August, 2006 Archive

Students learn more from same-gender teachers

August 30th, 2006 by Jane Sanders in Behavorial Differences

This is not a surprise at all. Most people of all ages feel safer and more comfortable with those like themselves. it’s both that simple and that complicated!

by
Nick Gibbens
Boys perform better at school when they are taught by men, while girls do best when they are taught by women, a study suggests.

Stanford University researchers studied 25,000 children aged between 8 and 14 who took part in the National Education Longitudinal Survey.

They found that pupils performed about 4 per cent better in examinations when their teachers were of the same sex.

Lead researcher Thomas Dee said: “Learning from a teacher of the opposite gender has a detrimental effect on students’ academic progress.

“My best estimate is that it lowers test scores for both boys and girls by approximately 4 per cent of a standard deviation and has even larger effects on various measures of student engagement.”

The study claims that adverse gender effects may fall more heavily on boys in middle-school because most middle-school teachers are female.

According to a US Department of Education survey, more than 90 per cent of middle-school reading teachers are female, as are more than 70 per cent of the math teachers and nearly 70 per cent of the science teachers.

In addition to examining the effect of teacher gender on students’ test performance, Dee also analysed teacher perceptions of a student’s performance and student perceptions of the subject taught by a particular teacher.

When a class is headed by a female teacher, boys are much more likely to be seen as disruptive, the study found

And, when taught by a man, girls were more likely to report that they did not look forward to a subject, that it was not useful for their future, or that they were afraid to ask questions, the report added.

“Simply put, girls have better educational outcomes when taught by women and boys are better off when taught by men,” said Dee.

The study is published in the fall issue of Education Next.


we are not the SAME! how many times do i have to say this?

August 21st, 2006 by Jane Sanders in Biological Differences

It shocks and frustrates me that some women still fight for the position that men and women’s brains are the same, that there is no difference between us emotionally or mentally. come on! if we keep sweeping our differences under the rug we will soon trip over them, and actually already have begun doing so. There are many many differences between us, AND THIS IS A GOOD THING. We need to understand and celebrate our differences, and learn how to work with them. Women should be proud of their differences and learn how to use them as the strengths they are. We are different from men, they are different from us. We are not the same but we are equal. let me repeat that…WE ARE NOT THE SAME, BUT WE ARE EQUAL.

This article below, one of numerous such writings, reinforces my position.

http://lfpress.ca/newsstand/Today/Books/2006/08/19/1764885-sun.html


An interesting point of view about the wage gap

August 15th, 2006 by Jane Sanders in Women's Issues

http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/opinion/281193_erbe15.html


from The Female Brain, new book

August 7th, 2006 by Jane Sanders in Biological Differences

Click Here for Full Article About “from The Female Brain”

those readers having heard my GenderSmart® presentation or read my book will be familiar with some of this, but it’s fascinating nonetheless!