This past Sunday Times (Actually, it was two Sunday's ago. It has taken me a while to finish this post.) contained an article by a Harvard sociologist who points to the relational breakdowns between black men and women as one of the underlying factors to the troubles for African-American men. This breakdown manifests in domestic violence and misogyny. The real problem is that no one is talking about how sexism has helped foster many of the problems that plague black men.
This is the same problem I see in schools. We don't talk about gender and its effect on student learning. Not only are there too few men teaching in elementary schools, but schools continue to perpetuate gender roles. These roles are too constraining for boys especially. While the advancements for gender equality has allowed girls to forge their own identities (although, we still have a long way to go with this), boys are being left behind and failing miserably at school. They are confused as to whether they are to be lost boys or choir boys.
My main point is that we have to talk about gender, especially the dominant gender in order to get at what's ailing our male students. To ignore the failings of masculinity is to ignore our failings in education. When we as educators decide to discuss this issue openly and search for ways in which we can transform gender into something that allows our boys to succeed, then we may be able to help them avoid some of the same problems in the Times piece.
Wednesday, October 03, 2007
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Your post is a good starting point for our discussion. As you write, it’s not just about males in education, it is how gender plays into our roles and our views, both as students and teachers. I mentioned during at the September meeting that I was interested in the feminization of education, and in part because of concerns over the views of reading as not masculine, as studying not the “cool” thing. What are the various views of literacy and how is gender a part of that? Thanks for getting me thinking more about these topics.
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