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Mary C. Tillotson's avatar

I wonder if what drives the "sit still and be quiet" approach to education is the fact that our society values those kinds of jobs. If that's the case, there's an indirect way in which society favors women. Fertility differences play a big role in why the professional world devalues women, and that's a real thing, but it's also true that when you're pregnant, it is easier/safer to sit quietly and type than to bend over and lift. (that said, with a born baby/toddler, physical work is often easier as long as it's not dangerous. I can do laundry and dishes with my toddler tagging along more easily than I can write a paper with my toddler tagging along. But if I were an electrician or plumber I wouldn't want her to be present.)

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Midge's avatar

"How would you expect the puberty-years of school to be different for both sexes, if school tracked development, instead of being fairly invariant across the years?"

As in, tracked development more holistically, not just checking off average milestones and accommodating an average difference between boys and girls?

Already in our usual system, high school is where the most gifted boys start pulling ahead of the girls in STEM. Mastering an intellectual challenge can channel and benefit from aggression, and between testosterone and girls' socialization to be less-aggressive people-pleasers "good enough at everything" (instead of focusing on what they're best at), girls will be at an unnecessary disadvantage if they haven't already banked talent development during their prepubertal years.

Schooling's job isn't just to educate the whole populace adequately, but to recognize special talent and prepare it. The trend to push calculus down to high school makes sense for that preparation. But it doesn't make sense for *everyone*, since that's not where everyone's talent and interest lies.

Schooling that really tracked children's individual development through high school would be far less homogenous, far more "tracked", and hopefully also more flexible in switching between tracks. Tracking would be skill-specific, not a blanket "is honors student or isn't". There would be more age-mixing, which requires its own caution. (One reason to educate youths by age rather than ability is to limit kids' aggression, whether physical, social, or sexual, to kids more their own size.)

Such a school sounds like heaven to me, with more room to develop both boys' and girls' talent. In particular, girls likely to go on to postgraduate education have more hope of successfully juggling that kind of career with less-delayed family formation. A guy who's done with postgraduate education at 30 is still reproductively "young". A gal is not, and this matters. A girl who wants to be a mathematician, who was capable of calculus at 12, and not taught it till her late teens, suffers more loss than guys who want to be mathematicians. Over a lifespan, guys' later development is balanced out (and then some, I think) by gals who need time for motherhood.

Is this ideal achievable on a mass scale? I'm pessimistic. But I can see little shoots of hope here and there, including in after-school services like Russian School of Mathematics and in how our very ordinary local public elementary has redesigned its accelerated classes.

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