Answer I would say that I am coming to agree with that statement. The difference in socialization and learning styles means that it makes a lot of sense. In his book "Why Gender Matters" Dr. Leonard Sax makes a good case that ignoring these sex differences serves to actually reinforce undesirable gender stereotypes.
Check this website in the Related Link below: Another opinion I would strongly support the view of single sex education. Students are mostly in a sensitive age, which implies dangerous in fact. In China we call it "Flower Age" when various emotions are likely to bloom.
Meanwhile, the secondary education they are receiving is of vital importance, serving as a steppingstone toward higher education. During this crisis, nothing should be a bar to students from focusing full attention on study. Sending boys and girls to separate schools may only improve the current situation but it can still do good to protect students from overcoming love affairs for example Another opinion: I disagree.
A child's learning style does not depend upon their gender. In the primary school the teacher can present subjects in a way that appeals to boys and girls. Girls and boys get treated differently by their parents from birth.
This is usually subconscious but little boys are more likely to be involved in rough play than girls. It can also be seen in the toys that the parents buy for the children, dolls for the girls, Lego etc for boys. I think it is important that primary aged children get the experiences of playing with members of the other gender and to be encouraged to take part in non-stereotypical experiences, to counteract these stereotypes.
I can not imagine the primary schools I have worked in being separate gender because many of the children need to learn how to socialise with the other gender especially when they are from single-parent families or are an only child Another opinion: I did attend a girl's grammar school at senior/high school at this did not prevent us from 'love affairs' with the boys grammar down the road. As the school was only for girls there was much more arguing and it was cattier than mixed schools I disagree! Girls need to see their boys.
Boys and girls should attend separate schools. Use specific reasons and examples to support your answer. First and foremost, this is a great topic because it looks at our individual feelings about male and female education and whether it should be coeducational (co-ed) or not.
I’ve research this topic before and, although, I don’t see a real need to create separate institutions of learning for men and women, I understand both sides of the argument. “Reports such as the American Association of University Women’s 1992 “How Schools Shortchange Girls” and David and Myra Sadker’s “Failing at Fairness,” conclude that girls are not as well served by the coeducational learning environment as boys are. They receive less teacher attention and find fewer reflections of themselves in the curriculum; their unique learning styles and ways of knowing are often ignored.
At all-girls schools, girls have 100% of the teacher’s attention in the classroom. Unrestricted by the pressures of a coeducational environment, they find it safe to develop their own voices. Girls in single-sex schools speak up, unafraid to challenge themselves and others to think.
The authors are proponents, I believe, of separate education for young men and women. Notice that I said ‘separate education’ and not ‘all-girls (or all-boys) schools’. Also noticed that I said ‘young men and women’ and not boys and girls.
I believe young men and women, junior and senior high school aged, will benefit the most from having separate classes. Young people, however, should not spend the whole day separate from each other. Developing a rapport with the opposite sex is so much more important to their life education than their schooling will ever be.
In my opinion, this sort of co-ed education is analogous to ELC students, men and women from a variety of countries, studying English together. My upbringing precludes me from agreeing with home economics (this was a class that taught cooking, cleaning, sewing, ironing, etc. when I was a young man growing up in public schools). My mother always taught me how to do these things because, in her words, “don’t leave home then look for another mother to take care of you.
You have to be able to take care of yourself”. I don’t personally believe that these are ‘fields that girls should concentrate on’. Is that my mother in me or the American in me?
I purposely choose this website entitled “Need for Islamic Girls Schools” because it had the info that I was looking for plus it included some info on how men and women are educated in Muslim countries. I always look to my student to educate me, as well, so please feel free to read this short article and comment freely.
I cant really gove you an answer,but what I can give you is a way to a solution, that is you have to find the anglde that you relate to or peaks your interest. A good paper is one that people get drawn into because it reaches them ln some way.As for me WW11 to me, I think of the holocaust and the effect it had on the survivors, their families and those who stood by and did nothing until it was too late.