

    TFA has a curious definition of either "modern" or "history", that's for sure.

    --
    "We've been attacked by the intelligent, educated segment of our culture"
    • (Score: 2) by velex on Friday May 02 2014, @01:26PM

      by velex (2068) on Friday May 02 2014, @01:26PM (#38896) Journal

      I'm convinced that feminists are all stuck in some kind of alternate 1955, like some kind of time loop where they appear to be in the present moment to an observer. Quick! Somebody call the Doctor! Or would this be a chronoton fluctuation? Quick! Send a message through the Pegasus Array and get Captain Janeway on the horn!

      • (Score: 1) by GeminiDomino on Monday May 05 2014, @12:28PM

        by GeminiDomino (661) on Monday May 05 2014, @12:28PM (#39743)

        I'd suggest Dr. E. Brown for this one, considering his expertise in that particular timespace domain, but I pale to think what they'd do to him.

        --
        "We've been attacked by the intelligent, educated segment of our culture"