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Gender Differences In Learning

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EDCI 5300 Dr. Beth Morton Christian. 2. Introduction. Educating children is a difficult job. ... .Org) report by Amanda Chapman, 'Gender Bias in Education' ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Gender Differences In Learning


1
Gender Differences In Learning
  • Katisha Moton
  • October 26, 2006
  • EDCI 5300 Dr. Beth Morton Christian

2
Introduction
  • Educating children is a difficult job. As an
    educator you must not only have knowledge of your
    subject area but also find a way to teach the
    subject in a way that is understandable to all
    students.
  • What if you knew a child had an individual
    characteristic that would prevent a child from
    learning? In most cases you would work to make
    sure the child felt included or spend extra time
    with the student.

3
Overview
  • This presentation will discuss research
  • on how females and males learn and
  • whether these differences really do
  • influence their success in school. The
  • topics of how both genders are treated in the
    classroom, specific gender differences in
    learning and the arguments for single sex
    schooling will be examined.

4
Classroom Treatment
  • It may seem incredible that teachers
  • may reinforce some of the gender stereotypes
    in the classroom. This type of stereotyped
    behavior is not limited to just one particular
    gender of teacher.

5
Classroom Treatment
  • Both male and female teachers may exhibit the
    following behaviors.
  • Boys often get more attention from the teacher in
    class.
  • Boys receive more attention in class but receive
    stricter punishment than girls for the same
    offense.
  • Boys get asked more complex questions in the
    classroom.

6
Classroom Treatment
  • Although it seems that boys have an advantage
    in the classroom because more time is used for
    their instruction, there is some evidence that
    boys are falling behind girls in academic
    performance.
  • Mulrine (2001) reports that boys are making
    failing grades more often and labeled as having
    learning disabilities.
  • Also studies conducted in British Columbia show
    that girls perform better on reading and writing
    on standardized testing.

7
Classroom Treatment
  • But girls still lag behind boys in the
    classroom in the way girls are socialized.
  • Girls are socialized to be feminine (such traits
    as being quiet and popular are reinforced
    although boys are expected to be speak up and
    think on their own).
  • Being assertive as a female is not encouraged or
    seen as disruptive in the classroom.
  • Boys are more likely to be referred to be tested
    for gifted programs (although they represent a
    larger number in the special education classrooms)

8
Classroom Treatment
  • Ready, LoGerfo, Burkam and Lee (2005) studied
    differences in male and female kindergarten
    students. Teachers were more likely to rate the
    behavior and academic skills of the girls as
    favorable. Female students had better social
    behavior than the male students
  • According to research findings from the National
    Center for Education Statistics (NCES) female
    students entered kindergarten with better
    literacy skills. Even though girls and boys have
    the same skill sets in kindergarten, girls have
    slightly higher reading proficiency. Boys have
    more learning and/or developmental delays and
    problems with attention and communicating with
    others.

9
Learning Differences
  • Now that we have discussed some of the
    attitudes that girls and boys face in the
    classroom we are going to examine whether their
    distinct learning differences may have some
    influence on how teachers approach each gender.
  • Some male learning characteristics are
  • More areas in the brain for spatial reasoning
  • Have more type M ganglion cells in their visual
    system. These cells detect movement.
  • Male brain enters a rest state several times a
    day. Often during these rest states in order to
    stay alert boys may fidget or act out.
  • Are seen as more aggressive and impulsive than
    girls
  • Engage in aggression nurturance or rough
    housing and insults with other males
  • Take more time than girls to transition between
    activities and/or topics
  • Feel less compelled to comply with the orders of
    teachers

10
Learning Differences
  • Female learning characteristics
  • Brain has more cortical areas devoted to verbal
    emotive processing
  • Have more P ganglion cells for vision which
    detect color and finer sensory movement
  • Have more active prefrontal cortex than males and
    frontal lobes develop faster (areas responsible
    for reading, writing, speech)
  • When brain is in a rest states more areas stay
    active
  • Brains have more communication between the
    hemispheres of the brain. Females have the
    ability to multitask better.
  • Seen as less competitive than males
  • Girls are supposed to have much better hearing
    than boys. Studies suggest that maybe from two
    to four times better than boys depending on the
    frequency. So a teacher may be able to talk at a
    normal level for a classroom full of girls but
    once boys are added may need to raise his or her
    voice significantly to get every boys attention.
  • So female students may feel that a teacher is
    yelling but really the teacher is simply trying
    to make sure that everyone is listening.

11
Learning Differences
  • Girls are more critical of their performance
    in school even though it has been reported that
    they do very well in academics. Boys seem to
    overestimate their ability to achieve.
  • A study done by Pomerantz, Alterman and Saxon
    (2002) stated that girls will feel that they are
    disappointing a parent and/or teacher. Girls
    place more emphasis on pleasing others. Boys do
    not generalize their failures but contain them to
    the specific area in which they failed. As
    stated before boys do not necessarily concern
    themselves with pleasing others.

12
Single Sex Schooling
  • With all the arguments on how different boys
    and girls are as students would it be better to
    separate the sexes? Would this result in a
    better learning environment?

13
Single Sex Schooling
  • In single sex classroom girls are encouraged to
    pursue non-traditional subjects such as math,
    science and computers. An example would be that
    in a classroom with both genders a girl would
    most likely choose the class with less males so
    as not to be intimidated in a subject area that
    is perceived to be male dominated.

14
Single Sex Schooling
  • No Child Left Behind Act also sites regulations
    that would allow single sex schooling in
    co-educational institutions
  • There must be reasonable rationale for a single
    sex class in the subject
  • There also must be a co-educational class in the
    subject
  • Must be reviewed periodically to determine if the
    single sex is still necessary after a time period

15
Conclusion
  • It is obvious that there are several
    differences in female and male students. It does
    seem that a solution would be to separate the
    genders in order to individualize the classroom
    environment. This solution also seems to be a
    problem. The separation of the sexes would not
    mirror the real world in which males and females
    have to work together. In a way the classroom is
    preparation for what students would encounter in
    the real world. Educators need to be aware of
    each childs individual needs and encourage
    students that they need not follow stereotyped
    roles and also not reinforce these roles in the
    classroom.

16
Websites
  • The Mid-Atlantic Equity Consortium
    (http//www.maec.org) focuses on creating
    classroom materials that are free from all types
    of discrimination. The report used in this
    presentation Title IX Gender Equity in Schools
    discuss bias in the classroom but also offers
    questions to ask yourself whether you actually
    exhibit these biases (http//www.maec.org/beyong.h
    tml)
  • This site is useful for teachers and
    psychologists to identify problems in the
    classroom. It also offers questions to ask
    yourself whether you actually exhibit these
    biases (http//www.maec.org/beyong.html
  • EdChange Multicultural Pavillion (EdChange.Org)
    report by Amanda Chapman, Gender Bias in
    Education (http//www.edchange.org/multicultural/
    papers/genderbias.html) focuses on the problems
    girls still face in the classroom. The site in
    general offers
  • research regarding multicultural
    education. This site can be a good resource for
    teachers and psychologist interested in what
    obstacles they have in order to achieve a
    multicultural class environment.

17
Websites
  • Association for Supervision and Curriculum
    Development (ASCD)
  • (www. ascd.org) offers information for all
    educators regarding school policy.
  • This sites has access to survey and data
    collection for several studies regarding
    education from the elementary school to college.
    There is also a section on the site for children
    that contains several learning games. A good
    resource for teachers with elementary school age
    students. There is also plenty of research for
    psychologists to use.
  • National Center for Education Statistics
    (http//www.nces.ed.gov) is a department within
    the U.S. Department of Education and the
    Institute of Education Sciences. This
    organization is responsible for collecting data
    related to education.
  • This site has access to survey and data
    collection for several studies regarding
    education from the elementary school to college.
    There is also a section on the site for children
    that contains several learning games. A good
    resource for teachers with elementary school age
    students. There is also plenty of research for
    psychologists to use.

18
Websites
  • National Association for Single Sex Public
    Education (NASSPE) (http//www.singlesexschools.or
    g) is an advocate for single sex schools and
    classrooms for girls.

19
Journal Resources
  • Mulrine, A. (2001) Are Boys the Weaker Sex? U.S.
    New World Report, 131 (4), 40-48. Provides
    viewpoints for educators on whether boys are
    receiving and adequate education.
  • Pomerantz, E., Altermatt, E. and Saxon, J.
    (2002). Making the grade but feeling distressed
    gender differences in academic performance and
    internal distress. Journal of Educational
    Psychology, 94, 396-404 A study that details
    academic performance in females.
  • Ready, D., LoGerfo, L., Burkam, D., and Lee, V.
    (2005). Explaining Girls Advantage in
    Kindergarten Literacy Learning Do classroom
    Behaviors Make A Difference? The Elementary
    School Journal, 106, 21-38A useful study to
    explain the literacy skills in children.
  • Sax, L. (2006). Six Degrees of Separation What
    Teachers Need to Know to Know about the Emerging
    Science of Sex Differences. Educational Horizons,
    84, 190-200
  • A commentary on the advantages of
    single-sex schooling.
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