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Teacher Development
An international journal of teachers' professional development
Volume 10, 2006 - Issue 2
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Original Articles

Starting school—why girls are already ahead of boys

Pages 249-270 | Published online: 18 Feb 2007
 

Abstract

Drawing on a number of fields of educational research this article argues that girls come to school better prepared to meet its demands than boys. Parents encourage different skills in their children, as a result girls have more sophisticated communication skills, and are more likely to have been encouraged to participate in intellectual tasks than boys, who have been mainly encouraged to engage in sports and physical activities. These differences mean that girls more readily ‘engage’ with school and show intrinsic motivation for academic tasks, factors strongly associated with success. Boys, however, are more likely to find schoolwork unfamiliar and difficult. Once in school the single‐sex peer groups favoured by both sexes provide opportunities to improve the skills learnt at home to the further advantage of girls. Differences in attitudes to gender roles are also apparent at an early age, boys being much more conforming to stereotypical gender roles than girls, who show much more sex‐role flexibility. This conformity may lead boys further away from engaging with school tasks either through ‘fear of the feminine’ or ‘fear of failure’. Finally the article considers how schools can help all pupils, particularly boys, to fully engage with schoolwork.

Notes

1. All pupils take standardised tests in English, mathematics and science at intervals throughout their school careers; Key Stage 1 tests are given at age 7; Key Stage 2 at 11 and Key Stage 3 tests at 14. Pupils take national examinations at 16 (General Certificate of Secondary Education, GCSE) and those who continue with their education beyond the statutory school‐leaving age take A (advanced) level examinations at 18.

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