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Noelle Kreider

Educational Leadership:Teaching to the Minds of Boys - 1 views

  • When it comes to fulfilling the kinds of assignments that we call “literacy,” boys are often out of their chairs rather than in them.
  • all over the world boys are struggling in school, with lower grades, more discipline problems, more learning disabilities, and more behavior disorders than girls (Gurian & Stevens, 2005).
  • By introducing more boy-friendly teaching strategies in the classroom, the school was able to close the gender gap in just one year. At the same time, girls' reading and writing performance improved.
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  • Douglass realized that its classrooms were generally a better fit for the verbal-emotive, sit-still, take-notes, listen-carefully, multitasking girl. Teachers tended to view the natural assets that boys bring to learning—impulsivity, single-task focus, spatial-kinesthetic learning, and physical aggression—as problems. By altering strategies to accommodate these more typically male assets, Douglass helped its students succeed
  • Increasing Experiential and Kinesthetic Learning Opportunities
  • Supporting Literacy Through Spatial-Visual Representations
  • Letting Boys Choose Topics That Appeal to Them
  • Helping Boys with Homework
  • Offering Single-Gender Learning Environments
  • for many boys these disruptions simply reflect male brains trying to stay awake in a classroom that is not well suited for their kind of learning.
    • Noelle Kreider
       
      Letting them wiggle, tap, etc. is helping them learn!
  • Seeking Out Male Role Models
  • Making Reading and Writing Purposeful
  • Researchers have identified more than 100 structural differences between the male and female brain. These differences are both genetic and socialized
  • Verbal/spatial differences. Boys' brains generally have more cortical areas dedicated to spatial-mechanical functioning than girls' brains
  • P cells and M cells. The male visual system (optical and neural) relies more heavily on type M ganglion cells, which detect movement. Girls generally have more type P ganglion cells, which are sensitive to color variety and other fine sensory activity
  • Frontal lobe development. A girl's prefrontal cortex is generally more active than a boy's, and her frontal lobe generally develops at an earlier age (Rich, 2000). These are the decision-making areas of the brain (as well as the reading/writing/word production areas).
  • Neural rest states. Boys' brains go into what neurologists call a rest state many times each day.
  • o bring about these improvements, teachers need to ask themselves some key questions: As teachers, do we fully understand the challenges that boys face in education today? Do we realize that there is a scientific basis for innovating on behalf of both girls and boys as disaggregated groups? Does my school incorporate boy-friendly and girl-friendly learning innovations in full knowledge of how essential they are in accommodating the structural and chemical gender differences built into the human brain? Do the educators in my school realize that many behaviors typical of either boys or girls are neurologically based?
  • Cross talk between hemispheres. Structural differences in girls' brains generate more cross talk between hemispheres, leading to better multitasking.
  • Boys also take more time than girls to transition between tasks (Havers, 1995). They tend to become more irritable (and to underperform in learning and classroom behavior) when teachers move them continually between tasks.
  • Natural aggression. For a number of neural and chemical reasons, boys are more naturally aggressive and competitive than girls are
  • With less oxytocin in the male neural and physiological system, boys tend toward greater impulsivity, more aggression, and less reliance on bonding malleability (Taylor, 2002). They have less desire than girls to comply to please others, including teachers.
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    fascinating article about the differences between male and female brains and the impact this has on effective instructional design. discusses a school in colorado that changed instruction to be more boy-friendly and experienced tremendous improvement in test scores.
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