Deborah Roberts doesn鈥檛 run her room like a typical 5th grade teacher. Enthusiastically exhorting her students, whom she refers to as her 鈥渢eam,鈥 she runs a loud, unabashedly 鈥渉igh-energy鈥 class. Drilling the kids like a coach, she openly fosters academic competition. It鈥檚 a setup calculated to engage the boys in her Woodward Avenue Elementary School class, tapping into their natural competitiveness and boisterousness. This way of teaching could easily alienate the girls in the room, but her class at the DeLand, Florida, public school doesn鈥檛 have any.
The number of public schools offering single-sex instruction has risen from fewer than a dozen to 205 since 1997.
鈥淚t鈥檚 much better than being with girls,鈥 10-year-old Austin Cox says about his boys-only class鈥攐ne of the small but growing number of such arrangements in public schools. 鈥淭hey used to annoy me with sissy talk.鈥
The sexes have been taught separately for centuries, usually in private settings. But recent research on gender-specific learning, new federal flexibility, and some eyebrow-raising test-score improvements are forcing public school leaders to rethink the hegemony of coeducational learning.
Woodward Avenue Elementary鈥檚 experiment started last school year in response to national statistics showing that boys were more likely than girls to drop out of school. Early results are promising: In the first year, 86 percent of boys in Woodward鈥檚 single-sex classes met state writing standards, compared with 33 percent of boys in the school鈥檚 coed classes, Roberts says. Among 4th grade girls, 75 percent in single-sex classes met standards, compared with 59 percent of girls in mixed classes.
A research review now under way by Cornelius Riordan, a sociology professor at Providence College in Rhode Island, seems to bear out the school鈥檚 success. Preliminary findings from his examination of 40 studies completed since 1960 suggest that single-sex schools in English-speaking countries improved academic performance, particularly among poor, African American, and Hispanic students, he says. But others warn against making too much of such results. Riordan鈥檚 study, for example, does not account for single-sex classes in coed schools. And at Woodward, participation in divided-gender classes was voluntary; the number of students tested was also not large enough to draw definitive conclusions.
But with score jumps so dramatic, some educators are concluding that they can鈥檛 afford to ignore single-sex classes鈥 potential benefits. Miami-Dade County Public Schools, the nation鈥檚 fourth-largest district, plans to launch the state鈥檚 first completely gender- segregated school next year: a magnet 鈥渓eadership academy鈥 for girls in 6th through 10th grades, followed by one for boys in 2007-08.
The No Child Left Behind Act has opened the floodgates.
The number of public schools offering single-sex instruction has risen from fewer than a dozen to 205 since 1997, with classrooms sprouting up in places such as Atlanta, New York, and Philadelphia, says Leonard Sax, a psychologist and physician who directs the National Association for Single Sex Public Education, in Maryland. The increase is directly attributable to the 2001 No Child Left Behind Act, which introduced new flexibility to Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972. The statute had previously prohibited public schools from segregating classrooms by gender if they wanted to keep receiving federal money. While 205 still represents a tiny fraction of the 96,000 public schools nationwide, Sax foresees growth.
鈥淭here are fundamental, hard-wired, genetically programmed differences in how boys and girls learn,鈥 he says. Generalizations are tricky, and other experts have highlighted exceptions, but many boys thrive on motion and noise, while girls often sit still longer and can work better in groups, adds Michael Gurian, author of The Minds of Boys: Saving Our Sons From Falling Behind in School and Life.
Not everyone believes separation is beneficial, though. 鈥淭here is tremendous potential for harm when you segregate boys and girls from each other and make them feel like it鈥檚 their gender that鈥檚 creating the problem,鈥 says Kim Gandy, president of the National Organization for Women.