Some women who are receiving single - sex education want to go to all girls' schools. This is a question I care about. You can imagine that there are no bad comments about boys, soccer games, and boys gossip at school. This does not seem interesting so much, does it? Your girl may think this and decide that all girls 'schools have no advantage, but in reality, there are many girls' schools. Believe it or not, the boys around you are not the most important elements in our education.
Pamela Haag 's literature review (Gender education by gender: What does research tell us?): Critical view of female gendered education, 1998). Generally, it seems that the results of the single sex class are mixed from the research studied by me. The remaining three, Durost, 3 Martin, 4, and Perry, 5 are descriptive, Martin Research is an ethnographic purpose to further explain the single sex classroom. Instead of evaluating the results, Düls reports that in seven years the difference in math scores in female girls class girls reduced the difference between boys and girls.
In 1998, the American College Women's Association (AAUW) announced "Sexuality by Sex: Critical Views on Girls Sexual Education". The report pointed out that education by gender is not necessarily better than co-education. The publication "challenged the general general view of K-12 single sex education for girls than school of coeducational cohabitation." In fact, recent research seems to indicate that gender disparities between men and women have shrunk. On November 17, 1999, Cornelius Riordan, a professor of sociology at Providence College, said in the "silent gender gap" of "Education Weekly" as follows. Efforts to improve the performance of women are effective. "
Education by gender is most commonly called primary, secondary, or higher education, and men or women go to school with their gender members. This report deals mainly with elementary and junior high school single sex education. Research in the United States is restricted as to whether public part - time education is beneficial for men, women, or for some groups (especially disadvantaged young people). However, due to the emergence of gender-specific schools in the public sector, a systematic review of gender-specific educational research is considered appropriate.