Scaffolding Boys' GSAT Achievement
For the first time since
2012, boys outperformed girls in the 2017 sitting of the Language Arts paper in
the Grade Six Achievement Test (GSAT). According to data released by the
Ministry of Education, Youth & Information, boys achieved a higher mean
percentage score of 76.7% in Language Arts, compared to 68.5 % for girls. This
development augurs well for boys’ education, especially since men’s educational
attainments have fallen and continue to fall drastically behind women’s. Boys’ underachievement has
been at the heart of many academic journals and discussion over the years. The
issue is not unique to Jamaica; in fact the concern is of global significance
and is rooted in both a socio-political and educational ideology. Males over
the years have been underperforming at almost every level of Jamaica’s
education system. There are various schools of thought which have been
forwarded with regards to boys’ underachievement. There are those who argue
that boys’ underachievement is a direct result of the emphasis that has been
placed on girls and women. Secondly, there are those who locate the problem in
relation to wider social changes and how this impacts males, particularly
adolescent males with regards to their view of masculinity and schooling. Statistics
from the Mona Campus, of the University of the West Indies, indicate that more
than seventy per cent (70%) of all graduates are females. Data from the other
degree granting institutions paint a similar picture. The discourse surrounding
gender and education is often emotional resulting in a loss of focus regarding
the issue at hand. Boys too have structural hurdles to overcome in the
education system. One such is the
gender-based bias in the curriculum as well as the methodology being used. It
is hope that the new National Standards Curriculum (NSC) will address the
deficit boys’ face. According to the Minister of Education, Senator Ruel Reid, the
National Standards Curriculum will improve methods of teaching, particularly
for boys. The National Standards Curriculum aims at improving the general
academic performance, attitude and behavior of students. The National Standard
Curriculum is student centered and emphasis will be placed on project-based and
problem-solving learning, with Science, Technology, Engineering, Arts,
Mathematics (STEAM) incorporated at all levels of the education system. It is
critical that we engage our males, specifically, adolescent males in trying to
change the gender norms within the society, one of which is that English
Language is a girl’s subject. Unfortunately, we live in a society in which boys
who display school smarts are often ridiculed as effeminate by peers and even
adults in areas where academic excellence by males is typically devalued. Undoubtedly,
our males continue to struggle with questions surrounding their masculinity and
manhood and many just give in to the popular culture of the day. The
achievement of our boys at the primary level is more significant against this
prevailing thug culture often far removed from education. It would be
interesting to have the progress of these young men tracked over the duration
of their high school years to see how well they perform at the Caribbean
Secondary Education Certificate (CSEC) especially so in English Language. We
need to build on the momentum gained from the boys’ GSAT achievement by
fostering a movement to rescue our boys from academic slumber. The onus is on
the policy makers to ensure that equality of educational opportunity for both sexes
is achieved and that this is sustainable for the long term viability and development
of the society. In the words of freedom
fighter and statesman Nelson Mandela, education is the most powerful weapon
which you can use to change the world.
@WayneCamo
Wayne Campbell is an educator and social commentator with an interest
in development policies as they affect culture and or gender issues.
waykam@yahoo.com@WayneCamo
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