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HOW THE SCHOOL ACTIVISTS ARE DESTROYING OUR SONS
City Journal ^ | Spring '06 Quarterly edition | Gerry Garibaldi

Posted on 07/25/2006 8:10:42 AM PDT by Lovingthis

How the Schools Shortchange Boys, by Gerry Garibaldi

In the newly feminized classroom, boys tune out.

Since I started teaching several years ago, after 25 years in the movie business, I’ve come to learn firsthand that everything I’d heard about the feminization of our schools is real—and far more pernicious to boys than I had imagined. Christina Hoff Sommers was absolutely accurate in describing, in her 2000 bestseller, The War Against Boys, how feminist complaints that girls were “losing their voice” in a male-oriented classroom have prompted the educational establishment to turn the schools upside down to make them more girl-friendly, to the detriment of males.

As a result, boys have become increasingly disengaged. Only 65 percent earned high school diplomas in the class of 2003, compared with 72 percent of girls, education researcher Jay Greene recently documented. Girls now so outnumber boys on most university campuses across the country that some schools, like Kenyon College, have even begun to practice affirmative action for boys in admissions. And as in high school, girls are getting better grades and graduating at a higher rate.

As Sommers understood, it is boys’ aggressive and rationalist nature—redefined by educators as a behavioral disorder—that’s getting so many of them in trouble in the feminized schools. Their problem: they don’t want to be girls.

Take my tenth-grade student Brandon. I noted that he was on the no-pass list again, after three consecutive days in detention for being disruptive. “Who gave it to you this time?” I asked, passing him on my way out.

“Waverly,” he muttered into the long folding table.

“What for?”

“Just asking a question,” he replied.

“No,” I corrected him. “You said”—and here I mimicked his voice—“ ‘Why do we have to do this crap anyway?’ Right?”

Brandon recalls one of those sweet, ruby-cheeked boys you often see depicted on English porcelain.

He’s smart, precocious, and—according to his special-education profile—has been “behaviorally challenged” since fifth grade. The special-ed classification is the bane of the modern boy. To teachers, it’s a yellow flag that snaps out at you the moment you open a student’s folder. More than any other factor, it has determined Brandon’s and legions of other boys’ troubled tenures as students.

Brandon’s current problem began because Ms. Waverly, his social studies teacher, failed to answer one critical question: What was the point of the lesson she was teaching? One of the first observations I made as a teacher was that boys invariably ask this question, while girls seldom do. When a teacher assigns a paper or a project, girls will obediently flip their notebooks open and jot down the due date. Teachers love them. God loves them. Girls are calm and pleasant. They succeed through cooperation.

Boys will pin you to the wall like a moth. They want a rational explanation for everything. If unconvinced by your reasons—or if you don’t bother to offer any—they slouch contemptuously in their chairs, beat their pencils, or watch the squirrels outside the window. Two days before the paper is due, girls are handing in the finished product in neat vinyl folders with colorful clip-art title pages. It isn’t until the boys notice this that the alarm sounds. “Hey, you never told us ’bout a paper! What paper?! I want to see my fucking counselor!”

A female teacher, especially if she has no male children of her own, I’ve noticed, will tend to view boys’ penchant for challenging classroom assignments as disruptive, disrespectful—rude. In my experience, notes home and parent-teacher conferences almost always concern a boy’s behavior in class, usually centering on this kind of conflict. In today’s feminized classroom, with its “cooperative learning” and “inclusiveness,” a student’s demand for assurance of a worthwhile outcome for his effort isn’t met with a reasonable explanation but is considered inimical to the educational process. Yet it’s this very trait, innate to boys and men, that helps explain male success in the hard sciences, math, and business.

The difference between the male and female predilection for hard proof shows up among the teachers, too. In my second year of teaching, I attended a required seminar on “differentiated instruction,” a teaching model that is the current rage in the fickle world of pop education theory. The method addresses the need to teach all students in a classroom where academic abilities vary greatly—where there is “heterogeneous grouping,” to use the ed-school jargon—meaning kids with IQs of 55 sit side by side with the gifted. The theory goes that the “least restrictive environment” is best for helping the intellectually challenged. The teacher’s job is to figure out how to dice up his daily lessons to address every perceived shortcoming and disability in the classroom.

After the lecture, we broke into groups of five, with instructions to work cooperatively to come up with a model lesson plan for just such a classroom situation. My group had two men and three women. The women immediately set to work; my seasoned male cohort and I reclined sullenly in our chairs.

“Are the women going to do all the work?” one of the women inquired brightly after about ten minutes.

“This is baloney,” my friend declared, yawning, as he chucked the seminar handout into a row of empty plastic juice bottles. “We wouldn’t have this problem if we grouped kids by ability, like we used to.”

The women, all dedicated teachers, understood this, too. But that wasn’t the point. Treating people as equals was a social goal well worth pursuing. And we contentious boys were just too dumb to get it.

Female approval has a powerful effect on the male psyche. Kindness, consideration, and elevated moral purpose have nothing to do with an irreducible proof, of course. Yet we male teachers squirm when women point out our moral failings—and our boy students do, too. This is the virtue that has helped women redefine the mission of education.

The notion of male ethical inferiority first arises in grammar school, where women make up the overwhelming majority of teachers. It’s here that the alphabet soup of supposed male dysfunctions begins. And make no mistake: while girls occasionally exhibit symptoms of male-related disorders in this world, females diagnosed with learning disabilities simply don’t exist.

For a generation now, many well-meaning parents, worn down by their boy’s failure to flourish in school, his poor self-esteem and unhappiness, his discipline problems, decide to accept administration recommendations to have him tested for disabilities. The pitch sounds reasonable: admission into special ed qualifies him for tutoring, modified lessons, extra time on tests (including the SAT), and other supposed benefits. It’s all a hustle, Mom and Dad privately advise their boy. Don’t worry about it. We know there’s nothing wrong with you.

To get into special ed, however, administrators must find something wrong. In my four years of teaching, I’ve never seen them fail. In the first IEP (Individualized Educational Program) meeting, the boy and his parents learn the results of disability testing. When the boy hears from three smiling adults that he does indeed have a learning disability, his young face quivers like Jell-O. For him, it was never a hustle. From then on, however, his expectations of himself—and those of his teachers—plummet.

Special ed is the great spangled elephant in the education parade. Each year, it grows larger and more lumbering, drawing more and more boys into the procession. Since the publication of Sommers’s book, it has grown tenfold. Special ed now is the single largest budget item, outside of basic operations, in most school districts across the country.

Special-ed boosters like to point to the success that boys enjoy after they begin the program. Their grades rise, and the phone calls home cease. Anxious parents feel reassured that progress is happening. In truth, I have rarely seen any real improvement in a student’s performance after he’s become a special-ed kid. On my first day of teaching, I received manila folders for all five of my special-ed students—boys all—with a score of modifications that I had to make in each day’s lesson plan.

I noticed early on that my special-ed boys often sat at their desks with their heads down or casually staring off into space, as if tracking motes in their eyes, while I proceeded with my lesson. A special-ed caseworker would arrive, take their assignments, and disappear with the boys into the resource room. The students would return the next day with completed assignments.

“Did you do this yourself?” I’d ask, dubious.

They assured me that they did. I became suspicious, however, when I noticed that they couldn’t perform the same work on their own, away from the resource room. A special-ed caseworker’s job is to keep her charges from failing. A failure invites scrutiny and reams of paperwork. The caseworkers do their jobs.

Brandon has been on the special-ed track since he was nine. He knows his legal rights as well as his caseworkers do. And he plays them ruthlessly. In every debate I have with him about his low performance, Brandon delicately threads his response with the very sinews that bind him. After a particularly easy midterm, I made him stay after class to explain his failure.

“An ‘F’?!” I said, holding the test under his nose.

“You were supposed to modify that test,” he countered coolly. “I only had to answer nine of the 27 questions. The nine I did are all right.”

His argument is like a piece of fine crystal that he rolls admiringly in his hand. He demands that I appreciate the elegance of his position. I do, particularly because my own is so weak.

Yet while the process of education may be deeply absorbing to Brandon, he long ago came to dismiss the content entirely. For several decades, white Anglo-Saxon males—Brandon’s ancestors—have faced withering assault from feminism- and multiculturalism-inspired education specialists. Armed with a spiteful moral rectitude, their goal is to sever his historical reach, to defame, cover over, dilute . . . and then reconstruct.

In today’s politically correct textbooks, Nikki Giovanni and Toni Morrison stand shoulder-to-shoulder with Mark Twain, William Faulkner, and Charles Dickens, even though both women are second-raters at best. But even in their superficial aspects, the textbooks advertise publishers’ intent to pander to the prevailing PC attitudes. The books feature page after page of healthy, exuberant young girls in winning portraits. Boys (white boys in particular) will more often than not be shunted to the background in photos or be absent entirely or appear sitting in wheelchairs.

The underlying message isn’t lost on Brandon. His keen young mind reads between the lines and perceives the folly of all that he’s told to accept. Because he lacks an adult perspective, however, what he cannot grasp is the ruthlessness of the war that the education reformers have waged. Often when he provokes, it’s simple boyish tit for tat.

A week ago, I dispatched Brandon to the library with directions to choose a book for his novel assignment. He returned minutes later with his choice and a twinkling smile.

“I got a grrreat book, Mr. Garibaldi!” he said, holding up an old, bleary, clothbound item. “Can I read the first page aloud, pahlease?”

My mind buzzed like a fly, trying to discover some hint of mischief.

“Who’s the author?”

“Ah, Joseph Conrad,” he replied, consulting the frontispiece. “Can I? Huh, huh, huh?”

“I guess so.”

Brandon eagerly stood up before the now-alert class of mostly black and Puerto Rican faces, adjusted his shoulders as if straightening a prep-school blazer, then intoned solemnly: “The Nigger of the ‘Narcissus’ ”—twinkle, twinkle, twinkle. “Chapter one. . . .”

Merry mayhem ensued. Brandon had one of his best days of the year.

Boys today feel isolated and outgunned, but many, like Brandon, don’t lack pluck and courage. They often seem to have more of it than their parents, who writhe uncomfortably before a system steeled in the armor of “social conscience.” The game, parents whisper to themselves, is to play along, to maneuver, to outdistance your rival. Brandon’s struggle is an honest one: to preserve truth and his own integrity.

Boys who get a compartment on the special-ed train take the ride to its end without looking out the window. They wait for the moment when they can step out and scorn the rattletrap that took them nowhere. At the end of the line, some, like Brandon, may have forged the resiliency of survival. But that’s not what school is for.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Government; Miscellaneous; Philosophy
KEYWORDS: boys; culturewars; education; educrats; feminism; genderpolitics; liberalism; malestudents; pc; politicalcorrectness; schoolbias; waragainstboys
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To: Mariner

"Male only schools are the best way to fix this problem. And the schools should be run by MEN."

Sorry, but if you established all male schools in the public school system of today, it would eventually turn into another episode of "Queer Eye."


81 posted on 07/25/2006 9:20:27 PM PDT by RavenATB (Patton was right...)
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To: Little Ray

As a high school student I sketched - drew faces. Not faces of anyone specific, but just faces. I could listen to the teacher. I'm no artist - that's all I can sketch.


82 posted on 07/25/2006 9:31:16 PM PDT by ArmyTeach (NOT ON MY WATCH!)
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To: Lovingthis

As a student teacher in early elementary, I had a very bright boy who would do things like poke other kids with his pencil, stuff the toilets and flip the fire alarm. One day he came to me, needing to go to the boys' room. I put my arm around him and held him so that we were side to side (expressing both love and control, couldn't do that today). "OK, this is what you're going to do." Walk, don't run, don't touch anything on your way, do what you need to to do in the restroom, wash your hands and put the paper towels in the trash and come straight back. He did it to the letter. I don't think anyone, including his parents, had ever guided him that way.I think he craved loving, positive direction.


83 posted on 07/25/2006 9:39:24 PM PDT by ArmyTeach (NOT ON MY WATCH!)
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To: Lovingthis

Indeed, this is an enormous problem with the educational system today-- especially in public schools. Every instance of students being assigned "group projects" in highly academic courses -- such as history, literature, or even math and the sciences -- is is an example of the feminization of American schools. It always astounds me how greatly female students are favored in the grades for such projects; having pretty pictures, neat borders, and the ability to "involve the entire class" are generally valued more than meaningful content, logical presentation, and depth of analysis. I do not think that the former set of attributes is negative-- but they belong in an art class, not a math project.

School should be about individual accomplishment *independently* of others. Each person's knowledge is his or her own and will be used in a unique way later on in life. If someone wants to engage in "cooperative learning," he or she should find a paying job (highly recommended, by the way).

I am
G. Stolyarov II
http://www.panasianbiz.com
http://www.thebizofknowledge.com
http://www.risingsunofnihon.com
http://www.zhonghuarising.com
http://rationalargumentator.com


84 posted on 07/25/2006 10:14:59 PM PDT by G. Stolyarov II (http://rationalargumentator.com)
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To: curiosity

It is interesting how the Army or Marines can take a group of 18 year old boys and teach them very complicated subjects
I hear that's still true of the Marines. Feminism, however, has taken a severe toll on the Army, or so I am told.

For instance, men and women do basic training together now in the Army, and the result has been a drastic decline in standards. Only special forces are now rigorously trained, or so say my sources."



***** I was in the Marines for 12 years, from OCS to a command, to Recruiting and to Parris Island as a company commander to train them. Even being a Marine and watching one series (graduating platoon), after another graduate, still amazed me. I watched how the little homesick MF's performed from the time they were long straggly haired fat boys to their final transformation as a Marine and step up on Graduation Day, after 12 weeks of basic training. They would then see their families for the first time after three months of getting rid of the civilian garbage in their head and replacing it with Marine Corps gung ho....People sometimes call it brainwashing, however, it's actually survival training to get through the war they will someday face. Now, the problem exists after they get out and have to interact with civilians as a civilian. Some never find that switch off. Some, find the switch, but switch tracks and apply what they have become to another career.....Some get the switch on, but never go to combat which, has it's a double edged sword. Those that do go to combat have a switch on that has been brought up about 100 notches..In that Marines don't wish for war, but they are eager to try out their newly acquired skills. Yet, the notion of going into combat is eagerly a bitter sweet experience to say the least. Importantly, and misunderstood by Civilians, we do love those ribbons and the romantic notion of being a hero. The Ultimate hero from the baptism of fire. We don't fight for the country, in reality we are fighting for each other and survival, the realization that it was for the country is before, afterwards you realize it was fighting for each other.

I have been out since 1987, and have truly learned that even after being out that long, you never are an ex-Marine...you are a former Marine, once one always one.


85 posted on 07/25/2006 11:56:20 PM PDT by tgambill (I would like to comment.....)
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To: Lovingthis

How very true. Start paying attention to advertising, books, magazines and TV. You will be stunned at how often Anglo males are either omitted or placed in the back. You'll rarely see a Anglo male standing above or in front of others. Pay careful attention to who does stand above or in front.


86 posted on 07/27/2006 8:22:20 AM PDT by AK2KX
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To: Lovingthis

Yes, this guy has it figured. God help the feminists when this boy gets to be an adult and figures it out, too.


87 posted on 07/27/2006 8:52:30 AM PDT by gogeo (The /sarc tag is a form of training wheels for those unable to discern intellectual subtlety.)
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To: cyclotic
The difference was that my son's halo was mounted with several guns.

Because...you never know!

88 posted on 07/27/2006 9:00:48 AM PDT by gogeo (The /sarc tag is a form of training wheels for those unable to discern intellectual subtlety.)
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To: You Dirty Rats
As if we fathers control the schools, or the culture, or our crazy ex-wives.

And I disagree that the education monopoly is irrational. It's perfectly rational as far as acting in its own narrow interests is concerned, and the interest of the students be damned.

You said a mouthful.

89 posted on 07/27/2006 9:03:05 AM PDT by gogeo (The /sarc tag is a form of training wheels for those unable to discern intellectual subtlety.)
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To: M0sby

Well, well said!


90 posted on 07/27/2006 9:04:58 AM PDT by gogeo (The /sarc tag is a form of training wheels for those unable to discern intellectual subtlety.)
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To: wintertime
By the way,,,,is this the wonderful socialization homeschoolers are missing?

Precisely.

91 posted on 07/27/2006 9:08:09 AM PDT by gogeo (The /sarc tag is a form of training wheels for those unable to discern intellectual subtlety.)
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To: 3niner
If I had been 20 years younger, they would have just drugged me up, and created another routiner.

Schools are about the best possible environment for the staff, not the students.

92 posted on 07/27/2006 9:11:10 AM PDT by gogeo (The /sarc tag is a form of training wheels for those unable to discern intellectual subtlety.)
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To: gogeo

I was just talking with an out of state co-worker today. Her 6 year old grandaughter spent 2 weeks this month in a coma from a car wreck. She's in a halo too. My friend got a huge laugh over the tactical halo my kid was wearing.

Her grandaughter said she needed some jewels for hers.


93 posted on 07/27/2006 9:22:52 AM PDT by cyclotic (Support MS research-Sponsor my Ride-https://www.nationalmssociety.org//MIG/personal/default.asp?pa=4)
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To: You Dirty Rats
Yes, I agree with you...the lesbian dominated feminists, started out to eradicate the white male from the face of the earth....and from what I see, they are close to achieving their goal
94 posted on 07/27/2006 9:23:39 AM PDT by thinking
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To: driftdiver
I remember an article written by a teacher. - snip- After reading this I realized my two boys did the same thing. they would make small physical contact when they wanted me to focus more on them. I started responding appropiately and things were much happier.

I've noticed with my son. And the boys in my group, too, not so much directed at me, but at each other, to get each other's attention. I hadn't considered it in that way, but had learned to stop letting it bug me. It's funny to me now that we had been trained to discipline for these disruptions - which in turn seem to be more disruptive. I hadn't noticed it as much among the girls, who are more verbal.

95 posted on 07/27/2006 10:41:12 AM PDT by fortunecookie
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To: redlocks322
All these years and no one noticed he's dyslexic.

Dyslexia can be fixed with heavy and ruthless application of phonics in an individualized setting. Particularly if you catch it early

My youngest daughter in first grade was having trouble reading. She would confuse "b"s and "d"s and "p"s and "q"s. Essentially she had a real hard time processing the difference between a letter and its mirror image. The only solution is to use flash cards until it sets in

In the last 14 months we've gone from Dr Seuss to finishing the first Harry Potter book (5th grade reading level)

96 posted on 07/28/2006 6:38:38 PM PDT by SauronOfMordor (A planned society is most appealing to those with the arrogance to think they will be the planners)
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