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The Problem With Boys
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The Problem With Boys

An ignored crisis.
 
 
 
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What changes would you recommend if you were told that African-American children were:

 

  • four to eight times as likely to be drugged with Ritalin and other stimulants, which pediatrician Leonard Sax, calls “academic steroids.”
  • reading much more poorly than are other students.
  • three times more likely to commit suicide.
  • 2 1/2 times as likely to drop out of high school.
  • severely underrepresented in college and even more so among college graduates, thereby locking them out of today’s, let alone tomorrow’s, knowledge economy.

    You’d likely invoke such words as “institutional racism” to justify major efforts to improve African-Americans’ numbers.

    All of the above statements are true except for one thing: those statistics aren't about African-American children. They're about children of all races, indeed half of all children, half of our next generation: boys.

    When a disparity hurts females or minorities, major efforts are implemented to redress the situation. Why not with boys? In our politically correct world, if you point to an inequity against women or a minority, you’re considered heroic, but dare you point out a deficit suffered by men, you’re demonized as a whiner or anti-female. Today’s media leaders, when in college, were relentlessly told how oppressive men are, so now, these media gatekeepers usually refuse  to publish male-positive pieces. So, except for a few minimally influential books and articles, all we continue to hear is an endless, often unfair drumbeat about how girls and women continue to be shortchanged. For example, there’s that ubiquitous bogus statistic that women earn 77 cents on the dollar compared with men. Meanwhile, the media, when it mentions boys at all, insist that boys are doing just fine. For example, a Time magazine cover story, The Myth About Boys, declared “Boys are all right,” implying that those horrifying statistics cited above are somehow outweighed by tiny recent gains in test scores (which, by the way, are dwarfed by girls’ gains.)

    And our schools continue to get ever more feminized. Competition, one of boys’ favorite motivators, has largely been excised in favor of “cooperative learning,” (which, in the real world, usually means that the bright do the dull’s work.) Stories of heroism and bravery are replaced with tomes about relationships and female heroes. Recess, the only opportunity for active boys to release pent up energy is increasingly replaced by yet another round of phonics. Girls are told they can accomplish anything while boys are taught that masculinity is an anti-social trait that must be extinguished.


    The percentage of female K-12 teachers has risen to an all-time high: 76.3 percent. In elementary school, it’s well over 90 percent. The main role model boys see in school is the custodian. And when boys get home from school, the male role models get worse. Whether watching a sitcom, movie, cartoon, or commercial, the odds are good that the male is a buffoon or sleazebag while the female is savvy and confident. Males are primarily responsible for creating the cars we drive, the buildings we live in, the computers we use, and the medical discoveries that save our lives, yet if a Martian descended upon earth and watched TV, he’d conclude that men are disposable. If role models matter, how do you imagine boys are affected by all this?

    What to do? Children’s mindmolders are the media, schools, and family. Each has a role:

    The media now takes inordinate care to ensure that women, minorities, and gays are not disproportionately portrayed negatively. Equal care must now be given to boys and men.

    Schools claim to celebrate diversity yet insist on providing one-size-fits-all education. Whether in co-ed or single-sex classes, boys need boy-friendly instruction: more  male teachers who have not been trained to de-boy boys, more competition, praise for boldness, more active learning (for example, drama and simulation) and less seatwork,  less relationship-centric fiction and more stories of adventure and heroism,  teachers’ accepting that boys will, on average, wiggle more than girls--and that does not require ongoing criticism, which, not surprisingly, leads to more oppositional behavior, to the school psychologist, to the little yellow bus of special education, and even more often to Ritalin.  Now, by high school age, according to a report in the New York Times, one in five boys have been diagnoses with ADHD.

    Ironically, educated parents often do particularly badly by boys. The college curriculum and the media consumed by the intelligentsia stresses the accomplishments of women and the evils of men. So, these parents too often feel justified in emasculating, squeezing the maleness out of boys: aggressiveness, competition, physicality, dislike of long seatwork. Of course, I’m not advocating that parents allow Junior to become a savage, but the above qualities, channeled wisely, can be the stuff of which greatness is made. We can refine but rarely remold so we must honor males’ ways of being, just as we’ve been urged now for decades to honor females’.

    Boys represent half our future, so the problem with boys is a major problem for society. In addition, having so many children unnecessarily unhappy and underperforming is, in itself, most sad. Over my 29 years as a career and education counselor, I’ve noticed a dramatic shift in the boys I’ve counseled. When I started, most boys were confident and ambitious. Now, disproportionately, they’re despondent or angry, while the girls much more often feel the world is their oyster. And they’re right, but it should be both genders’ oyster.

    Marty Nemko's bio is in Wikipedia.



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Boys aren't the problem. The problem is a society that will no longer allow boys to be boys and to try to squash any and all things masculine.

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The funny thing is, as I read the suggestions for how to engage boys, it occurred to me that these are suggestions on how to engage ALL students. Less seat work, less "cooperative learning", more active work, these are things that my energetic daughter would have loved as well. She often got scolded for being too full of energy and unwilling to work in groups (why do all the work when when the whole group gets credit?) So it is just good education policy, and good policy helps all children.

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That's a good point Mellow Momma.

LG,
I don't know how I feel about your statement. I usually cannot get on board with the "boys will be boys" attitude.
However I do feel that boys on average do have more energy and boys will physically fight.
I am tired of schools and parents calling the police every time there is a fight. These kids (mainly boys) are getting in trouble for physical assault and many times it's so ridiculous.
I am all for anti bullying but we need to evaluate each and every case? Do the police really need to get involved in every fist fight? NO

As for the energy issues we need to give our kids an acceptable amount of recess in schools and outlets at home to get all that energy out.

Other than those two things,.I really just don't see how we are not letting boys be boys. But I may not have thought of things that you have.

My issue is that I have an aunt who has a son, whenever this boy (now a man) got into trouble she always said "Boys will be boys"
That young man is in and out of jail all the time because of her attitude and her refusal to take his behaviors seriously.

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I wholly agree.

I'm just not sure there is an easy solution.

I don't think it's so much about "boys will be boys" as it is the fact that most teachers want boys to be girls.

I think to some extent, parents are lazy, too. Instead of making boys behave themselves, we find a diagnosis and put them on drugs.

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I am not saying boys will be boys means they should engage in criminal behavior, sheesh. A real man is in CONTROL of himself. Controlled masculinity. But, to just ignore and dismiss the GOOD of masculinity and not encourage proper development of it, is foolish on the part of society.

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On the bright side...... Christmas is coming! (Mod)

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I don't like "The Problem with Boys". That implies boys are a problem just for being boys. The problem is lack of exercise which doesn't allow them to get the ants out of their pants.

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Lady Gaga Snerd wrote:

I am not saying boys will be boys means they should engage in criminal behavior, sheesh. A real man is in CONTROL of himself. Controlled masculinity. But, to just ignore and dismiss the GOOD of masculinity and not encourage proper development of it, is foolish on the part of society.


 I realize that but when moms allow their boys to run around the neighborhood fighting all the other boys, harassing all the girls and refusing to keep their trap shut in class without punishment then they turn into criminals later.



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