Boys Don't Try? Rethinking Masculinity in Schools
Rethinking Masculinity in Schools
- Publisher's listprice GBP 17.99
-
8 594 Ft (8 185 Ft + 5% VAT)
The price is estimated because at the time of ordering we do not know what conversion rates will apply to HUF / product currency when the book arrives. In case HUF is weaker, the price increases slightly, in case HUF is stronger, the price goes lower slightly.
- Discount 20% (cc. 1 719 Ft off)
- Discounted price 6 875 Ft (6 548 Ft + 5% VAT)
Subcribe now and take benefit of a favourable price.
Subscribe
8 594 Ft
Availability
Estimated delivery time: In stock at the publisher, but not at Prospero's office. Delivery time approx. 3-5 weeks.
Not in stock at Prospero.
Why don't you give exact delivery time?
Delivery time is estimated on our previous experiences. We give estimations only, because we order from outside Hungary, and the delivery time mainly depends on how quickly the publisher supplies the book. Faster or slower deliveries both happen, but we do our best to supply as quickly as possible.
Product details:
- Edition number 1
- Publisher Routledge
- Date of Publication 18 April 2019
- ISBN 9780815350255
- Binding Paperback
- No. of pages218 pages
- Size 246x174 mm
- Weight 400 g
- Language English
- Illustrations 7 Line drawings, black & white; 12 Tables, black & white 0
Categories
Short description:
There is a significant problem in our schools: too many boys are struggling. Traditional ideas about masculinity are having a negative impact, not only on males, but females too. In this ground-breaking book, Matt Pinkett and Mark Roberts argue that schools must rethink their efforts to get boys back on track.
MoreLong description:
"What do we want for our boys?" Matt and Mark explode myths, challenge some of our preconceptions and suggest alternative routes to success in our raising and educating of boys. And they don't dodge the most sensitive issues.
This is a thoughtful, balanced, thoroughly-researched, eminently sensible and practical consideration of how we can support boys to be their best in the classroom and beyond it. It recognises and addresses the pressures boys are under as they make their journey towards manhood. Mark and Matt skilfully demonstrate that if we help boys in schools we will improve education for girls, too.
Each chapter is structured according to the story, the research, the solutions: this is positive and forward-looking, asking not only "what’s not wanted?" but "what’s wanted instead?" and so focusses on the future rather than only the past and present.
The authors explain honestly, courageously and with humility how and why they have rethought their own perceptions of "the boy problem" to come to a more nuanced and carefully considered understanding of why boys behave in certain stereotypical ways and how they can be encouraged, motivated and inspired to be their best selves. I learnt a huge amount from this book, and I suggest you will, too.
- Jill Berry, Former head, now leadership consultant
This is a fabulous book. It's going to be a must-read for any teacher, leader or parents who have ever had concerns or questions about boys' attitudes to school, to learning, to sex, to each other. Boys Don’t Try? Rethinking Masculinity in Schools is impressively ambitious in its scope, tackling a range of key issues with a brilliant blend of the personal and the analytical with a clear, helpful repeating structure: the story, the research, the solutions. Matt and Mark speak from experience, acknowledging their biases and changes of heart; both have voices of conviction and an absolutely authentic desire to find real answers to difficult problems. The final 'other voices' chapter illustrates this perfectly.
I loved reading this book and I know thousands of others will too.
- Tom Sherrington, Author and education consultant
Having just read Boys Don’t Try? Rethinking Masculinity in Schools by Matt Pinkett and Mark Roberts, I have found myself with a sore neck. Why? Because I found myself nodding in agreement page after page. Like many teachers, at various stages in my career, I have been given really bad advice such as ‘introduce competition into your lessons to engage the boys’ or ‘don’t worry if the boys’ work is a bit untidy, that’s just the way it is with boys’. Matt and Mark address myths like this and use the research evidence, alongside their own experience in schools, to break down many of these widely held beliefs, which serve to do nothing else but compound the problem of gender inequality in schools. Furthermore, they challenge us as educators to reflect on our own gender biases which, whilst uncomfortable at times, is the first step to addressing this problem.
The world of education has needed a book like this for a long time. Evidence informed, written by practitioners and not pulling any punches. It gets to the heart of a really serious issue that permeates our education system and should be read by anybody who works in a school.
- Shaun Allison, Author, deputy head, and Director of Durrington Research School
We desperately need this book – and more like it. In a data-obsessed education system, the statistics are stark: too many boys, particularly from disadvantaged backgrounds, are falling behind... In Boys Don’t Try? Matt Pinkett and Mark Roberts directly link boys’ relative educational underachievement to mistaken attempts to aspire to an “outdated, but nonetheless widespread idea” about what it means to be a “real man” and “a brand of masculinity that leaves many boys floundering” – and make no mistake, it is a brand, sold hard yet often unthinkingly, with very real casualties. The message is clear: we have a lot of work to do.
- Stephanie Keenan, TES
There is something for everyone here, whether you read this as a classroom teacher, determined to do better for all the students in every class, or as a headteacher more worried about whole-school strategy, vision and ethos. This is a call to action, to a brave new world where boys are nurtured and developed. Without putting the blame on schools for the current situation, the authors are clear about just how much good we can do for society if we can do better with our boys in school.
- Peter Hall, Schools Week
The problems identified within this book will be applicable for many schools, and the solutions offered are a fantastic starting point to address many challenging issues to ensure that the opportunities and experiences of all those attending education remain as positive and possible, no matter what your race, gender, religion or cultural background is.
- Colin Hill, UKEdChat
I’ll be honest and say that I didn’t think I’d learn much from this book. I have always felt that helping boys to achieve was something I knew quite a bit about. After all I have been one, I went to an all boys school and I have a teenage son. However, from the first chapter I realised that I had fallen foul of the ‘myths’ on many occasions. The ‘boy problem’ is not a new phenomenon and is cited as a major challenge to the improvement of our education system and society so it is time to think differently and ‘Boys Don’t Try?’ throws down that gauntlet to all of us.
When you read this book you will find yourself with a furrowed brow regularly as you think back through your own school and life experiences; a good book does that – it makes you think. I haven’t been able to walk past a textbook without noticing all of the gender stereotypes that run through so many of them.
‘Boys Don’t Try?’ will have an impact on my thinking for a long time to come and has helped me look at my school through a different lens."
-Vic Goddard, Principal of Passmores Academy
As a PGCE student, I was taught about the impact of gendered language on our students, about careful book choices and our own unconscious bias. These lessons stayed with me and helped me to be a better teacher of boys and girls. If these aspects have not been part of your learning as a teacher or a leader, then you need this book.
The authors explore, in frank and detailed ways, the myths that surround the education of boys and explain how we need to widen our own expectations of boys as well as their cultural capital. It is uncomfortable to hear of the experiences of some students and teachers which is why this is an important topic. The key message I take away is that boys need the same as girls and that is great teaching and teachers. I particularly applaud the refusal to accept the stereotypes that diminish both genders which means ditching the engagement strategies that we hope motivate boys to learn and yet only succeed in further limiting both genders. Instead the book offers teachers, leaders and parents ways to ensure that all students, whatever gender, achieve and exceed.
-Vivienne Porritt, Education and Leadership consultant and National Leader of "What do we want for our boys?" Matt and Mark explode myths, challenge some of our preconceptions and suggest alternative routes to success in our raising and educating of boys. And they don't dodge the most sensitive issues. This is a thoughtful, balanced, thoroughly-researched, eminently sensible and practical consideration of how we can support boys to be their best in the classroom and beyond it. It recognises and addresses the pressures boys are under as they make their journey towards manhood. Mark and Matt skilfully demonstrate that if we help boys in schools we will improve education for girls, too. Each chapter is structured according to the story, the research, the solutions: this is positive and forward-looking, asking not only "what’s not wanted?" but "what’s wanted instead?" and so focusses on the future rather than only the past and present. The authors explain honestly, courageously and with humility how and why they have rethought their own perceptions of "the boy problem" to come to a more nuanced and carefully considered understanding of why boys behave in certain stereotypical ways and how they can be encouraged, motivated and inspired to be their best selves. I learnt a huge amount from this book, and I suggest you will, too. - Jill Berry, Former head, now leadership consultant This is a fabulous book. It's going to be a must-read for any teacher, leader or parents who have ever had concerns or questions about boys' attitudes to school, to learning, to sex, to each other. Boys Don’t Try? Rethinking Masculinity in Schools is impressively ambitious in its scope, tackling a range of key issues with a brilliant blend of the personal and the analytical with a clear, helpful repeating structure: the story, the research, the solutions. Matt and Mark speak from experience, acknowledging their biases and changes of heart; both have voices of conviction and an absolutely authentic desire to find real answers to difficult problems. The final 'other voices' chapter illustrates this perfectly. I loved reading this book and I know thousands of others will too. - Tom Sherrington, Author and education consultant Having just read Boys Don’t Try? Rethinking Masculinity in Schools by Matt Pinkett and Mark Roberts, I have found myself with a sore neck. Why? Because I found myself nodding in agreement page after page. Like many teachers, at various stages in my career, I have been given really bad advice such as ‘introduce competition into your lessons to engage the boys’ or ‘don’t worry if the boys’ work is a bit untidy, that’s just the way it is with boys’. Matt and Mark address myths like this and use the research evidence, alongside their own experience in schools, to break down many of these widely held beliefs, which serve to do nothing else but compound the problem of gender inequality in schools. Furthermore, they challenge us as educators to reflect on our own gender biases which, whilst uncomfortable at times, is the first step to addressing this problem. The world of education has needed a book like this for a long time. Evidence informed, written by practitioners and not pulling any punches. It gets to the heart of a really serious issue that permeates our education system and should be read by anybody who works in a school. - Shaun Allison, Author, deputy head, and Director of Durrington Research School We desperately need this book – and more like it. In a data-obsessed education system, the statistics are stark: too many boys, particularly from disadvantaged backgrounds, are falling behind... In Boys Don’t Try? Matt Pinkett and Mark Roberts directly link boys’ relative educational underachievement to mistaken attempts to aspire to an “outdated, but nonetheless widespread idea” about what it means to be a “real man” and “a brand of masculinity that leaves many boys floundering” – and make no mistake, it is a brand, sold hard yet often unthinkingly, with very real casualties. The message is clear: we have a lot of work to do. - Stephanie Keenan, TES There is something for everyone here, whether you read this as a classroom teacher, determined to do better for all the students in every class, or as a headteacher more worried about whole-school strategy, vision and ethos. This is a call to action, to a brave new world where boys are nurtured and developed. Without putting the blame on schools for the current situation, the authors are clear about just how much good we can do for society if we can do better with our boys in school. - Peter Hall, Schools Week The problems identified within this book will be applicable for many schools, and the solutions offered are a fantastic starting point to address many challenging issues to ensure that the opportunities and experiences of all those attending education remain as positive and possible, no matter what your race, gender, religion or cultural background is. - Colin Hill, UKEdChat I’ll be honest and say that I didn’t think I’d learn much from this book. I have always felt that helping boys to achieve was something I knew quite a bit about. After all I have been one, I went to an all boys school and I have a teenage son. However, from the first chapter I realised that I had fallen foul of the ‘myths’ on many occasions. The ‘boy problem’ is not a new phenomenon and is cited as a major challenge to the improvement of our education system and society so it is time to think differently and ‘Boys Don’t Try?’ throws down that gauntlet to all of us. When you read this book you will find yourself with a furrowed brow regularly as you think back through your own school and life experiences; a good book does that – it makes you think. I haven’t been able to walk past a textbook without noticing all of the gender stereotypes that run through so many of them. ‘Boys Don’t Try?’ will have an impact on my thinking for a long time to come and has helped me look at my school through a different lens." -Vic Goddard, Principal of Passmores Academy As a PGCE student, I was taught about the impact of gendered language on our students, about careful book choices and our own unconscious bias. These lessons stayed with me and helped me to be a better teacher of boys and girls. If these aspects have not been part of your learning as a teacher or a leader, then you need this book. The authors explore, in frank and detailed ways, the myths that surround the education of boys and explain how we need to widen our own expectations of boys as well as their cultural capital. It is uncomfortable to hear of the experiences of some students and teachers which is why this is an important topic. The key message I take away is that boys need the same as girls and that is great teaching and teachers. I particularly applaud the refusal to accept the stereotypes that diminish both genders which means ditching the engagement strategies that we hope motivate boys to learn and yet only succeed in further limiting both genders. Instead the book offers teachers, leaders and parents ways to ensure that all students, whatever gender, achieve and exceed. -Vivienne Porritt, Education and Leadership consultant and National Leader of
Table of Contents:
1. The Engagement Myth 2. Disadvantaged Students 3. Peer Pressure 4. Mental Health 5. Expectations 6. Sex and Sexism 7. In the Classroom 8. Violence 9. Relationships 10. Other Voices
More
On Renaissance Commentaries
14 433 HUF