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In New York, boys are now lagging behind girls in math and a full grade level behind in English. Similar patterns can be seen across the nation. Boys graduate high school at about the same rate as poor students, while girls account for two out of three high schoolers in the top 10% ranked by GPA. One in four black boys repeat a grade, and 60% of students on college campuses are now women.
When almost one in four boys (23%) are categorized as having a “developmental disability,” it is fair to wonder if it is the boys — or the system — that is not functioning properly.
As many boys struggle through school, many men are also having a hard time in the labor market. The jobs men used to get without much formal education are disappearing: Fewer than one in ten jobs now require what the Bureau of Labor Statistics describes as “heavy work,” requiring “occasionally lifting or carrying 51-100 pounds or frequently lifting or carrying 26-50 pounds.”
Even before COVID cratered the economy in 2020, nine million men of prime working age were not employed. (Economists define the “prime” years as beginning at the age of 25 and ending, unnervingly, at 54.) Among men with just a high school education, one in three are not working. That’s 10 million men, a reserve army of labor five times the size of the People’s Liberation Army of China.
The workplace has shifted away from brawn jobs to brain jobs and caring jobs. Men have not been able to adjust quickly enough.
To reverse this trend, we need schools to be more male-friendly. Boys should be allowed and encouraged to start school a year later than girls, since male brains develop a little later than female ones on average, especially in adolescence. Right now, New York public schools actually prohibit a later start in school.
We also need a national recruitment drive for male teachers. Boys do better in schools with more men at the front of the classroom, especially in subjects like English. But men account for a shrinking share of the teaching profession: just 24%, down from 33% in the 1980s. In elementary schools, only 11% are men. And in the earliest years, men are virtually invisible. Just 3% of kindergarten teachers are men, which is about half the share of women flying military airplanes. Men, our schools need you.
In recent years, much attention has been focused on getting women into STEM careers (in science, technology, engineering and mathematics). It’s working, too: 27% of STEM workers are women, up from 17% in 1980. But STEM occupations are a small slice of the economy, accounting for only 7% of jobs. Meanwhile the health, education, administration and literacy sectors — what I call “HEAL” occupations — account for 26% of jobs. Between now and 2030, for every new STEM job created, there will be three new HEAL positions.
Women are getting into STEM, but men are not getting into HEAL. The share of men in these occupations is 26%, down from 35% in 1980. There has been a slight rise in the share of men in nursing, up to 12%, but a fall in almost every other occupation, including teaching, psychology, counseling and social work. Among psychologists under the age of 30, just 5% are men.
This is bad news for those professions, which urgently need more recruits. It’s bad news for boys and men using those services, many of whom would prefer a male provider but can’t find one. And it’s bad for working men who are missing out on opportunities in some of the fastest-growing areas of the economy.
As things stand, men account for just 16% of the college degrees awarded in health-care fields. But many HEAL jobs don’t even require a college degree. Career and technical paths also offer good routes in. Almost a million young people take vocational health-science qualifications, for example. But four out five of them are girls or women.
The story is similar for apprenticeships, where women dominate in training programs leading to jobs as a pharmacy technician (81%), nursing assistant (91%) or child care worker (97%). These are sometimes called “pink collar” occupations, because they are so female-dominated. But we need them to become purple-collar jobs, just as open to men as to women.
It’s hardly a secret that many boys and men are struggling. Now, it’s time to do something about it. And it needs to start with our schools.
When almost one in four boys (23%) are categorized as having a “developmental disability,” it is fair to wonder if it is the boys — or the system — that is not functioning properly.
As many boys struggle through school, many men are also having a hard time in the labor market. The jobs men used to get without much formal education are disappearing: Fewer than one in ten jobs now require what the Bureau of Labor Statistics describes as “heavy work,” requiring “occasionally lifting or carrying 51-100 pounds or frequently lifting or carrying 26-50 pounds.”
Even before COVID cratered the economy in 2020, nine million men of prime working age were not employed. (Economists define the “prime” years as beginning at the age of 25 and ending, unnervingly, at 54.) Among men with just a high school education, one in three are not working. That’s 10 million men, a reserve army of labor five times the size of the People’s Liberation Army of China.
The workplace has shifted away from brawn jobs to brain jobs and caring jobs. Men have not been able to adjust quickly enough.
To reverse this trend, we need schools to be more male-friendly. Boys should be allowed and encouraged to start school a year later than girls, since male brains develop a little later than female ones on average, especially in adolescence. Right now, New York public schools actually prohibit a later start in school.
We also need a national recruitment drive for male teachers. Boys do better in schools with more men at the front of the classroom, especially in subjects like English. But men account for a shrinking share of the teaching profession: just 24%, down from 33% in the 1980s. In elementary schools, only 11% are men. And in the earliest years, men are virtually invisible. Just 3% of kindergarten teachers are men, which is about half the share of women flying military airplanes. Men, our schools need you.
In recent years, much attention has been focused on getting women into STEM careers (in science, technology, engineering and mathematics). It’s working, too: 27% of STEM workers are women, up from 17% in 1980. But STEM occupations are a small slice of the economy, accounting for only 7% of jobs. Meanwhile the health, education, administration and literacy sectors — what I call “HEAL” occupations — account for 26% of jobs. Between now and 2030, for every new STEM job created, there will be three new HEAL positions.
Women are getting into STEM, but men are not getting into HEAL. The share of men in these occupations is 26%, down from 35% in 1980. There has been a slight rise in the share of men in nursing, up to 12%, but a fall in almost every other occupation, including teaching, psychology, counseling and social work. Among psychologists under the age of 30, just 5% are men.
This is bad news for those professions, which urgently need more recruits. It’s bad news for boys and men using those services, many of whom would prefer a male provider but can’t find one. And it’s bad for working men who are missing out on opportunities in some of the fastest-growing areas of the economy.
As things stand, men account for just 16% of the college degrees awarded in health-care fields. But many HEAL jobs don’t even require a college degree. Career and technical paths also offer good routes in. Almost a million young people take vocational health-science qualifications, for example. But four out five of them are girls or women.
The story is similar for apprenticeships, where women dominate in training programs leading to jobs as a pharmacy technician (81%), nursing assistant (91%) or child care worker (97%). These are sometimes called “pink collar” occupations, because they are so female-dominated. But we need them to become purple-collar jobs, just as open to men as to women.
It’s hardly a secret that many boys and men are struggling. Now, it’s time to do something about it. And it needs to start with our schools.
Why American boys are failing at school—and men are losing in life
When almost one in four boys (23%) are categorized as having a “developmental disability,” it is fair to wonder if it is the boys — or the system — that is not functioning properly.
nypost.com