47 Matching Annotations
  1. May 2016
    1. Every year, we administer student, parent, and teacher surveys at schools with single-gender classes with regard to self-confidence, motivation, participation, and desire to complete hard work. Last year's results show that an average of 60 percent of the students' self-reports indicate that these characteristics increase by being in single-gender classes.

      Improve student confidence, motivation and participation.

    2. Structure and connection are two key concepts when examining gender in the classroom. All students certainly need both, but it seems that teachers need to consider the issue of structure more with boys and the issue of connection more with girls.

      Vast differences in genders in the classroom.

  2. Apr 2016
    1. For urban African-American and Latino males, single-sex education is viewed as a way to counter dropouts and the school-to-prison pipeline

      Provides less pressure and motivation to do so.

    2. In addition, it is suggested that single-sex schools tend to overemphasize academics at the expense of “whole child” development

      Help promote interest in outside activities normally outside comfortable gender range

    1. In fact, girls are less likely than boys to be held back in American schools, too, so some argue that the effort put into helping girls in the classroom may be counterintuitive, when the boys are the ones who aren’t doing as well.

      Supports males and Females

    2. Detractors of same-sex classrooms weren’t surprised since one of the biggest drawbacks of single-sex classrooms is the lack of concrete evidence that they boost achievement. As Margaret Talbot wrote in her 2012 New Yorker piece, “The evidence wasn’t very good then [the ’90s] for a gap between the genders’ learning styles so significant that it would mandate separate instruction, and it hasn’t gotten any better.”

      Old news, studies have been given supporting single sex schools.

    3. In 2006, the No Child Left Behind Act added a provision giving single-sex classrooms and schools the ability to exist as long as they are voluntary.

      Legal if voluntary

    1. The Foundation study, which suggests that single-sex education is more beneficial for girls than for boys, is somewhat at variance with an earlier study which suggested that single-sex education was more beneficial for boys than for girls. Educator Graham Able published a study of student performance in 30 coeducational and single-sex schools in England. Dr. Able's study documented superior academic performance of students in single-sex schools, after controlling for socioeconomic class and other variables. "The most significant finding was that the advantage of single-sex schooling is even greater for boys in terms of academic results than for girls," Able said. "The unsubstantiated mythology of the educational establishment has been that girls do better in single sex schools but that boys are 'brought on' by the more studious girls in a co-educational environment. This mythology has never been supported by any objective evidence, and any policy derived from it must presumably sacrifice the advantages to one sex in order to promote the cause of the other," he wrote. "[Our] results suggest that single sex schools give an even greater academic advantage to boys than for girls. This directly contradicts the popular educational myth that boys do better in the classroom if girls are present to set them a good example. One could reasonably conclude from this study that both boys and girls are academically disadvantaged in co-educational schools, but that the disadvantage is greater for the boys.

      studies say being in single sex classrooms provide better academic results than in ones of coed, contrary to popular belief.

    2. The all-girls format can greatly enhance the engagement of girls in physics. That reality was demonstrated most dramatically by the research of Bettina Hannover and Ursula Kessels.

      Encourage activites in new subjects. Approved by researchers Bettina Hannover and Ursula Kessels

    3. Boys at boys' schools also earned significantly higher test scores compared with boys at coed schools; likewise, girls at girls' schools also earned significantly higher test scores compared with girls at coed schools

      Children at single-sex schools received better results

    4. Girls attending girls' schools were significantly more likely to attend a 4-year college compared with girls attending coed schools (Cohen's d = 0.5, p < 0.01). Likewise, boys who graduated from boys' schools were significantly more likely to attend a 4-year college compared with boys who graduated from coed schools (Cohen's d = 0.8, p < 0.01).

      Tested experiment

    1. Advocates of single-sex education do NOT believe that "all girls learn one way and all boys learn another way." On the contrary, we cherish and celebrate the diversity among girls and among boys.

      Advocates know not all children act based on gender stereotypes

    1. Girls who learn in all-girl environments are believed to be more comfortable responding to questions and sharing their opinions in class and more likely to explore more “nontraditional” subjects such as math, science, and technology.

      Better accustomed in all girl class and more likely to explore male dominated subjects.

    2. Studies suggest that when boys are in single-gender classrooms, they are more successful in school and more likely to pursue a wide range of interests and activities.

      Males can join female dominated subjects and are more successful

    3. Single-gender education and the often-spirited dialogue surrounding it have raised a number of issues concerning the best manner to educate boys and girls

      Will co-ed or single-gender schools best prepare students for the world

    1. a sensitive boy might be intimidated by a teacher who “gets in his face” and speaks loudly believing “that’s what boys want and need to learn

      Teachers may stereotype their students by gender

    2. when asked if they’d consider a single-sex school for their own children, only 14% said they “definitely would” and 28% said they “probably would.”

      Not all parents are positive on their thoughts of a single sex school

    3. Dr. Schlosser theorizes that a higher percentage of girls lowers the amount of classroom disruption and fosters a better relationship between all students and the teacher.

      Plausible

    4. At least one study found that the higher the percentage of girls in a co-ed classroom, the better the academic performance for all students (both male and female)

      (Small number of sources) say more girls in a classroom increase academic performance per student

    5. Students in single-sex classrooms will one day live and work side-by-side with members of the opposite sex.

      Students will need to learn how to work with the opposite sex

  3. Nov 2015