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KEN
RING
(This is the transcript of a paper presented to Forum
97, May 1997)
A recently published study reflecting
on general gender differences has involved 991 five year olds in Dunedin,
New Zealand. From time to time such work uncovers and re-establishes
basic differences that appear to be constants, despite cultural differences
in expectation and role division.
This does not impact on
feminist claims of equality of opportunity or the call for the overthrow
of stereotype. Knowing and appreciating basic variances, one might better
explain differences in attitudes and be ready to be more tolerant.
Although diet plays some
part, some differences are obvious: general bone structure for women is
slighter and more delicate, especially around the face. I have been told
that Maori folklore states that by looking at the shape of the abdomen
during pregnancy, the sex of the unborn child can be accurately guessed.
A more rounded shape indicates a girl, while a more angular look predicts
a boy. Carrying this burden higher or lower is significant; apparently
if a boy it feels like the weight is being carried on the backside.
Most women have higher voices,
and the Greeks realized that if a man and a woman are asked to sing the
same note, each will unconsciously sing it an octave apart. Dr. David Lewis,
author of Silent Language of Babies explains that the male voice being
the more powerful is more scary, therefore less secure, to the baby’s ears.
The higher voice would be then the less threatening.
If we accept gender anatomical differences as fact
then it is a short jump to the possibility of mental and emotional differences
as well.
John Gray’s bestsellers, Men Are From Mars, Women
Are From Venus and its sequels, focus on differing relationship attitudes.
The books enjoy wide popularity, partly due to aggressive marketing but
also to some instinctive popular gut reaction.
If so, what are these differences?
Perhaps there is no truth in them, and people in your life are not like
that. But it could be of use to know what educational psychologists are
increasingly saying, so you as a teacher or parent can be better informed.
SERIATION VS HOLISTIC
Boys are better at doing one thing at a time; girls
are better at doing many things at once. While girls are fond of detail,
boys like things to be simply put - they may give up earlier when too many
instructions are perceived. Boys’ focus is much narrower, whereas it is
the detail that more interests and fascinates girls.
Sales and marketing experts will tell you that
brochures that have 3 or 4 simple clear instructions or points on a page
will appeal to male readers more than a lot of clutter. On the other hand,
they have found that women like a page to be busy, desiring to know everything
that a product, person or service has done and can offer. Much like browsing
around a shopping mall, females seem to like the act of browsing, when
it comes to brochures. Therefore one needs to know who is going to read
your advertising. To cover the field advertisers often send out both types
of layout.
Some subscribe to Left brain and Right brain Sometimes
this scientific model becomes an explain-all and is to my mind a bit too
simplistic. Anyway, whatever causes perceived differences is probably immaterial.
If one believes there are gender differences, then this impacts on presentations
in teaching, especially in math No-one need lose out because math is about
focus and math is also about detail and patterning.
Like the advertising styles, the approaches should
differ to teaching the same subject. Both sexes will then be catered for
and neither will be left out..
SEPARATION
It has also been noted that young boys are more
upset at being separated from their mother. They are shyer, less confident,
more dependent. They have a shorter attention span, give up on things more
easily, and have less frustration tolerance. It has also been observed
that they are also more hyperactive, more restless, fidget more than girls,
destroy property more often, and have more tics. They are more difficult
to manage and more inclined to bully others.
Girls, on the other hand, when separated from their
mother are more often miserable, bite their nails more often, and develop
fussier natures.
Girls do more puzzles, boys play more in sandpits.
When taken into a garden, boys more typically will want to dig holes in
it and girls will prefer to pick the flowers.
LANGUAGE
Apart from the finding that there is no difference
between the sexes in child studies when it comes to telling lies, girls
are generally ahead of boys in all aspects of language development for
at least the first five years of school life. Much confidence in early
math years comes from ease in the use of the appropriate language. Boys
may often understand the processes more, but they may fall short of being
able to adequately describe them. Because the language gets selectively
reinforced, boys can lose heart and can end up thinking they’re no good
at math.
WHAT DO GIRLS WANT
Workability is more the girls’ aim; knowing how
to get a result that will please the teacher, after which they can move
on to the next thing that comes up. It’s not quite the same as understanding
a process.
Girls are culturally encouraged to be group-aware
and relationship-oriented. This bodes well in learning sets and points
out some reasons for perceived gender differences in math skills. In social
as well as math situations, girls often only want to know what they have
to say and to whom, to get themselves included, to be part of the group.
They want to know the lay of the land, the state of the problem and how
they fit in, in terms of being able to find solutions.
WHAT DO BOYS WANT
Boys are less concerned with pleasing; they seek
to know what happens. Rather than examining while leaving things be, they
want to make changes, apply movement, shift gear, look at inner workings,
and take things apart. The interest is in how they work and not THAT they
work. They want to do it without necessarily talking about doing it.
In co-ed high schools, teachers have noted the
difference when it comes to computers. Boys rush to the machines whilst
girls are not in such a hurry - they can’t talk to each other whilst operating
keyboards; it is not a social activity. Boys on the other hand, prefer
to work by themselves in relative silence. Computers seem more suited to
the so-called male way of doing things. Girls seem to prefer books.
Teachers have commented that girls, when allowed
to sit and work together, say to each other ‘Oh, I can’t do this, can you?’
, all the while doing it. The opportunities to converse seems more attractive
to females. Perhaps it is cultural or genetic - it doesn’t matter; it seems
to be often true, and something that should taken into account in a gender-mixed
class.
This is not to say that boys don’t like talking.
But their preference is DOING which often will be in silence.
Few young girls try to wreck their dolls and many
women can show you dolls they had as young children, whereas boys can point
to few intact toys surviving from early childhood. When you take something
apart you often lose the point of it, because if the exercise fails and
you end up not understanding a function, you’ve lost the original article
as well.
When a boy wrecks a new toy, it is not that he
is a vandal, merely curious and exploratory. It is more the fault of the
toy than of him if it breaks too soon after purchase. Better to provide
such a child with equipment designed to be taken apart..
It also might explain why children leave messes
on their floor. The joy is in the disassembly - there is far less to be
learned from putting it all back again. Going somewhere is always more
fun than returning home.
Because they often think some knowledge of the
inner working mechanism is required of them, boys are more liable to make
more of a math problem than might really exist. While the boy may still
be pondering the deep implications of some question, the girl in the next
seat may have worked the same problem to what she thinks will be an acceptable
answer and handed it in, hoping for praise.
From her maternal rolemodel, the girl may approach
math like housework; she rolls up her sleeves and wades in. She has seen
Mum do this around the home. There might not be much wonder involved. Yet
for a boy, unless some hunting element, some sense of elusiveness is there,
a task often doesn’t seem worth pursuing.
GIRLS START OFF BETTER
In the early years, girls are across the board
better at math than boys, according to the way we assess academic progress.
Boys are separated from the father, the preferred role-model, at an early
age. It has been suggested that at an unexpressable level they resent that
the mother is there instead.
For girls that is no problem - the preferred role-model
is available. But boys hesitate and their identity development misses a
beat or two, while girls, having no identity factor to work at, pass them
academically. Boys often view school as a place full of women and do not
relish the idea of women being higher status, so won’t apply themselves
as well as girls. This attitude is a cultural one( it is not a prejudice
to say that such male superiority is often found in some Polynesian, Pakistani
and Indonesian groups)
ATTENTION
It is unfortunate that boys are not rewarded for
daydreaming and dawdling. It is also unfortunate that as girls grow older,
society gradually steers them away from math-based careers. Yet research
has shown that when girls are expected to do well in math and to continue
to choose math-oriented options, they continue to beat the boys at
ALL levels. If a boy is falling behind everyone says to him What? You have
to work harder - math is VERY important, whereas if a girl falls behind
the common reaction from the adults in her life is Oh well, she’s not going
to be a famous scientist, is she! She’ll probably leave school and just
get married. Fortunately this attitude is changing rapidly in middle
class homes more exposed these days to the greater variety of vocational
options.
MATH VS THE ARTS
Math gets lumped in with science, and language
with the arts: a polarity that has always suited school administrations
more than what actually happens in life. There is no reason why art and
math should not enjoy a double-billing – for example the study of linguistics
is highly scientific. But when children approach option crossroads and
are forced to decide, it is the boys who are still encouraged to take the
hi-fi road and the girls to take what is left. Science is the area that
gets the research funds, so in the long run the boys are going to benefit
and land the more lucrative jobs.
The end result is a society that invents industry-sponsored
big toys like NASA projects that sometimes exist for their own engineering
feats. The technology serves itself rather than the common people, and
the machines can end up working for the fantasies of collective male corporate
management rather than for the nation’s best welfare.
HELPING BOYS
The task for boys who might be having trouble coping
with math is to see that much math is just verbal in its requirement. When
you see a young boy taking something apart, seize the opportunity to create
a math exercise. Ask him casually how many bits he’s ended up with and
therefore how many parts to the whole. Engage him in conversation about
it on any level. Slowly get him used to the language of math - what goes
before this, after that, what was the first part removed and what will
be the last, what needs to be taken away or added. How many times can he
assemble or dismember in a certain time frame, say, 5 minutes?
These are essential number line concepts. Get him
used to the fact that no more is required of him at this stage than description
and possibility, and lighten his mental load. Offer small rewards.
So long as language is being used and he’s enjoying it he will want to
do it again, which means you can hook in some more direct language in the
next session.
HELPING GIRLS
The task for girls experiencing difficulties may
be to see that understanding is required and talking should, in math at
least, be to unravel understanding and not be a substitute for working
at a solution. If a child is talking too much and not thinking enough and
has become used to calling out immediately to you for help - you might
now decide to be busy and unavailable for longer and longer periods or
stay just out of earshot. Also do not react to everything she says . Rather
than existing for relaying important information, chatter even to
you is often just used as a social glue.
GETTING GIRLS TO DO WELL
Expect the best from a girl and that’s what you’ll
get.
Expectancy is only just starting to become properly understood.
In a recent experiment involving New York elementary schools, a group of
educational psychologists went into selected schools and told teachers
in sample classes the same story. These children, they said, producing
lists showing pupils’ names, have been selected for a project later
in the year. They are considered exceptional in some category. And then
they watched from afar the academic progress of these children.
Very quickly they rose to the top of their class,
if they weren’t there already. What they didn’t tell the teachers at the
outset was that the names were chosen at random.
There is no doubt that if girls are expected to
do as well as boys they will do so. Much depends on parents’ language.
Parents, - not peers or the media - have the strongest influence on their
daughters’ self-esteem and life choices.
Girls and boys are more alike than different in
their physical developments prior to puberty.. Given the same kind and
amount of practice, they would perform at least equally well at sports
and other physical activities.
Girls and boys have the same range of abilities
in reading, writing, and mathematics. Most of the differences that we find
have more to do with family, social and cultural experiences and expectations
than with capacity. Differences in experience and expectation account for
many of the differences in choices and performance
WHAT PARENTS CAN DO AT HOME
- Your words are powerful and can influence attitudes
and performance in school and at home
- Encourage and praise risk-taking in female children
and care-taking in boys.
- Avoid rescuing girls. Encourage girls to make an imperfect
product, to get dirty, disheveled and sweaty in pursuit of a goal, to make
big, interesting mistakes.
- Praise girls for their skills, ideas and successes,
and not only for their appearance.
- Provide opportunities for girls to explore roles, experiences
and activities that are generally reserved for boys. Girls may not ask
for the opportunity to hold a snake, learn carpentry or construct an electrical
circuit, but they participate eagerly when given the chance to do so.
- Enable every girl to become a media critic. Examine
the portrayals ofgirls and women in television programs, popular songs,
movies, books and magazines. Are the portrayals realistic? Are female characters
judged more by their looks or their actions?
EDUCATION
- A new study has confirmed that education plays a key
role in improving women’s lives. Among women who were college graduates,
95 % said that things were going at least fairly well, compared with only
3 % of the women who had not completed high school.
- Women who take more than two college-level math courses
often achieve pay equity with men, and in many cases, receive higher average
pay than men.
- Build your daughter’s technological mastery and competence
by finding a way for her to use a computer regularly.
- If she shows an interest in technical things, buy her
a subscription to a computer magazine. Don’t assume that she is not interested
in technical things. Support your daughter’s interests and participation
in extracurricular activities. Sports, clubs, field trips, etc. allow students
to find new interests, take on new responsibilities, learn leadership,
be part of a team effort, and build a resume. Find out about computer camps
or computer clubs. .
CHECKLIST FOR FOCUSING ON GIRLS IN CO-ED SETTINGS
Encourage girls to:
- Take risks
- Think, probe and be inquisitive
- Speak up for themselves and take action
- Make mistakes, learn from them and try again
- Try out new interests and acquire new skills
- Take on leadership positions
- Be physically active
- Stick with science, math and technology
- Ask your daughter about her school experiences. Find
out if she feels comfortable speaking out in class or asking for help,
and whether she thinks the teachers hold the boys and the girls to the
same standards.
- Try to visit her classes to observe how the teachers
interact with the students, if possible.
- Encourage schools to celebrate the accomplishments of
women.
- Promote participation in debating clubs, school newspapers,
sports and student government.
- Push a girl who is opting out of science, math or advanced
courses she could tackle. Praise a C+ in a tough class as loudly as an
A in an easy one.
- Be sure that she gets “hands-on” computer time at school.
- Urge educators to introduce career awareness and information
in
elementary school.
WHY THIS ALSO HELPS BOYS
- Equity for girls is equity for everyone. Gender equity
projects
always lead to improved education for boys as well as
girls.
- Serving girls better does not necessarily mean less
for boys.
Much of what we know about effective programming for
girls is grounded in positive youth development and would help improve
programming for boys. A higher valuing of girls can benefit boys, too.
In particular, boys can learn more about the strengths,
capabilities and contributions of girls and women. This, in turn, may help
decrease the pressure many boys feel to conform to traditional roles, behaviors
and ways of thinking.
- Look at textbooks: are there women in history, science
and art?
- Read what your daughter is reading.
- Find out if girls have equal access and time on the
computers and other high-tech equipment.
- Ask school administrators to develop viable programs
to assure girls access and time.
- Find out how many girls are enrolled in advanced math,
science and computer courses.
- Find out if there are organized, funded team sports
for girls. If not, talk to the principal and coaches.
- Recommend awareness training for faculty and staff on
stereotypic language, books and programming that slow girls down.
- Ensure that your daughter is involved in a girls-only
group, sports camp, after school program, workshop or school. Any single-sex
learning experience can be valuable for girls, from summer camp to Girl
Scouts to organized athletics. Such activities offer girls a chance to
experience a world in which females are in charge.
WHAT PARENTS CAN DO: MATH & SCIENCE
- Math and science are critical. Stress the importance
of math, science and technical classes. These are opportunities for students
to learn and practice problem-solving and independent thinking - skills
that are critical to building personal confidence and competence, to being
creative, to being flexible and adaptable in dealing with life, and to
accessing high-paying work.
- Consider your own feelings about math and science. Even
if these subjects were hard for you, do not impose your feelings on your
daughter.
Support your daughter’s interest in math and science.
Keep expectations high. Encourage your daughter to take mathematics and
science classes and hold high expectations for her own success.
(After participating in a program with activities showing
that algebra can be fun, and after encouragement that they could do math,
one group of low-income, urban, Hispanic girls in New York all decided
to take algebra.)
- Engage your daughter in projects that develop spatial
reasoning and analytical skills. Girls ten and older may enjoy tinkering
with a chemistry set or building a model robot from a kit.
- Ask your daughter’s teachers about specific math and
science projects. Express interest in your daughter’s progress in these
subjects. Find out what computer programs, materials, and equipment are
available for her use and how often she uses them.
- Check to see if your daughter’s school hosts special
math or science programs. If not, encourage her school to get involved.
- Intervene ! In most schools, students decide around
the age of 14 if they will take algebra, an important first step to continued
math involvement. While girls and boys are equally apt to take algebra
and geometry, girls are more likely than boys to stop there and take no
more matsh.
- Introduce girls, as well as boys, to women and men in
the world of work in both traditional and non-traditional fields.
- Debunk the myth of Prince Charming in favor of
the reality that most women will work outside the home for a large proportion
of their lives.
- Provide opportunities to develop interests and skills
that can lead to careers - agriculture, art, astronomy...zoology.
- Introduce girls to dynamic women who combine paid
work, volunteer work and family life in innovative ways.
UNLOCKING STEREOTYPES - SCIENCE QUESTIONS TO ASK YOUR
DAUGHTER
- When I need help with math or science, I usually ask……….
- Girls who enjoy science are.……………
- Boys who enjoy science are.……………
- I want to be...............................................................
when I grow up. I will/will not need math and science.
- My parents want me to be ............................................
when I grow up.
- In math classes, teachers expect the boys to................
- In math classes, teachers expect the girls to.................
- Draw a picture of a scientist.
DID YOU KNOW..?
- The world’s first computer programmer was a woman.
August Ada Lovelace wrote the instructions for a computing machine in the
1800’s.
- One of the chief developers of COBOL, a language for
programming digital computers for business applications, was a woman, Grace
Hopper. She was also the first to coin the term “bug” in referring to a
computer error. In 1960, when the computer industry was still in its infancy,
65% of the 2,000 computer operators were women.
IMPROVING SCHOOLS FOR GIRLS
Spend time regularly in local classrooms to get in touch
with what’s happening in schools.
Expect and advocate schoolwork that includes complex problem-solving.
Foster interest in girls’ participation in science fairs.
Encourage the school to start a mentorship program, matching
professionals in the community with girls and boys interested in their
fields.
SURPRISING BUT TRUE
Developmentally, girls take the lead. They talk
earlier, read earlier, count earlier. In preschool, they score higher on
IQ tests than their male peers. They usually receive better grades in elementary
school than boys, yet in public schools, far more gifted boys than gifted
girls are identified by fifth grade.
Girls begin to go underground with their talents
and abilities sometime between fifth and ninth grades.
Traditional teacher training has focused on teaching
to boys’ interests and behaviors. This strategy is thought to help keep
order in classrooms. Boys predominately express their frustrations by acting
out, disrupting the classroom in a variety of ways. Girls predominantly
express their frustrations by acting in, becoming silent, withdrawn and
non-participative. One way to control boys was to be
sure that they were contributing - therefore, teachers have traditionally
called on boys more often than girls.
Boys and girls come to very different conclusions
about themselves, even when the data on which they base their decisions
are the same.
Research shows that boys are more willing to accept
success and take credit for their accomplishments than girls are.
EXPECTATION
Adults, even teachers, often have different expectations
of boys and girls, especially in the area of mathematical achievement.
Adults tend to rescue girls in situations where
they do not rescue boys.
WOMEN AND WORK
Society still tells girls they have a choice as
to whether or not they will work for pay. Yet, women are nine times as
likely as men to be single parents. Nine out of ten women work for pay
at some time during their lives. Eight out of ten women between the ages
of 20 and 44 are working in 1995. By paying attention to girls’ educational
achievements and career aspirations, we will ensure that women can have
economic security, a better quality of life, and more career choices. We
will also reduce the need for social welfare; since most families in poverty
are headed by women with inadequate education. Women who choose non-traditional
careers can expect to have lifetime earnings that are 150% of women who
choose traditional careers.
Females continue to be clustered into traditionally
female occupations. If present trends continue and girls are not encouraged
into math and science and computer programming, they will be trained only
for the data and information-retrieval capabilities of the computer. These
are still secretarial/clerical skills, and females will remain at the low
end of the service-oriented pay scale. Excluding sales, the highest paying
occupations will be those requiring the highest technical skills, such
as:computer systems analysis, programmers, engineers, technicians, and
repair and service people.
90% of the jobs today’s kindergartners will be
doing when they reach adulthood do not even exist today.
Acknowledgements
The Women’s College Coalition
The USA Ad Council.
The Dept of Statistics
The University of Auckland
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