Investigation of the factors responsible for the superior performance of male students in standardised testing at one primary school
conference contribution
posted on 2005-01-01, 00:00authored byS Dinham, C Buckland, R Callingham, Heather Mays
The project set out to investigate one primary school where, for four years or more, boys have outperformed girls in standardized Year 3 and 5 Basic Skills Tests in literacy and numeracy, which contradicts general findings on male and female performance in standardized literacy and numeracy testing. The school placed a heavy emphasis on literacy programs, which appear to be making a difference to the boys. Over time, there has been a slight improvement in boys’ literacy performance but the greatest area of growth is generally boys’ numeracy, rather than boys’ literacy.<br><br>Further aims of the study were to isolate school-based factors, which are potentially responsible for this phenomenon, from community-based factors and to explore the possibility that, rather than boys being advantaged, girls were actually being disadvantaged by practices at the school. The approach adopted by the research team employed intensive case-study methods and ethnographic approaches, including interviews, document analysis, and structured and unstructured observation of a range of school activities.<br><br>This paper describes how the school has transformed itself, the effects that this has had upon the teaching and learning environment and the results that have been achieved in the key areas of numeracy and literacy.<br>
History
Location
Sydney, N.S.W.
Language
eng
Publication classification
E2 Full written paper - non-refereed / Abstract reviewed
Copyright notice
2005, AARE
Editor/Contributor(s)
P Jeffrey
Pagination
1 - 42
Start date
2005-11-27
End date
2005-12-01
ISSN
1324-9320
Title of proceedings
AARE 2005 : Creative dissent: constructive solutions: proceedings of the AARE 2005 international education research conference
Event
Australian Association for Research in Education. Conference (2005: Sydney, N.S.W.)