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Do boys need more male teachers?

Female educators set to make up 90 per cent of teaching staff in B.C. over next few years
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The gender teaching gap in B.C. is estimated to hit a 9:1 ratio soon. (Pixabay photo)

Children may have a hard time finding a male role model to look up to in the classroom.

Statistics show women greatly outnumber men as educators, a trend that is seen in classrooms across Greater Victoria.

Dave Eberwein, superintendent of the Saanich School District, recognises that students need to be able to relate to their teachers but does not think biological sex is much of a factor. B次元官网网址淭he most important thing is having at least one adult a child can relate to, that they trust and that believes in them.B次元官网网址

Regarding gender, he says, B次元官网网址渙ur goal is to hire the best, male or female, we are moving away from binary identity.B次元官网网址

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In 2011, Statistics Canada published some surprising numbers regarding male and female teachers. Only 41 per cent of high school teachers, 16 per cent of all elementary teachers and three per cent of early childhood educators were men. ThatB次元官网网址檚 a 20 per cent average and the gap appears to be growing.

A 2016 marking analysis found there was a marking bias against boys and research in the UK has found that young men without male role models are more likely to suffer from depression and leave school without qualifications.

Thomas Dee, from Stanford University, also published a study suggesting that boys do better in classes taught by men.

The number of male teachers is low in Canadian schools, but especially so in B.C.

One Greater Victoria schoolB次元官网网址檚 staff list registers only one male teacher out of 22.

The British Columbia Teachers Federation says the only reliable figures available are from the Teachers Pension Plan, which states that almost 80 per cent of teachers in B.C. are women. Presently, the Pension Plan is the only way to assess this data, as figures are not collated by policymakers or school districts.

Experts believe the picture is similar across Canada.

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Glen Hansman, president of the British Columbia Teachers Federation (BCTF) says that it is B次元官网网址渋mportant all students have a diversity of teachers.B次元官网网址 He states that the BCTFB次元官网网址檚 highest priority has been to increase the number of Aboriginal teachers in school, and acknowledges, B次元官网网址渢here has been less of a conversation about gender bias in schools.B次元官网网址

According to Hansman, fewer men are joining the profession, and he predicts that 90 per cent of all teachers will be women in the next few years. The latest statistics regarding teaching graduates in B.C. supports his view, as 90 per cent of new teaching graduates are women.

While some educational experts have concerns, Hansman thinks it is important to recognise that the school system is full of talented female teachers and he does not believe that boys are necessarily being B次元官网网址渟hort-changed.B次元官网网址

There are many factors why men are put off becoming teachers. The perceived low status of the job, low pay and some residual prejudice against men being around children are cited as central reasons.

Hansman also believes that successive governments have shown a hostile attitude towards public servants in general, and teachers in particular, including past decisions that have been ruled as unconstitutional.

B次元官网网址淕overnments often take advantage of teachers and those in the B次元官网网址榗aring professionsB次元官网网址 and B.C. education is chronically under-funded,B次元官网网址 he says, adding male high-school students faced with this climate ask themselves, B次元官网网址淲hy do it?B次元官网网址


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