The Trend is Clear
Everybody wants to know
where all the men have gone. The Washington Post calls their
disappearance the "question that has grown too conspicuous to ignore,"
and USA Today notes "universities fret about how to attract
males as women increasingly dominate campuses."
Females now outnumber
males by a four to three ratio in American colleges, a difference of
almost two million students. Men earn only 43% of all college degrees.
Among blacks, two women earn bachelor’s degrees for every man. Among
Hispanics, only 40 percent of college graduates are male. Female high
school graduates are 16% more likely to go to college than their male
counterparts.
“This is new. We have
thrown the gender switch," says Christina Hoff Sommers, a resident
scholar at the American Enterprise Institute and author of The War
Against Boys: How Misguided Feminism is Harming Our Young Men.
"What does it mean in the long run that we have females who are
significantly more literate, significantly more educated than their
male counterparts? It is likely to create a lot of social problems.
This does not bode well for anyone."
"As a nation, we simply
can't afford to have half of our population not developing the skill
sets that we are going to need to go into the future," says Susan L.
Traiman, director of the Business Roundtable's education initiative.
Researchers from Harvard
University, the University of Michigan and the United Negro College
Fund have now agreed to study the issue.
"This is a powerful issue
we need to stop talking about in generalities and really dig into,"
says Michael L. Lomax, president of Dillard University in New Orleans.
"We just can't figure out how to get more male applicants, and we're
not going to turn students down on the basis on gender," Lomax says.
"I don't understand what is happening in the male community that is
making education seem less attractive and less compelling."
The trend is unmistakable
and some fear it is irreversible. Men made up the majority of college
graduates when the first national survey was conducted in 1870. Except
during World War II, when slightly more females enrolled than men,
males were in the majority until men’s graduation rate began to
decline in the late 1970s. By the early 1980s women began to represent
the majority of graduates.
In total, the U.S.
Department of Education estimates that 698,000 women received
bachelor’s degrees in 2002, compared to 529,000 men.
Yet the loss in national
productivity that this trend portends is not a concern to some.
Jacqueline Woods, executive director of the American Association of
University Women, denies that men's declining enrollments is a crisis
or even a gender issue. She notes that those concerned about boys'
sagging educational performance are "playing a zero-sum game" and says
"I refuse to play." Columnist Ellen Goodman dismisses boy-friendly
educational reformers as being motivated by the fact that "educated
women have always made some people nervous." She, Woods and writer
Barbara Ehrenreich argue that the college gender gap is another
example of the disadvantages faced by women! According to
Ehrenreich, “men…suspect they can make a living just as well without a
college education, since they still have such an advantage over women
in the non-professional workforce.”
Not only are the problems
of college males being minimized in some quarters, but also much of
the discussion of the lack of males in college surrounds the
destructive impact it may have upon females. For example, an ABC.com
report on the subject gloats "No More Big Man on Campus?” while
declaring that the "College Gender Gap Could Mean Women Lose Mating
Game" and asking "Must Women Go Slummin'?" Canadian journalist Lysiane
Gagnon laments in the Globe and Mail that "the next generation of
Quebec women might face a difficult love life...in a few years the
province will be filled with high-paid, ambitious, professional women.
Across the dance floor will be a large group of losers -- uneducated
men stuck in small, low-paying jobs."
A Hidden Issue
Sophomore Adam Petkun and
Senior Jesse Harding at the University of Oregon, who work at the
Associated Students office, are typical of many male students on
campuses across the country. They didn’t know that women outnumber men
on their campus. They were both surprised, but not shocked by the
information. Neither had any thoughts on why it was occurring or
seemed concerned about the trend. Martin S. a junior at Portland State
University after giving it some thought didn’t think the trend is
ultimately a good thing. “I don’t know why this is going on. It seems
like blue collar physical jobs that usually go to men are on the
decline, so you’d think there would be more men attending college not
less. I know some guys who have taken to going into high-tech and feel
they don’t need a degree, but even in quite a few of those jobs a
degree is obviously a help. It’s a mystery to me.“
It is also apparently a
surprise and a mystery to most high school counselors.
“The few counselors I have
talked with seem surprised by the trend,” said Richard Wong, executive
director of the American School Counselor Association, the nation’s
largest school counseling group. “I don’t think there has been a
conscious effort to exclude white males, because historically they
have been able to take care of themselves. A lot more attention has
been paid to other groups, minorities and women, but perhaps the
pendulum has swung too far.” Although the ASCA has conducted
initiative programs for women and minorities, it does not plan any
affirmative campaign to address the decline in male college
attendance. “If it becomes a major issue the board will likely
consider a response,” said Wong.
According to Mark Kuranz,
a former president of the ASCA and currently a high-school counselor
in Racine, Wisconsin, “Certainly college is very accessible for girls,
and there is more competition with boys for the available spots. You
would think however, there would a leveling off or the attendance and
the graduation rate would be pretty level. Perhaps we have begun to
expect less from boys.”
An Early Start to
Giving Up on College?
Boys have fallen seriously
behind girls at all K-12 levels. By high school the typical boy is a
year and a half behind the typical girl in reading and writing. Girls
get better grades than boys and boys are far more likely than girls to
drop out of school or to be disciplined, suspended, held back, or
expelled. Boys are four times as likely to receive a diagnosis of
attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder as girls, and the vast
majority of learning-disabled students are boys.
The problem is a complex
one, but a fundamental reason behind the phenomena is that modern K-12
education is not suited to boys' needs and learning styles. Success in
school is tightly correlated with the ability to sit still, be quiet,
and complete work that is presented in a dull, assembly line fashion.
There is little outlet for natural boyish energy and exuberance in
schools, and as a result many boys-even those as young as five or
six-- end up being given Ritalin or other drugs so they can sit still.
At every step of the way those whose natures are least accommodating
to this type of education--boys--fall by the wayside.
Boys’ educational problems
often begin as soon as they go to kindergarten. Michelle Ventimiglia,
director of a Los Angeles pre-school, says:
"Our schools simply aren't
made for boys. I see this every September when my students go into
elementary school. My boys do great here, but when they go on to
elementary school all of a sudden some of them become ‘behavior
problems’ or ‘bad kids.’ How can a six year-old be ‘bad?’
"Children need physically
connected activities, particularly boys. They learn best by doing. Too
often teachers find it easier to simply give them worksheets instead.
And now, with so much time being devoted to testing and preparing for
testing, teachers' repertoires are even more limited, which is bad for
children, particularly boys."
When boys are unable to
fit into a school environment that clearly is not suited to them, they
are often diagnosed with Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder and
given Ritalin or other drugs. Nearly nine million prescriptions of
Ritalin are written for American children each year, most of them for
boys between the ages of six and 12. According to Stanford
University's Thomas Sowell, author of Inside American Education:
The Decline, the Deception, the Dogmas, the drugging of boys is
“part of a growing tendency to treat boyhood as a pathological
condition that requires a new three R's repression, re education and
Ritalin.” He notes: “The motto used to be: ‘Boys will be boys.’ Today,
the motto seems to be: ‘Boys will be medicated.’"
Kuranz says these issues
are beginning to be addressed in schools. “The conversation is
beginning to be heard” regarding more active learning methods and the
over-use of Ritalin.
Less For Men’s Sports
The decline of men’s
college sports has also contributed to the disappearance of men on
college campuses. Title IX of the Education Amendments Act of 1972
bars sex discrimination in any educational program or activity that
receives federal funding. In the decades since, women's athletics have
burgeoned in high schools and colleges. Title IX was and remains an
important and laudable victory for the women's movement.
Some feminist groups,
however, lobbied successfully to use an obscure bureaucratic action
known as the 1979 Policy Interpretation to mandate that the number of
athletes in college athletic programs reflect within a few percentage
points the proportion of male and female students on campus. The
problem is, as studies have shown, fewer women than men are interested
in playing organized sports, even though the opportunity is available.
Even in all-female colleges the number of women athletes fall
considerably below that needed to satisfy Title IX requirements in
coed colleges.
In addition, the current
Title IX equity calculations are misleading because they count college
football's athletes and dollars without considering football's
moneymaking ability. In fact, over 70% of Division I-A football
programs turn a profit.
Thus schools are caught in
a vise. Because schools need football's revenue yet must also equalize
gender numbers, they are forced to cut men's non-revenue sports.
Todd R. Dickey, University
of Southern California’s general counsel, and many others argue that
football should simply be taken out of the gender equity equation
because no other sport earns as much revenue, has such a large number
of athletes or staff, and needs as much equipment. "You can't spend as
much on women's sports as you can on men's, because there is no
women's equivalent for football," Dickey says.
Thus women have gained a
little but men have lost a lot. According to the National Collegiate
Athletic Association (NCAA), for every new women’s athletics slot
created between 1992 and 1997, 3.6 male athletes were dropped. During
the same period, colleges added 5,800 female athletes--and cut 20,000
male athletes. More than 400 men's collegiate athletic teams have been
eliminated nationwide since the advent of Title IX. Kimberly Schuld,
director of the Independent Women's Forum's Title IX Play Fair!
Project, calls this "clear, government-sanctioned sex discrimination."
The current situation in
men’s sports in college has prompted some recent reconsideration, but
no clear direction. The Commission on Opportunity in Athletics’ is
looking at recommendations to Secretary of Education Rod Paige. In
testimony before the commission, Deborah Zelechowski, a senior vice
president at Robert Morris College in Chicago, said that she has a
male student population of just 36%. ''We need more males,'' she said,
''yet we cannot offer more male athletic teams…the letter of the law
of Title IX is interfering with the spirit of the law.''
An anti-male campus?
Nearly every large college
campus and many smaller ones have a Women’s Studies department. There
are over five hundred women’s studies departments and over one hundred
colleges that offer a degree program in women’s studies. There is not
a single degree program or department in men’s studies in the U.S. It
is difficult to get exact numbers, but it appears that there are fewer
than a dozen classes labeled men’s studies being offered in colleges
anywhere. Some that are labeled men’s studies are in fact anti-male.
Kenyon College, for example, has a Men’s Studies program that in the
words of one professor is in opposition to, “The white, male,
heterosexual, able-bodied, Christian, middle-class norm.”
Some academicians contend
that the ascendancy of women’s studies on campus was a mistake. They
argue that such issues do not properly belong in a narrowly defined
‘feminist’ approach to learning, but in already established fields of
study such as sociology and history. In any case, there certainly has
been little demonstrated movement among college administrators to
offer men’s studies departments or courses, and men’s resource
centers. Bret Burkholder a professor at Pierce Community College in
Puyallup, Washington has set up a resource center on his campus. He
says such efforts can help, “We must learn and establish alternative
ways of instruction and student services support that are more in step
with the predominate ways that men learn and communicate. We have to
respect men, their ways of learning and expression if we are to earn
their respect and trust. No one stays where they aren't wanted or
valued.”
The claim that an
anti-male agenda exists in our universities is difficult to understand
unless one is immersed in today’s college culture.
Denesh D’Souza in his
book, Illiberal Education, the Politics of Race and Sex on Campus
argues that a system has emerged which has encouraged separatism: “By
the time these students graduate, very few colleges have met their
need for all-round development. Instead, by precept and example, the
ideal of an educated person is largely a figment of bourgeois white
male ideology, which should be cast aside.” He charges that the
American students are getting is not a liberal education but, “its
diametrical opposite, an education in closed-mindedness and
intolerance.”
D’Souza and others point
to Women’s Studies departments as a prime mover in this change. Thomas
Sort, a professor of philosophy at Kenyon College, says, “Ideological
dogmatism is the norm not the exception in Women’s Studies. They
practice the very exclusion that they claim to have suffered in the
past.” It is not that men are not welcome just in Women’s Studies
programs. The programs may have fostered an environment in which the
very presence of males on campus is a threat to a worldview that sees
things only in terms of oppressors and the oppressed.
Deliberate misinformation
about men and gender issues are an integral part of modern campus
culture. Women's centers and women's studies departments publicize and
promote discredited academic frauds like "one in four college women
has been the victim of rape or attempted rape" and "domestic violence
is the leading cause of injury to women aged 15 to 44." Sommers, who
debunked many academic feminist claims in Who Stole Feminism?,
calls these "Hate Statistics." The statistics help to set up a campus
mindset where it makes sense to be anti-male. If, for example, one
believes the oft-stated feminist claim that on an average campus a
woman is raped every 21 hours, who wouldn't be? (In reality, there is
an average of less than one reported rape per three American college
campuses per year).
Women's studies textbooks
provide a view of the hostility towards men in our universities.
According to an extensive study of women's studies textbooks released
in 2002 by the IWF, a dissident women’s group, the textbooks "ignore
facts in favor of myths," "mistake ideology for scholarship," and
encourage students to "embrace aggrievement, not knowledge." The
study, “Lying in a Room of One's Own: How Women's Studies Textbooks
Miseducate Students,” examined the five most popular Women Studies'
textbooks in the United States and found relentless
woman-as-victim/man-as-victimizer bias and hostility. According to the
author, Christine Stolba, the textbooks construe or distort studies
and statistics to infer that women are miserable and oppressed, and
that men are privileged oppressors.
Among the "truths" the
textbooks tell students are: Women are under siege from virtually all
sectors of society; little has changed for women in the past three
decades; believing that women have achieved equality is "modern
sexism"; and most women are not naturally sexually attracted to men
but are the victims of "compulsory heterosexuality" maintained through
male "social control." Bad fathers are described as the rule rather
than the exception, the prevalence of sexual abuse and molestation is
wildly exaggerated, and students are told that in families fathers
often represent a "foreign male element" that mothers and daughters
must unite against.
UCLA is one of the few
universities in which a debate on the anti-male bias on campus has
actually been allowed to take place, and this was only because of a
full-page ad in the campus newspaper. The IWF ran a full-page
advertisement in UCLA's student newspaper, the Daily Bruin,
which asked "Are you tired of male-bashing and victimology?" The ad
debunked what it called the "Ten Most Common Feminist Myths,"
including "30 percent of emergency room visits by women each year are
the result of injuries from domestic violence," "women have been
shortchanged in medical research," "one in four women in college has
been the victim of rape or attempted rape," and others. Feminists, led
by Tina Oakland, director of the UCLA Center for Women and Men, and
Christie Scott, executive co-chair of the UCLA Clothesline Project,
launched campus demonstrations against what Scott called "a violent
ad, a very hostile ad" which "breeds a very bad attitude toward campus
women." Oakland said that challenging one in four is like denying the
Holocaust. A feminist professor wrote to the Daily Bruin
claiming that the IWF ad served to "ferment intolerant,
anti-woman...sentiment and action on campus" and "incite hate." While
the Daily Bruin refused to apologize for the ad, its viewpoint
editor was cowed, and expressed regret that the paper had "let
something so anti-woman through." Oakland, after being castigated by
some in conservative magazines, backed off of her defense of the "1 in
4" figure rape figure, explaining that "the statistics don't really
matter that much in the big picture."
Can Balance be
Achieved?
A serious national effort
is needed to redress the gender imbalance in our universities and the
biggest solution to the absence of boys from our college campuses will
be boy-friendly reforms at the K-12 level. Sommers notes that one of
the greatest challenges reformers face is the fact that our society is
largely unaware of or refuses to recognize the boy crisis in our
schools. She contrasts this with England, which embarked upon
boy-friendly educational reforms in the early 90s and has met with
some success.
Part of this national
effort will be a retooling of our schools to create boy-friendly
classrooms and teaching strategies. Boys in particular need strong,
charismatic teachers who mix firm discipline with a good-natured
acceptance of boyish energy. Concomitantly, a sharp increase in the
number of male teachers is also needed, particularly at the elementary
level, where female teachers outnumber male teachers six to one.
Same-sex classes can also be helpful, and schools should have the
power to employ them when appropriate.
Beyond reforms at the K-12
level, it is apparent that college campuses need to be places where
males feel as welcome as females. Women's Studies needs to be either
abolished, converted to Gender Studies and its texts and studies put
under strict peer review, or departments of equal stature and funding
need to be created that are devoted to Men’s Studies. It only seems
fair and balanced. At the very least, many Women's Studies textbooks
need to be replaced by texts which consider both male and female
points of view on gender issues and which cite only academically
credible research. Title IX needs to be brought back to its original
intent, and viable men's athletic programs need to be restored.
The decline in male
attendance and college achievement does not appear to be a statistical
aberration, or one that will correct itself without attention being
paid to the issue. Certainly society is not better off if a
significant number of our best and brightest young men fail to seek or
earn a college education. We need to take the first step by
acknowledging that the decline of males on campus is a significant
social and economic problem. This realization need not detract from
the mission to provide equal educational opportunities for women. It
may lead to recognizing that at least some real discriminatory lack of
accommodation for males in education campus exists, and that reforms
and different approaches are needed. If these steps are not taken, it
seems clear that the decline of males on campus will continue at its
present rapid rate.
This article originally
appeared on the Glenn J. Sacks
Website and appears here with the permission of the author.