(Name-mce) ListServ More public schools dividing boys, girls

Bill Howe bill at billhowe.org
Tue Jan 30 07:23:53 EST 2007


Jan. 25, 2007, 8:20PM

More public schools dividing boys, girls





By SCOTT BAUER Associated Press Writer

Houston Chronicle



HARTLAND, Wis. — Lauren Panos was surprised when she walked into her
ninth-grade English class in the fall and saw there were no boys.



Her parents had not told her they had enrolled her in a new all-girls class
at Arrowhead High School in Hartland, about 25 miles west of Milwaukee. A
semester into classes, Panos still isn't sold on the idea.



"All the girls there, they can talk out of turn," the 14-year-old said. "We
get really off task and it's really annoying."



More public school systems are looking at separating boys and girls, whether
for certain classes or by entire schools, after the federal government
opened the door last fall. Supporters say splitting students by sex
minimizes distractions, helps them learn better and allows boys and girls to
explore subjects they may not otherwise take.



Panos' classmate, Alyson Douglas, 15, said she likes not worrying about boys
causing disruptions.



"Guys just make a bigger nuisance in the class," she said.



Panos' and Douglas' school is one of just three public schools in
Wisconsinthat offers classes for either boys or girls only. But
Thursday night, the
Milwaukee School Board approved a committee report calling for opening a
school with all same-sex classes, perhaps by 2008.



Milwaukee would join several other large cities where public schools already
offer single-sex classes. They include New York City — where there are nine
single-sex public schools — as well as Chicago, Dallas, Seattle and
Washington, D.C.



Plans to open same-sex schools have been announced in Miami, Atlanta and
Cleveland.



Nationwide, at least 253 public schools offer single-sex classes and 51
schools are entirely single sex, according to the National Association for
Single Sex Public Education. In 1995, just three public schools offered
single-sex classes.



Critics of same-sex classrooms argue that proven methods of improving
education should be pursued instead of one that divides boys and girls.
Separating boys and girls is tantamount to "separate but equal"
segregation-era classrooms, they say.



"Too many schools feel they can carry out a social experiment with students'
education with really the flimsiest of theories," said Emily Martin, deputy
director of the American Civil Liberties Union's Women's Rights Project.



Single-sex schools are an "illusionary silver bullet," said Lisa Maatz,
director of public policy and government relations for the American
Association of University Women. They distract from real problems and do not
offer proven solutions such as lower class sizes and sufficient funding, she
said.



Many classrooms and schools could make the switch thanks to a change made by
the U.S. Department of Education in November.



Previously, single-sex classes had been allowed in only limited cases, such
as gym classes and sex education classes. But the new rules allow same-sex
education any time schools think it will improve achievement, expand the
diversity of courses or meet students' individual needs.



Enrollment must be voluntary and any children excluded from the class must
get a "substantially equal" coed class in the same subject, if not a
separate single-sex class.



The change could mean a boom in public schools splitting the sexes. Leonard
Sax, executive director of the National Association for Single Sex Public
Education, predicts that if public schools follow the path of private
schools, where 7 percent are single sex, some 5,000 single-sex schools could
open in the next 20 years.



It has opened the door for Milwaukee's plan, which had been on the drawing
board for three years, said school board member Jeff Spence.



"I would suggest that for many of our kids and families, especially in
Milwaukee, it's a question of choice," Spence said. "We have an array of
choices in Milwaukee and I just think this should be one additional choice."



___



On the Net: National Association for Single Sex Public Education:
http://www.singlesexschools.org/



U.S. Department of Education: http://www.ed.gov/index.jhtml


-- 
Bill Howe

Multicultural Educators to China Summer 2007 Trip -
http://www.billhowe.org/china2007.htm


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