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Boys (and men) have been in trouble for
some time, but “progressives” have only just noticed. In “The Trouble
with Boys,” Newsweek, a representative of the species, articulates the
problem:
By almost every benchmark, boys across the nation and in every
demographic group are falling behind. In elementary school, boys are two
times more likely than girls to be diagnosed with learning disabilities
and twice as likely to be placed in special-education classes.
High-school boys are losing ground to girls on standardized writing
tests. The number of boys who said they didn't like school rose 71
percent between 1980 and 2001…. Nowhere is the shift more evident than
on college campuses. Thirty years ago men represented 58 percent of the
undergraduate student body. Now they're a minority at 44 percent.
The magazine then implicates the perennial “progressive” bugaboo:
“quantifiable and narrowly defined academic success,” for which
“activist parents” are responsible. The writers blame parents for
ensuring that “school performance has been measured in two simple ways:
how many students are enrolled in accelerated courses and whether test
scores stay high.”
Other than pushy parents, Newsweek also faults “curricula [that] have
become more rigid.” Too much teaching at the expense of the cult of the
“whole child” has, seemingly, caused boys to stumble. The scribes, four
women and one man, must be confusing America with Singapore.
Curiously, the magazine allows that boys used to do okay at school. What
happened to change that is an enigma, best left to the experts. The
experts—also the people who put boys in this predicament in the first
place—aver that, while a considerable investment was made to empower
girls, boys were neglected.
There’s a problem with this reasoning. If boys used to do well at
school, then an “investment in girls” would not explain their
deterioration. Unless “investing in girls” is Orwellian for privileging
girls at the expense of boys, which is precisely the impetus behind
Title IX and other legislative loadstars. Presently, boys toil under
elaborate affirmative action initiatives in secondary and tertiary
schools that subordinate merit to the equal representation of girls in
every field of endeavor, including sports.
“Experts” such as the National Education Association—the largest union
in the country and the al-Qaida of education—will say we spend too
little money and tolerate unacceptable teacher-student ratios. Oh, come
off it. We shell out more per child than any other developed country,
and at 1:16.5, the teacher-student ratio has never been lower. Soon
there’ll be more adults than children in the system.
The travails of boys, moreover, need to be put in perspective. American
high-school kids, boys and girls, have been crowned the
cretins of the developed world, as measured by every conceivable
international test. That carnivorous girls have climbed to the top of
this pile is no great achievement. No, the galloping ignorance among
American students is proportional to budgetary profligacy.
The problems plaguing boys are not pecuniary, but paradigmatic: the
progressive, child-centered worldview and feminism.
For decades now, America’s educators have insisted that learning be made
as natural and as easy as possible, when it is neither. To this end,
content-based, top-down teaching was replaced with pop-culture friendly,
non-hierarchically delivered flimflam. But as classicists such as E. D.
Hirsch Jr. have pointed out, effective, analytical and explicit
instruction is very definitely not a natural but a highly artificial,
often-unintuitive process.
Evidence abounds that boys thrive in the more disciplined, structured
learning environment. America’s loosey-goosey schools, however, shun
discipline and moral instruction. Boys are also biologically predisposed
to competition. But in the progressive school, cooperative experiences
and groupthink are preferred to individual achievement.
And girls favored over boys.
When boys bubble over with unbridled testosterone, instead of
challenging, disciplining, and harnessing their energies, as teachers
once did, they are emasculated or medicated. The former means being made
over in the image of woman; the latter entails being diagnosed as
“learning disabled” and drugged with Ritalin. It is a consequence of the
demonization of male biopsychology.
The school is a microcosm of society. Both have been thoroughly
feminized. The false feminist narrative suffuses every aspect of a boy’s
life. Women everywhere are depicted as brawny, brainy, and
beautiful; men as buffoons. On celluloid, an 80-pound waif manages to
wallop a 200-pound gangster with no punctures to the silicone sacks.
When male teachers manage to infiltrate the public school system, they
are of the androgynous genus—and every inch as feminist as their
XX-carrying colleagues. The quintessential male role models—the Founding
Fathers—are persona non grata in courses, as are other so-called
pale, patriarchal pigs. A boy risks purgatory and worse should he
mention weaponry or female anatomy.
In addition to a core-curriculum, banished too from America’s feminized
and foolish schools is the “archaic” idea of a literary canon. Not only
do boys have to internalize feminism’s lumpen jargon; they must also
synchronize their male brains to Oprah’s challenged synapses. English
teachers expect them to study Memoirs of a Geisha and The
Secret Life of Bees.
If epic literature worms its way into the school’s shopping-mall
assortment of flimsy courses and frivolous subject matter, then it is
duly deconstructed and shred: Boys are taught to see great works of art
through feminism’s grim and distorting prism. Shakespeare, Tolstoy, and
T. S. Eliot were members of the ruling class of oppressors; their
artistry no more than a manifestation of the alleged power relationships
in society.
Progressive schools—and the feminist and feminized “education” they
inflict—are ultimately extremely bad for boys and girls alike. But while
they favor girls, casting them as a besieged class of helots; they are
hostile to boys, who are perceived as members of a ruling elite that
refuses to let go of patriarchal privilege and power.
In an e-mail to me a young man described his daily grind under this
mirthless and unmerciful ideology:
I cannot seem to
escape the biases of feminism no matter where I turn. Every female
teacher somehow manages to bring the argument around to point out that
males overrun everything. If I produce any artwork with any sort of tall
thin form in it, I’m immediately criticized for producing artwork that
involves phallic symbolism. Thus meaning that I obviously am promoting
male dominance in society.
He said he felt “worn down” by the experience. Others like him just walk
away.
© 2006 By Ilana Mercer
WorldNetDaily.com
January 27
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