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Facts & Figures
• In 2000, 3.4% fewer Year 3 boys and 4.4% fewer Year 5 boys achieved
the national reading benchmarks than girls.
• 15.3% of Australian boys lack the literacy skills to benefit sufficiently
from their education opportunities, compared with just 8.7% of girls.
• 69% of 15-year-old girls scored at or above the OECD mean in reading
literacy tests, compared with 55.4% of males.
•
While girls’ performance in literacy results has remained relatively
stable over the past 25 years, overall, boys’ results have fallen
to a significant degree.
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Girls are achieving higher average marks in the majority of subjects
at Year 12, and the ‘gap’ between boys’ and girls’ total
marks has widened.
•
In NSW, the difference between boys’ and girls’ average Tertiary
Entrance Score rose from 0.6 marks in 1981 to 19.4 marks in 1996.
• In most states, boys and girls are fairly evenly represented among
the top one or two per cent of students in Year 12 overall results, but the
majority of mid-level to upper performers are girls, while boys dominate
the bottom performers.
• While male students are more likely to participate in extracurricular
sports activities, female students are likely to participate to a greater
extent in extracurricular activities than male students and in doing
so increase their level of attachment to the school.
•
Boys report less positive experiences of schooling than girls in terms
of ‘enjoyment of school, perceived curriculum usefulness and teacher
responsiveness’.
• Males made up just 43.1% of domestic higher education students in Australia
in 2002, compared with 45.9% in 1992.
• Males make up an overwhelming proportion of students experiencing disciplinary
problems and school exclusion.
• Teenage boys are more likely than teenage girls to be unemployed,
be involved in a car crash, have problems with the law, experience alcohol
and substance abuse or commit suicide.
• In some schools boys account for eight out of every ten suspensions
and exclusions.
•
Nationally, girls’ results in Year 3 and Year 5 Literacy Benchmark
tests are up to five percentage points higher than boys.
• The Year 12 retention rate for girls is between 11 and 12 percentage
points higher than it is for boys.
•
Girls’ average levels of achievement in a majority of subjects
assessed at senior secondary level are higher and the gap in the total
has been widening.
•
In the 20 years from 1975, the proportion of 14-year-old boys failing
to meet basic literacy benchmarks increased from 30 per cent to 35 per
cent. Boys’ literacy achievement in years 3 and 5 now lags behind
that of girls by 4.5 percentage points. Year 12 retention rates are 11
per cent higher for girls, driving a 6 per cent higher rate of university
entry. (p.4)
• Only 29 per cent of Australian males aged 25-34 have a tertiary education,
compared with 38 per cent of females.
•
In Year 12 girls outperform boys in all states and territories for which
information is available. The most extreme example is in NSW, where there
was not one Higher School Certificate subject in which the boys’ average
mark was higher than the girls’ in 2000.
•
In 2002, 70 per cent of boys and 80 per cent of girls stayed to Year
12. In 1977, the figures were much closer – 34 per cent and 37
per cent – so while both have increased, boys have not kept pace
with girls.
• Most recent estimates show that boys are arrested for criminal offences
at least five times more than girls.
• The rates of male juvenile property crime doubled from the 1970s to the
1990s, while violent juvenile crime rates increased five-fold.
• In 2002, the suicide rate per 100,000 population of 15-24 year
old males was 19, compared with 4.3 for 15-24-year-old females.
•Recent research with same-sex-attracted young people showed that: 81%
of young men and 53% of young women (69% overall) had been harassed and
abused at school, making school a more violent place for these students
than the streets; 59% were harassed by other students; young men were
more likely targets for verbal abuse (52%) than young women (39%) but
overall nearly half (46%) had been verbally abused.
• Young men aged 15-24 are twice as likely to die from motor vehicle accidents
as young women and four times more likely to die from suicide.
•
Men aged 25-64 years have a death rate nearly twice that of females.
They’re four times more likely to die from coronary artery disease
or suicide and twice as likely to die from cancer.
• Men are more likely to die or suffer permanent disabilities at work.
Men are less likely to admit to health problems and ignore warning signs
associated with ill health and men use health services far less than
women.
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