New UGA study: Their classroom demeanors give girls a boost in grades over boys in classroom

downeyart (Medium)Interesting release from the University of Georgia on why girls fare better than boys in elementary school.

If interested in this issue, check out this interview I did with the author of “The Way of Boys: Raising Healthy Boys in a Challenging and Complex World.”  Author and behavioral psychologist Anthony Rao maintains that today’s classrooms favor how girls learn.

“Girls use more words. They are heavy on reading and early literacy and more social cooperation,” Rao told me. The boy brain is wired for motor skill development and spatial tasks, and boys learn more by touching and exploration. (There are exceptions, he says, describing himself as a compliant learner eager to do what the teacher wanted.)

“When you promote all this assessment and increasing standardization, you narrow the way you are going to teach kids, eclipsing the ways that boys learn better,” said Rao. “You go to much less hands-on and manipulation of objects and to more sit down and lectures.”

Here is the release on the new UGA findings:

Why do girls get better grades in elementary school than boys—even when they perform worse on standardized tests?

New research from the University of Georgia and Columbia University published in the current issue of Journal of Human Resources suggests that it’s because of their classroom behavior, which may lead teachers to assign girls higher grades than their male counterparts.

“The skill that matters the most in regards to how teachers graded their students is what we refer to as ‘approaches toward learning,’” said Christopher Cornwell, head of economics in the UGA Terry College of Business and one of the study’s authors.

“You can think of ‘approaches to learning’ as a rough measure of what a child’s attitude toward school is: It includes six items that rate the child’s attentiveness, task persistence, eagerness to learn, learning independence, flexibility and organization. I think that anybody who’s a parent of boys and girls can tell you that girls are more of all of that.”

The study, co-authored by Cornwell and David Mustard at UGA and Jessica Van Parys at Columbia, analyzed data on more than 5,800 students from kindergarten through fifth grade. It examined students’ performance on standardized tests in three categories ­­— reading, math and science — linking test scores to teachers’ assessments of their students’ progress, both academically and more broadly.

The data show, for the first time, that gender disparities in teacher grades start early and uniformly favor girls. In every subject area, boys are represented in grade distributions below where their test scores would predict.

The authors attribute this misalignment to what they called non-cognitive skills, or “how well each child was engaged in the classroom, how often the child externalized or internalized problems, how often the child lost control and how well the child developed interpersonal skills.” They even report evidence of a grade bonus for boys with test scores and behavior like their girl counterparts.

This difference can have long-reaching effects, Cornwell said.

“The trajectory at which kids move through school is often influenced by a teacher’s assessment of their performance, their grades. This affects their ability to enter into advanced classes and other kinds of academic opportunities, even post-secondary opportunities,” he said. “It’s also typically the grades you earn in school that are weighted the most heavily in college admissions. So if grade disparities emerge this early on, it’s not surprising that by the time these children are ready to go to college, girls will be better positioned.”

Research about gender differences in the classroom and beyond has grabbed headlines recently. Titles like Hannah Rosin’s “The End of Men and the Rise of Women” and Kay Hymowitz’s “Manning Up” have spent months on best-seller lists and inspired countless discussions in the media.

“We seem to have gotten to a point in the popular consciousness where people are recognizing the story in these data: Men are falling behind relative to women. Economists have looked at this from a number of different angles, but it’s in educational assessments that you make your mark for the labor market,” Cornwell said.

“Men’s rate of college going has slowed in recent years whereas women’s has not, but if you roll the story back far enough, to the 60s and 70s, women were going to college in much fewer numbers. It’s at a point now where you’ve got women earning upward of 60 percent of the bachelors’ degrees awarded every year.”

But despite changing college demographics, the new data may not be reflecting anything fundamentally new.

“My argument is that this has always been true about boys and girls. Girls didn’t all of a sudden become more engaged and boys didn’t suddenly become more rambunctious,” Cornwell said. “Their attitudes toward learning were always this way. But it didn’t show up in educational attainment like it does today because of all the factors that previously discouraged women’s participation in the labor force, such as a lack of access to reliable birth control.”

What remains unclear, however, is how to combat this discrepancy.

“The most common question we’ve gotten is whether or not the gender of the teacher matters in regards to grading students,” Cornwell said. “But that’s a question we can’t answer because there’s just not enough data available. As you can probably guess, the great majority of elementary school teachers are women.”

–From Maureen Downey, for the AJC Get Schooled blog

55 comments Add your comment

AnonMom

January 4th, 2013
11:07 pm

We’re losing our boys… for over 15 years … we expect boys to sit still like girls and to learn like girls … when they don’t we put them on ADD/ADHD meds…then there are problems when they turn 18 and are “responsible” for themselves and can’t control without the meds… maybe they didn’t need them in the first place .. maybe what they need is an elementary classroom that lets boys learn more kinetically — with recess and jumping jacks in between things .. maybe they shouldn’t be required to sit still for 6 or 7 hours and do just pen and paper work… maybe we shouldn’t force them to just learn this way or medicate them so that they can do this;… there’s a problem here… and we are going to have some very serious problems as a society if we don’t really look into this further.

AnonMom

January 5th, 2013
12:22 pm

we need many more details on aurora and newtown but maybe (and perhaps this is an incredible reach an dream) but maybe these “guys” were off meds they had been put on to control behaviors that they should have learned to control by other methods and then went off the “deep end” (ending in mass murders) because they didn’t have other coping mechanisms…. I know that we have mental health issues as a society and we need to have the mentally ill in institutions and that this may also account for these tragedies but I think that we over medicate and we need to let elementary school boys be treated as boys naturally behave and not medicate them to act more like girls and this study dovetails into this issue…..

I Teach Writing

January 5th, 2013
2:00 pm

Mostly undiscussed in these comments is the move away from recess. Thirty years ago, we had morning and afternoon recess throughout elementary school. These were sizable, meaningful breaks in the day that left us half worn out and more ready to learn when we flopped back into our seats. Other than making sure we didn’t injure ourselves (or each other), teachers didn’t interfere with recess or try to program activities. As a result, recess itself was a great learning experience, even if we didn’t always like what we learned.

Unfortunately, I’ve noted a major change in the way my childrens’ teachers treat recess. For some, recess is a “privilege,” and revoking that “privilege” is an early-stage disciplinary move. As you can imagine, that tends to be ragingly counter-productive. My daughter spent a whole year complaining perplexedly about how her teacher repeatedly punished a pair of “rampageous” (daughter’s word) boys by revoking their recess. Guess what those boys did all afternoon? Yup, they fidgeted, bounced around, and generally disrupted the learning environment for the whole class. I’m not suggesting that the boys shouldn’t have been disciplined, but I do think that using a disciplinary method that stands of snowball’s chance in Miami of actually helping the problematic behavior might be a good plan.

Fortunately, other teachers have taken a more constructive attitude toward discipline, but all of them treat the children as delicate hothouse flowers. If it’s raining, no recess. If it’s mildly chilly, no recess. Despite what are, I’m sure, admirable intentions, these moves end up hurting the kids more than they help. Kids are tough by nature. They bounce. They recover. Let ‘em get a little wet or chilly! They’ll be better students because of it, and they won’t be afraid of the outdoors.

I’ve observed know, as I’m sure has every other parent, that sending kids outside to blow off steam creates a quieter, more orderly house later on. That can only be MORE true when you put 25-30 kids in the same room. If boys are slightly more rambunctious by nature (in our house, the evidence leans the other way), then they should benefit slightly more from recess (and suffer more for its absence), which may influence the outcomes measured by this study.

Suzannah

January 6th, 2013
6:36 am

The misogyny on this thread is appalling. The study is about learning differences, not whether or not girls/women are taking over America.

The very simple fact is this: factory schools are set up for kids in rows. Boys mature later than girls, but our society has the earlier expectation that girls sit down, shut up and do as they are told. Maybe the differences start out biologically, but they are reinforced socially.

Who gets in trouble in school more? Boys Does it mean that boys are naturally troublemakers and girls are sweetness and light? Nope. Just means that boys get more negative attention because they have been allowed/encouraged to “be boys,” whereas girls have been taught/encouraged to “play nice.”

As to the “feminization” of the classroom, give me a break. Expecting that students are respectful is a “feminine” quality? That attitude is 90% of the problem. How about we expect better education that takes learning styles and individual students’ needs into account? How about we expect parents and society to bring up kids of both genders to be respectful to themselves and others? How about we change the factory model of school so it makes more sense for the kids who are being schooled?

AnonMom

January 6th, 2013
12:18 pm

The statistics are pretty clear — colleges are over 60% female… the high school grad rate is more female… we are losing boys. Appx. 70% of all kids are on ADD/ADHD meds (I haven’t researched the stat in a while — this would be a good blog topic….). Is it the case that this many kids really need these meds? Is this really a good thing for society long term? What percentage of these kids are boys vs. girls. I have 3 boys.. fortunately, all are now over 15 and essentially grown and none wound up on meds but I’ve been following this topic very carefully. Our schools have become pipelines to jail just as frequently, if not even more frequently, than to college for our boys. There is a problem here. Expecting boys to act like girls is one of the problems. Overfull classrooms is a problems. Weak mental heath “solutions” is a problem. Assembly line classrooms is a problem. Single moms generating babies without dads anywhere in the picture is a problem. There are lots of problems. We need to start tackling them. Newtown was an offshoot of these problems.. the answer isn’t just gun control… bad guys always get the guns. The first thing the Nazis did was to take the guns away from the defenseless… The last Colorado shooting in a high school (a decade ago) was under pretty tough gun control laws ….