Los Angeles Times

Why single-sex schools aren’t best

- By Juliet A. Williams Juliet A. Williams is a professor in the UCLA Department of Gender Studies and the author of the forthcomin­g “The Separation Solution: Single-Sex Public Education and the New Politics of Gender Equality.”

In her first days on the job, L.A. Unified’s new superinten­dent, Michelle King, suggested that single-sex education might attract more families to the district and improve student achievemen­t. She wouldn’t be the first district leader to vest hope — not to mention public funds — in allboys and all-girls schools. But LAUSD should be wary of segregatin­g its students by sex.

The notion of boys’ and girls’ schools conjures rosy images of elite private institutio­ns, but the history of single-sex education in the United States is rife with misguided prejudice. In the 1870s, retired Harvard professor Edward H. Clarke ignited popular interest in single-sex education — by arguing that exposing adolescent girls to the rigors of a standard education would cause their reproducti­ve organs to wither. In the 1950s, after racial segregatio­n was declared unconstitu­tional, sex-segregated public schools were created across the South to keep boys and girls of different racial background­s apart.

Today, in a major reversal, single-sex education has found political champions among supporters of gender equality and those who believe that black and Latino boys in particular will benefit from being educated apart from their female peers. In 2001, then-Sen. Hilary Clinton co-sponsored a provision of the No Child Left Behind Act that provided federal funds to fledgling single-sex public schools, spurring local school districts across the country to experiment with sex segregatio­n.

A few years later, however, a government-commission­ed study noted a lack evidence proving that single-sex education improved student performanc­e. The Bush administra­tion decided to press forward anyway, and in 2006 issued guidelines signaling it wouldn’t go after single-sex public schools for violating laws against sex discrimina­tion in education. Today, there are nearly 80 singlesex public schools in the U.S., up from just a handful three decades ago. Hundreds more schools separate boys and girls during academic instructio­n, though the campuses are technicall­y coed. So, how’s it going? Supporters point to a few carefully chosen examples to prove that single-sex education raises test scores and boosts students’ confidence. But the larger story is the overwhelmi­ng number of single-sex public school programs that haven’t produced any positive results. In 2014, researcher­s Erin Pahlke, Janet Shibley Hyde, and Carlie M. Allison published a metaanalys­is of existing studies on single-sex instructio­n. Their exhaustive review found no significan­t advantage, for boys or girls, over coeducatio­n.

Yes, there are some terrific single-sex public schools out there. But are they great schools because they are single-sex? The evidence suggests not. Research shows that successful schools do certain things — such as creating strong mentoring relationsh­ips and keeping class sizes to a manageable level — that benefit students whether boys and girls learn together or apart.

Meanwhile, evidence is mounting that single-sex education can do real harm by perpetuati­ng limiting gender stereotype­s. In single-sex schools across the country, girls’ classrooms are decorated in pastels while boys are surrounded by bold colors; girls are assigned to read romantic fiction, while boys are given nonfiction books; boys are subjected to frequent drills and timed tests, while girls are assigned group work and non-competitiv­e activities — and on and on.

These “gender-sensitive” teaching methods sometimes are dressed up in the jargon of neuroscien­ce, but the popular notion that boys and girls are “hard-wired” to learn differentl­y rests on gross generaliza­tions about sex difference­s in the brain. Today, much of the socalled science of sex difference has been debunked, but that hasn’t kept public schools from modeling programs on bogus theories. As a result, boys are being deprived of the opportunit­y to develop crucial social skills, such as working collaborat­ively and thinking creatively, while girls are being denied the opportunit­y to build test-taking skills and learn how to succeed under pressure.

Past mistakes don’t prove that single-sex schools can never work in public education in the future. But unless LAUSD takes a critical look at the facts and research on single-sex education, it hardly can be expected to do any better moving forward.

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