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Truth and Consequences
The Daily Oklahoman ^ | 02-20-05 | Kathleen Parker

Posted on 02/20/2005 12:33:39 PM PST by Osage Orange

Truth and Consequences

By Kathleen Parker

If I were Harvard President Lawrence Summers -- given Womanhood's reaction to his suggestion that innate gender differences might account for men's higher achievement in math and science -- I'd be sorely tempted at this point to say: "I rest my case." Or, alternatively, "... and the horse you rode in on."

Instead, despite having apologized for speaking an unpopular truth, Summers will be the subject of an emergency faculty meeting scheduled Tuesday at which Harvard professors will discuss: What to do about Larry?

Right off, I'd say give the man a raise for honesty, a brand-new armored Humvee for courage, and, behind curtain No. 3, an all-expense-paid Hawaii vacation surrounded by beautiful women in grass skirts whose idea of chemistry is what happens between men and women on moonlit nights.

Just for fun.

The past few weeks following Summers' blasphemous remarks at an economics conference have been embarrassing for some of us gals. Maybe I spend too much time with men -- can there be such a thing? -- but I'm finding the fair sex to be most unfair and somewhat short-staffed in the logic and reason departments.

What Summers said, in terms that left a reasonable amount of wiggle room for reasonable people, happens to be factually, biologically, chemically, genetically, anecdotally and historiagraphically true. Even if it makes some tortured academics reach for the fainting couch.

He did not say that women are dumb, as some claimed in the immediate aftermath. He did not say that women are incapable of doing as well as men in math and science. He merely said that, given the many possible explanations for why men as a group actually do perform better than women as a group -- consistently testing better in those areas -- that biological differences might be worth considering.

Heresy.

The truth is, Summers' suggestion is neither radical nor provocative. It's old news that boys do better than girls in math and science, and that girls do better in the reading and areas requiring verbal skills. Yet, you don't see men lurching for smelling salts when they hear this. Instead, they stroke their chins and say, "Hmmm, maybe I need a new razor."

Why can't women do that? Why not respond without emotion, grab a government grant and explore methods of teaching science and mathematics in ways that females learn best? Instead, some women have reacted as though their corsets were too tight. Male chauvinist pigs (remember them?) can take a vacation as long as women like MIT biology professor Nancy Hopkins are defending women's intellect. Upon hearing Summers' words, Hopkins told reporters that she felt she was going to be sick. That her "heart was pounding" and her "breath was shallow ... I just couldn't breathe ..."

Rhett, oh Rhett, get that woman a julep, for cryin' out loud.

As nursemaids and parents of real children have always known, boys and girls are different, including their wiring and the way they learn and process information. There is, moreover, a growing body of scientific evidence that girls and boys have different aptitudes based on brain-based gender differences.

Boys are better at spatial skills and abstract cognition, which gives them an advantage in math. Their brains also make them adept at working with lists, giving them an advantage on multiple-choice questions and possibly explaining why they tend to score slightly better than girls on standardized tests.

This gap has narrowed in recent years as tests have begun to include more essay-style questions, at which girls tend to do better. Otherwise, girls are far exceeding boys in school at nearly every level. Sixty percent of college students today are female. At the high school level, girls receive 60 percent of the A's, while boys earn 70 percent of the D's and F's, according to Michael Gurian, author of "Boys and Girls Learn Differently."

In his book, Gurian, an educator and therapist, argues that some boy-girl differences won't ever change owing to brain-based causes. While obviously many women will excel in science and many men will excel in literature, there's no reason to insist that all others should, could or would want to.

The larger, more compelling concern to educators would seem to be helping boys improve their reading and writing skills so that they can survive in the information age, rather than counting the number of female Ph.D.s in science as some measure of gender equality.

Meanwhile, it's too bad Summers felt forced to apologize and that he faces further censure from faculty. When the president of the nation's oldest university has to say he's sorry for saying something true, the opposite of Truth seems the victor.

Kathleen Parker: kparker@kparker.com


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society
KEYWORDS: culturewars; feminism; kathleenparker; larrysummers; now; pc; politicalcorrectness; socialism; summers

1 posted on 02/20/2005 12:33:39 PM PST by Osage Orange
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To: Osage Orange
Kathleen Parker...get's it..!!
2 posted on 02/20/2005 12:42:51 PM PST by Osage Orange (Hillary Clinton's heart is darker than the Devil's riding boots.............................)
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To: Osage Orange

What is funny is that this college has called this professor on the carpet for telling the truth while Colorado University is trying to avoid unloading Churchill for his lies.


3 posted on 02/20/2005 1:07:47 PM PST by sgtbono2002
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To: sgtbono2002

Freedom of speech is a funny thing isnt it?


4 posted on 02/20/2005 1:08:18 PM PST by sgtbono2002
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To: sgtbono2002

It ALL depends on what you are talking about.......


5 posted on 02/20/2005 1:19:49 PM PST by Osage Orange (Hillary Clinton's heart is darker than the Devil's riding boots.............................)
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To: Osage Orange
He did not say that women are incapable of doing as well as men in math and science. He merely said that, given the many possible explanations for why men as a group actually do perform better than women as a group -- consistently testing better in those areas -- that biological differences might be worth considering.

It is heretical because a tenet of radical feminism is that gender is a social construct.

And as a member of and leader within the academic community, Summers is expected to know that and accept it as a proven fact. [Hello??]

6 posted on 02/20/2005 1:39:27 PM PST by SteveH
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Comment #7 Removed by Moderator

To: sgtbono2002
My father, who was a reporter, told me story about 50's Yugoslavia. A minor government official said "Of course we have freedom of speech. I can cheer for Marshal Tito on any street in Belgrade." He lost his job and went to prison for saying it.

Academic freedom seems to be something like this, although the academics don't yet have the power to send us to prison. God help us when they do.

8 posted on 02/20/2005 7:50:24 PM PST by Christopher Lincoln
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To: Osage Orange

A certain number of both sexes have what I'll call the "scoundrel mindset." People with the "scoundrel mindset" want the softest, easiest road to advancement and promotion. We have a disgusting thing called "affirmative action" that certain females know about and seek to use. But in hard science jobs there are exacting objective standards: the part breaks/wears out too fast, bridge falls down, plane crashes. Why would a scoundrel female want such a job, when she can "skate" in some other field, maybe for years (like the Carly)?


9 posted on 02/20/2005 8:03:36 PM PST by 185JHP ( "The thing thou purposest shall come to pass: And over all thy ways the light shall shine.")
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To: 185JHP
Summers was just "placing the thought" out there anyway....he was introducing a theory for discussion.

I listened to one of the woman professors that complained. She was such a loon...that the whole interview was a riot to listen to. The bad part was I thought the whole time that this loon was "teaching" young minds full of mush.

FRegards,

10 posted on 02/21/2005 8:32:20 AM PST by Osage Orange (Hillary Clinton's heart is darker than the Devil's riding boots.............................)
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To: Osage Orange

What this will all lead to, of course, are more insane changes to the way children are taught in public schools. Educators will try with all their might to mask the innate differences between boys and girls and make the system "fair".


11 posted on 02/21/2005 8:36:27 AM PST by TChris (Most people's capability for inference is severely overestimated)
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