成人快手

The Benefits of an All-Girls Education

The Benefits of an All-Girls Education

Research from around the world provides strong evidence that girls-only education leads to higher academic achievement, higher confidence levels, greater participation in STEM, and enhanced career aspirations.

In the absence of boys, teaching is tailored to girls鈥 learning needs and preferences, and activities and academic opportunities are free of gender-stereotyping. Girls have more grit, greater self-esteem and feel empowered to achieve their full potential.

Her academic success: higher confidence and better outcomes

A groundbreaking Australian study,聽Hands Up For Gender Equality, found that girls educated in single-sex schools are equally as confident as boys educated in single-sex schools. In other words, the frequently reported gender difference in confidence levels between men and women in the workplace simply does not exist for girls educated in girls鈥 schools. This confidence has been shown to be critical to academic and life success.1听聽It also begs the question: Is it mixed-sex environments that contribute to girls鈥 and women鈥檚 lower levels of confidence?

An analysis of the OECD鈥檚 Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA) results show that girls from girls鈥 schools in Australia and New Zealand outperformed girls from co-educational schools on all academic measures of science, mathematics and literacy.2

Several Australian studies also demonstrate that girls in single-sex schools are more confident in maths in junior secondary and more likely to take advanced science and maths subjects in senior secondary than girls in co-ed schools.3

Her career: no limits to what she can achieve

Enjoyment of science and maths subjects and activities like coding and robotics inspire girls to pursue careers in STEMM (science, technology, engineering, maths and medicine). Graduates of girls鈥 schools in Australia and New Zealand are significantly more likely to enter male-dominated fields like engineering and construction than girls from co-ed schools.4

A study of nearly 6,000 incoming female university students found that graduates of all-girl schools are more likely to show higher levels of science self-confidence, consider themselves critical thinkers, score higher on measures of academic habits of mind, and demonstrate stronger study habits.5

Her wellbeing: comfortable with her body image and being herself

Raising a confident, self-assured daughter who is comfortable with her body image is not an easy task these days. Studies show that girls in co-ed schools have lower self-esteem and feel more pressure to be thin than girls in single-sex schools.6聽Girls in co-ed schools are more likely than girls in single-sex schools to fast, diet and go to other extremes often associated with eating disorders.7

In contrast, single-sex schools encourage 鈥渋mproved self-esteem鈥 and 鈥減sychological and social wellbeing in adolescent girls鈥.8聽All-girl classes also help girls through the critical middle school years when they are struggling with social interactions relating to adolescence.9

Her safety: there鈥檚 less bullying and greater respect

The incidence of bullying for girls in single-sex schools is markedly lower than for girls in co-educational schools across all six of PISA鈥檚 measures of bullying 鈥 including being made fun of, being the subject of nasty rumours, and being pushed or hit 鈥 with a difference of up to 11 percentage points.10

Research has found less aggressive behaviours in girls鈥 schools than in boys鈥 and co-educational schools,11聽while many girls report preferring girls-only science, computing and IT classes where they are not subject to stereotyped beliefs and bullying by boys.12聽Similarly for physical education (PE) classes and sporting activities, international research shows that a large majority of girls strongly prefer all-female PE classes and sports where they are not self-conscious of their body image and what they are wearing. They do not have to take part in competitive mixed-gender activities which reinforce existing stereotypes and undermine girls鈥 enjoyment of physical exercise which is so important to their long-term physical and mental health.13

Her voice: there鈥檚 no place for inequality

Sexism and harassment are commonplace across all levels of society and the often-used excuse of 鈥渂oys will be boys鈥 simply reinforces ingrained and unacceptable stereotypes and sexist beliefs.

An Australian study of five co-educational schools confirmed previous findings that sexual bullying behaviours are commonplace within mixed-sex schools.14听

Similarly, a report by Britain鈥檚 Institute of Physics,聽Opening Doors, found that sexist language was often dismissed as 鈥渉armless banter鈥 in co-ed schools, although many girls did not see it as such and that, 鈥渋n extreme cases, it verged on bullying鈥.15

Even more concerningly, an inquiry by a committee of the British Parliament found that girls in co-ed high schools are subjected to daily sexual harassment, including unwanted sexual touching and sexting, and are the victims of implicit bias by teachers who steer girls away from 鈥榟ard鈥 subjects like advanced maths, physics and computer science.16

More recently, UK聽and Australian聽studies found that students not only experienced gender bias from teachers in STEM related subjects, but in generalised behaviour management, where girls were often used as tools to address boys鈥 behaviour. Equally disturbing, girls reported not feeling safe at school, due to constant harassment and a failure of teachers to respond appropriately to their complaints.聽19;听20

However, in a girls鈥 school, girls are intentionally 鈥渆quipped with the knowledge and skills required to overcome social and cultural gender biases and in doing so actively break the stereotypical norms that define women in society.鈥17

These outcomes have been confirmed by a 2021 scoping review of the past twenty years of research on single-sex education which has found that single-sex schools and classes have the 鈥減otential to enable the challenging or disrupting of some gender norms, by both girls and boys鈥 and that there is 鈥減romising鈥 evidence that single-sex education is better than co-educational models at 鈥渃reating conditions for equity鈥.18听

Endnotes

  1. Fitzsimmons, Yates & Callan, 2018.聽Also see, Fitzsimmons, Yates & Callan, 2021.
  2. Macquarie Marketing Group (MMG) and the Alliance of Girls鈥 Schools Australasia, 2020.
  3. Forgasz & Leder, 2017; Justman & M茅ndez, 2018; Lee & Anderson, 2015; Ryan, 2016.
  4. Carnemolla, 2019; Docherty et al., 2018; Tran, 2018; Tully & Jacobs, 2010.
  5. Riggers-Piehl, Lim & King, 2018.
  6. Cribb & Haase, 2016.
  7. Kim et al., 2018.
  8. Cribb & Haase, 2016.
  9. Hart, 2015. Also see, Hart, 2016.
  10. MMG and the Alliance of Girls鈥 Schools Australasia, 2020.
  11. Gee & Cho, 2014.
  12. Fisher, Lang & Forgasz, 2015.
  13. Morgan et al., 2019; Robinson et al., 2021; Timken, McNamee & Coste, 2019; Wallace, Buchan & Sculthorpe, 2020.
  14. Shute, Owens & Slee, 2016. Also see, Shute, 2017 (published online 2021).
  15. Institute of Physics, 2015.
  16. Women and Equalities Committee, House of Commons [UK], 2016.
  17. Archard, 2018.
  18. Robinson et al., 2021
  19. Connolly, 2022
  20. Ofsted, 2021

Page Source: the Alliance of Girls' Schools Australasia (now part of the International Coalition of Girls' Schools)