46 min

Do Schools Create “Problem Boys?‪”‬ ON BOYS Podcast

    • Barn och familj

Boys don’t do as well in school as girls. On the whole, they earn lower grades and more disciplinary referrals. You will typically find more boys in detention than at the top of the class.
Are boys the problem? Is there something about masculinity, something about male biology that contributes to these disparate outcomes? Or, are schools the problem? Does the curriculum and environment somehow inhibit boys’ success?
Yes. Boys mature more slowly than their female peers, so they’re generally not as well-equipped for the challenges of school as their similarly-aged female peers. Current masculinity standards also ridicule academic achievement or effort and make it difficult for boys to ask for help. And, most school curriculum and practices don’t align well with boys’ needs.
In far too many cases, though, adults make things worse rather than better for boys in school. Adult misunderstanding of male development, coupled with intrinsic bias (and intensified by the fact that educators are now being asked to do too many things, with too few resources & too little support), causes many adults to inadvertently exacerbate boys’ problems. And that’s a problem for all of us.

Photo by Mikhail Nilov via Pexels
In this episode, Jen & Janet discuss:Why boys struggle in schoolHow adults unintentially exacerabate boys’ problemsSetting boys up for school success (Choose a play-oriented preschool instead of an academically-oriented one!)Meeting boys’ needs in schoolLinks we mentioned (or should have) in this episode:When Your Kid is the Classroom Problem Child — The Cut article
Why Are Kids Being Forced to Eat Lunch in Silence? — Guardian article
Schools — Not Boys — Behaving Badly — Jen’s Building Boys Bulletin about both these articles
Boys & School — Building Boys post about the black walnut incident
Moving Into the Red: Boys & Education — article by Jen about her son’s kindergarten experience
Gifted & Twice-Exception (2E) Boys — ON BOYS episode
Sponsor Spotlight: My Life in a Book
Sponsor Spotlight: ArmoireClothing rental subscription that makes getting dressed easier. Visit armoire.style/ONBOYS to get up to 50% OFF your first month.

Sponsor Spotlight: WinonaMenopause care made easy!
Visit bywinona.com/onboys & use code ONBOYS to get 25% your first order.

Sponsor Spotlight: ByHeart Get 10% off your first order using code ONBOYS at byheart.com

 
Sponsor Spotlight: EZ MeltsGet a FREE 3-month supply of D3 w your 1st purchase at try.ezmelts.com/onboys




Our Sponsors:
* Check out Armoire and use my code ONBOYS for a great deal: www.armoire.style
* Check out undefined and use my code ONBOYS for a great deal: undefined


Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brands

Privacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy

Boys don’t do as well in school as girls. On the whole, they earn lower grades and more disciplinary referrals. You will typically find more boys in detention than at the top of the class.
Are boys the problem? Is there something about masculinity, something about male biology that contributes to these disparate outcomes? Or, are schools the problem? Does the curriculum and environment somehow inhibit boys’ success?
Yes. Boys mature more slowly than their female peers, so they’re generally not as well-equipped for the challenges of school as their similarly-aged female peers. Current masculinity standards also ridicule academic achievement or effort and make it difficult for boys to ask for help. And, most school curriculum and practices don’t align well with boys’ needs.
In far too many cases, though, adults make things worse rather than better for boys in school. Adult misunderstanding of male development, coupled with intrinsic bias (and intensified by the fact that educators are now being asked to do too many things, with too few resources & too little support), causes many adults to inadvertently exacerbate boys’ problems. And that’s a problem for all of us.

Photo by Mikhail Nilov via Pexels
In this episode, Jen & Janet discuss:Why boys struggle in schoolHow adults unintentially exacerabate boys’ problemsSetting boys up for school success (Choose a play-oriented preschool instead of an academically-oriented one!)Meeting boys’ needs in schoolLinks we mentioned (or should have) in this episode:When Your Kid is the Classroom Problem Child — The Cut article
Why Are Kids Being Forced to Eat Lunch in Silence? — Guardian article
Schools — Not Boys — Behaving Badly — Jen’s Building Boys Bulletin about both these articles
Boys & School — Building Boys post about the black walnut incident
Moving Into the Red: Boys & Education — article by Jen about her son’s kindergarten experience
Gifted & Twice-Exception (2E) Boys — ON BOYS episode
Sponsor Spotlight: My Life in a Book
Sponsor Spotlight: ArmoireClothing rental subscription that makes getting dressed easier. Visit armoire.style/ONBOYS to get up to 50% OFF your first month.

Sponsor Spotlight: WinonaMenopause care made easy!
Visit bywinona.com/onboys & use code ONBOYS to get 25% your first order.

Sponsor Spotlight: ByHeart Get 10% off your first order using code ONBOYS at byheart.com

 
Sponsor Spotlight: EZ MeltsGet a FREE 3-month supply of D3 w your 1st purchase at try.ezmelts.com/onboys




Our Sponsors:
* Check out Armoire and use my code ONBOYS for a great deal: www.armoire.style
* Check out undefined and use my code ONBOYS for a great deal: undefined


Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brands

Privacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy

46 min

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