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We can see the gender bias of all-boys’ schools by the books they study in English

“She’s more crazy than she is female.”

<p>So declared a senior student in a furious critique of Sylvia Plath’s poetry&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The classroom was entirely male&comma; myself included&period; As the teacher&comma; I mediated discussion but had come to expect opposition to conversations about gender in the all-boys’ Sydney private school&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>My research into the presumptive biases of single-sex education has affirmed a culture of resistance to talking about gender in all-male schools&period; Comments like this one can’t be dismissed or excused as teenage bravado&period; They’re part of an enduring ethos that continues to protect male privilege in the private school system&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Single-sex schools across Sydney are reckoning with sexual violence disclosures in response to a <a href&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;smh&period;com&period;au&sol;national&sol;nsw&sol;rape-culture-reckoning-as-wave-of-sexual-assault-claims-unleashed-20210225-p575r2&period;html">heartbreaking petition<&sol;a> from more than 3&comma;000 women&period; Hundreds have shared their testimony in a document created by a former Kambala schoolgirl Chanel Contos demanding better education on sexual consent&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Contos also calls for a change to the pervasive misogyny of single-sex male schools&period; And here&comma; we need to recognise the biases that infuse all aspects of school life&comma; including classroom teaching&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>My research has found the learning differences assumed by teachers and school leaders in gender-segregated schools impact both programming and practice&period; In an all-male context&comma; this can marginalise women and galvanise destructive gender stereotypes&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<h2>Male schools favour male texts<&sol;h2>&NewLine;<p><a href&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;link&period;springer&period;com&sol;article&sol;10&period;1007&sol;s11199-011-0037-y">Neuroscientific research<&sol;a> has shown any disparities between male and female ways of thinking are irrelevant to the psychology of learning&period; In spite of this&comma; studies demonstrate how <a href&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;journals&period;plos&period;org&sol;plosone&sol;article&quest;id&equals;10&period;1371&sol;journal&period;pone&period;0233378">assumptions about gender guide the type of content selected<&sol;a> for study&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><a href&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;research&period;unimelb&period;edu&period;au&sol;&lowbar;&lowbar;data&sol;assets&sol;pdf&lowbar;file&sol;0029&sol;152957&sol;A-REPORT-ON-TRENDS-IN-SENIOR-ENGLISH-TEXTLISTS-BACALJA&lowbar;BLISS&period;pdf">A report from the University of Melbourne<&sol;a> recognises the enduring misconception among teachers and school leaders that<&sol;p>&NewLine;<blockquote>&NewLine;<p>male – rather than female – authors and creators are more equipped to write about and imagine major social&comma; political and cultural issues&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<&sol;blockquote>&NewLine;<p>For the English classroom&comma; where my work is focused&comma; the most visible indicator of this belief is the choice of texts to study&period; In a single-sex male context there is a tendency to <a href&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;tandfonline&period;com&sol;doi&sol;abs&sol;10&period;1080&sol;01596300802643124">favour fiction deemed appropriately masculine<&sol;a>&comma; and literature <a href&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;jstor&period;org&sol;stable&sol;20466644&quest;seq&equals;1">written by male authors<&sol;a>&period; The result is that gender becomes both invisible and irrelevant to classroom criticism&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>This is contrasted in co-educational and single-sex female school settings&comma; where text choice is less likely to be guided by &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;<a href&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;ebookcentral-proquest-com&period;ezproxy&period;newcastle&period;edu&period;au&sol;lib&sol;newcastle&sol;reader&period;action&quest;docID&equals;1501491&amp&semi;ppg&equals;538">the inevitable privileges of being a boy<&sol;a>”&period; In these contexts gender remains visible and valuable to classroom discussion&comma; <a href&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;ebookcentral-proquest-com&period;ezproxy&period;newcastle&period;edu&period;au&sol;lib&sol;newcastle&sol;reader&period;action&quest;docID&equals;1501491&amp&semi;ppg&equals;541">but does not directly inform content selection<&sol;a> or curriculum programming&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>In 2015 and 2016 I surveyed more than 130 English teachers and curriculum leaders across public and independent schools&period; I wanted to investigate whether teaching practices beyond content selection were influenced by gender assumptions in all-male environments&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The interviews were striking in their expectations of gender and student success&period; There was a near unanimous assumption by teachers I spoke to across all school systems that male students should be steered away from overtly gendered literary experiences&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The teachers I spoke to believed male students were more likely to be successful in assessments if they avoided analyses of gender&comma; including their own&period; While there is no quantifiable data to support this claim&comma; it is almost impossible to measure student achievement separate from the acknowledged biases of practice&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Many teachers speculated that students in all-male schools seldom had cause to recognise or reflect on gender entitlement&period; As such&comma; they were likely to be limited in their capacity for literary discussion on this aspect of identity&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<h2>Female literature and male bias<&sol;h2>&NewLine;<p>The issue might suggest a simple solution&period; By including more literature by female authors and about female experiences&comma; we could seemingly break the silence of gender in male single-sex schools&period; Unfortunately&comma; the problem is more profound&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<figure class&equals;"align-center zoomable"><a href&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;images&period;theconversation&period;com&sol;files&sol;387133&sol;original&sol;file-20210302-19-1kh4u2c&period;jpg&quest;ixlib&equals;rb-1&period;1&period;0&amp&semi;q&equals;45&amp&semi;auto&equals;format&amp&semi;w&equals;1000&amp&semi;fit&equals;clip"><img src&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;images&period;theconversation&period;com&sol;files&sol;387133&sol;original&sol;file-20210302-19-1kh4u2c&period;jpg&quest;ixlib&equals;rb-1&period;1&period;0&amp&semi;q&equals;45&amp&semi;auto&equals;format&amp&semi;w&equals;754&amp&semi;fit&equals;clip" sizes&equals;"&lpar;min-width&colon; 1466px&rpar; 754px&comma; &lpar;max-width&colon; 599px&rpar; 100vw&comma; &lpar;min-width&colon; 600px&rpar; 600px&comma; 237px" srcset&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;images&period;theconversation&period;com&sol;files&sol;387133&sol;original&sol;file-20210302-19-1kh4u2c&period;jpg&quest;ixlib&equals;rb-1&period;1&period;0&amp&semi;q&equals;45&amp&semi;auto&equals;format&amp&semi;w&equals;600&amp&semi;h&equals;400&amp&semi;fit&equals;crop&amp&semi;dpr&equals;1 600w&comma; https&colon;&sol;&sol;images&period;theconversation&period;com&sol;files&sol;387133&sol;original&sol;file-20210302-19-1kh4u2c&period;jpg&quest;ixlib&equals;rb-1&period;1&period;0&amp&semi;q&equals;30&amp&semi;auto&equals;format&amp&semi;w&equals;600&amp&semi;h&equals;400&amp&semi;fit&equals;crop&amp&semi;dpr&equals;2 1200w&comma; https&colon;&sol;&sol;images&period;theconversation&period;com&sol;files&sol;387133&sol;original&sol;file-20210302-19-1kh4u2c&period;jpg&quest;ixlib&equals;rb-1&period;1&period;0&amp&semi;q&equals;15&amp&semi;auto&equals;format&amp&semi;w&equals;600&amp&semi;h&equals;400&amp&semi;fit&equals;crop&amp&semi;dpr&equals;3 1800w&comma; https&colon;&sol;&sol;images&period;theconversation&period;com&sol;files&sol;387133&sol;original&sol;file-20210302-19-1kh4u2c&period;jpg&quest;ixlib&equals;rb-1&period;1&period;0&amp&semi;q&equals;45&amp&semi;auto&equals;format&amp&semi;w&equals;754&amp&semi;h&equals;503&amp&semi;fit&equals;crop&amp&semi;dpr&equals;1 754w&comma; https&colon;&sol;&sol;images&period;theconversation&period;com&sol;files&sol;387133&sol;original&sol;file-20210302-19-1kh4u2c&period;jpg&quest;ixlib&equals;rb-1&period;1&period;0&amp&semi;q&equals;30&amp&semi;auto&equals;format&amp&semi;w&equals;754&amp&semi;h&equals;503&amp&semi;fit&equals;crop&amp&semi;dpr&equals;2 1508w&comma; https&colon;&sol;&sol;images&period;theconversation&period;com&sol;files&sol;387133&sol;original&sol;file-20210302-19-1kh4u2c&period;jpg&quest;ixlib&equals;rb-1&period;1&period;0&amp&semi;q&equals;15&amp&semi;auto&equals;format&amp&semi;w&equals;754&amp&semi;h&equals;503&amp&semi;fit&equals;crop&amp&semi;dpr&equals;3 2262w" alt&equals;"A co-ed classroom&period;" &sol;><&sol;a><figcaption><span class&equals;"caption">The way literature is studied in co-educational classrooms is profoundly different to how it’s done in all-male schools&period;<&sol;span> <span class&equals;"attribution"><a class&equals;"source" href&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;shutterstock&period;com&sol;image-photo&sol;multi-racial-teenage-pupils-class-one-280363907">Shutterstock<&sol;a><&sol;span><&sol;figcaption><&sol;figure>&NewLine;<p>The teachers I interviewed from all-male schools spoke about gender being sidelined&comma; even in female-focused texts&period; They noted in these lessons&comma; discussion shifted to favour other textual concerns&comma; or to prioritise a male perspective of the central female experience&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>These observations again differ from <a href&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;search-proquest-com&period;ezproxy&period;newcastle&period;edu&period;au&sol;docview&sol;1728219905&quest;pq-origsite&equals;summon">research in all-girls schools<&sol;a> and in co-educational schools&period; Here <a href&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;journals-sagepub-com&period;ezproxy&period;newcastle&period;edu&period;au&sol;doi&sol;abs&sol;10&period;1177&sol;0957926595006001003">all students appear to benefit from the presence of female students<&sol;a> and the lived female experience to which they are able to give voice&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>My research has affirmed these outcomes in Australian classroom practice&period; As a case study&comma; the HSC English Advanced syllabus prescribes a comparative analysis of Sylvia Plath’s <em>Ariel<&sol;em> and Ted Hughes’s <em>Birthday Letters<&sol;em>&period; Responses I collected from all-male schools showed they were inclined to marginalise Plath’s womanhood&comma; and favour Hughes’s account of their violent marriage&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>In contrast&comma; responses from all-female and co-educational schools more often presented extensive discussion of Plath’s feminist identity&comma; even when those responses were composed by male students&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>More disturbingly&comma; several female teachers I interviewed said they felt intimidated when asked to discuss constructions of gender in all-male school environments&period; They said a small but vocal portion of older adolescents would become aggressively oppositional&comma; and assert such content was only included as &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;tokenism” towards a &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;feminist agenda”&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>One senior English teacher based in Sydney’s east recalled a close study of Ophelia’s suicide in <em>Hamlet<&sol;em>&period; The discussion centred on the possibility Ophelia’s death was the ultimate act of passivity&period; As a woman&comma; the responsibly that burdens Ophelia is too great&comma; and suicide is her only escape&period; In the all-male class&comma; a student argued he would only write about the sexual connotations of this reading if the teacher could promise his essay would be marked by a male member of staff&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<h2>It matters<&sol;h2>&NewLine;<p>These accounts are troubling&period; Dangerous learning assumptions indicate the need for reform across curriculum programming and teaching practice&period; But their innate influence also hints at a clear path for improvement&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Compelling scholarship shows <a href&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;jstor&period;org&sol;stable&sol;44011386">fiction affects students’ social empathy<&sol;a>&period; The English classroom can <a href&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;doi-org&period;ezproxy&period;newcastle&period;edu&period;au&sol;10&period;1177&sol;1053451211424604">foster inclusion<&sol;a> and <a href&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;jstor&period;org&sol;stable&sol;30046755">develop appreciation for gender equity<&sol;a>&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The need for our private school system to denounce the most conspicuous elements of misogyny is urgent&comma; but we must also contend with the quietly profound role classroom learning plays in affirming or challenging an institutional culture of oppression&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<h6><a href&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;theconversation&period;com&sol;profiles&sol;cody-reynolds-766984">Cody Reynolds<&sol;a>&comma; Researcher &amp&semi; Educator&comma; <em><a href&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;theconversation&period;com&sol;institutions&sol;university-of-newcastle-1060">University of Newcastle&period; <&sol;a><&sol;em>This article is republished from <a href&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;theconversation&period;com">The Conversation<&sol;a> under a Creative Commons license&period; Read the <a href&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;theconversation&period;com&sol;we-can-see-the-gender-bias-of-all-boys-schools-by-the-books-they-study-in-english-156119">original article<&sol;a>&period;<&sol;h6>&NewLine;

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