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Troubled Boys Mean Girls

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Title: Troubled Boys Mean Girls


1
Troubled Boys- Mean Girls
  • Understanding
  • Intervention

South Central RPDC
2
Male/Female Brains

3
Cerebral Cortex
Parietal Lobe
Occipital Lobe
Touch
Motor Skills, Reasoning Personality
Vision
Hearing Language Speech
Frontal Lobe
Temporal Lobe
Brain Stem
4
There are at leastreported differences in
male andfemale brains.
100
Gurian, The Minds of Boys
5
Frontal lobes The main language centers Of the
brain.
Touch
Motor Skills, Reasoning Personality
Vision
Hearing Language Speech
Frontal Lobe
6
Corpus Callosum
Amygdala
Hippocampus
Cerebellum
7
Corpus Callosum
Amygdala
Hippocampus
Cerebellum
8
Interesting..
  • .. it seems to be that the natural template of
    the brain is female

9
Summarizing brain matters
  • Boys tend to be logical (as opposed to emotional)
    and more driven to solve problems.
  • Boys use less words when they talk.
  • The first segment of a boys brain to develop is
    the part that governs spatial abilities.
  • The last portion to develop is language.

10
History tells us
  • Biological changes in puberty began..
  • 1850 Today
  • 16 ?

12
No evidence of change in emotional maturity.
11
Boys/Girls
  • Boys are biologically, developmentally and
    psychologically different.

12
Boys and Girls learn DIFFERENTLY.
  • Girls and boys play differently.
  • They learn differently.
  • They fight differently.
  • They see the world differently.

  • Dr. Leonard Sax, M.D., Ph.D

13
From Day One..
  • Newborn boys and girls shows differences in
  • Hearing
  • Sight

14
P cells M cells
15
What happens when you give a child a piece of
paper and crayons?
16
Boys draw verbs, Girls draw nouns Art is for
girls.
  • Girls
  • people, pets, trees
  • arrange symmetrically, facing the viewer
  • average of 10 warm colors.
  • Leonard Sax. M.D., Ph.D.
  • Boys
  • action,
  • looking at action from a remote vantage point,
    a rocket hitting its target, a car about to hit
    another,
  • average of 6 cold colors.



17
What about giving directions?
  • Boys
  • Young men use the hippocampus.
  • Girls
  • Young girls use the cerebral cortex.

Dr. Leonard Sax, M.D., Ph.D.
18
How do I get to the Robinsons new house?
19
Navigation strategies use geometric cues and
recall of landmarks
  • Women
  • - seem to have an edge in factual recall
  • - rely landmarks.
  • Men
  • - seem to use conceptional recall
  • - depend on navigational cues

Robert Sylwester The Adolescent Brain Reaching
for Autonomy
20
Responses to Stress
  • The typical male stress response is a
  • fight-or-flight, assertive response.
  • The typical female response is often a
  • tend-or-befriend, nurturing response.

Robert Sylwester The Adolescent Brain Reaching
for Autonomy
21
Fight or Flight?
  • When most young girls face the same, they
    feel dizzy and yucky. They may have an
    unpleasant, nauseated feeling.
  • When most young boys are exposed to threat and
    confrontation, their senses sharpen and they feel
    an exciting tingle.
  • Bottom line
  • Many young boys get a thrill from violent or
  • quasi-violent confrontation. Most young girls
    dont.

  • Dr. Leonard Sax, M.D., Ph.D.

22
Risk-Taking
  • Girls may be willing to take risks, but they are
    less likely to seek out risky situations just for
    the sake of living dangerously.
  • Girls are likely to underestimate their ability
  • One reason many boys engage in physically
    dangerous activities may be that the danger
    itself gives the activity a pleasant tingle.
  • Boys systematically overestimate their own
    ability.

23
Risky Behavior
  • In experiment after experiment, researchers have
    discovered gender differences in childrens
    responses to risky situations
  • 1. boys are more likely to erroneously attribute
    their injuries to bad luck than to any lack of
    skill or foresight on their part
  • 2. were less likely to tell their parents about
    the injury
  • 3. were more likely to be around other boys at
    the time the injury occurred

24
Troubled Boys
  • Strategies to help them be successful

25
For every 100 girls
  • enrolled in gifted and talented programs, there
    are 94 boys.
  • who graduate from high school, 96 boys graduate.
  • suspended from public elementary and secondary
    schools, 250 boys are suspended.
  • expelled from public elementary and secondary
    schools, 335 boys are expelled.
  • Ralph Fletcher, Boy
    Writers

26
For every 100 girls
  • 217 boys are diagnosed with a special education
    disability.
  • 276 boys are diagnosed as learning disabled.
  • 324 boys are diagnosed with emotional
    disturbances.
  • 147 are diagnosed with speech impairments.
  • 108 boys are diagnosed as hearing impaired.
  • 189 boys have multiple disabilities.

27
Here is what we know
  • In the classroom
  • - Boys are territorial.
  • - The average boy is more active than
  • ¾ of the girls.
  • - They use less of their brain.
  • -Gurian, Mind of Boys

28
How do we help boys in our classrooms?
29
Address the kinesthetic
  • Over 50 of boys are kinesthetic learners.
  • After 30 minutes of sitting, blood pools in the
    legs and feet. Need to move at least 10 paces,
    or do toe lifts.
  • Consider Talk, Touch, Walk.
  • Dr. David Sousa

30
Here is what we know..
  • Thoughts on Teaching
  • - learn with less multitasking
  • - better when focusing for longer periods
  • on one task
  • - relate to diagrams better than information
  • dealing with words
  • - do less well when moving from task to task
  • quickly
  • Gurain,Mind of Boys

31
Boys are more likely to attach their learning to
physical movement.
  • Strategies
  • - Hands On
  • - Cooperative Learning
  • - Active Learning
  • - Concept mapping
  • - Frayer Model

32
Frayer Model
Definition
Characteristics
Non-linguistic Representation
Non-Examples
Examples
33
Active Learning
  • Look to professional resources
  • try some Tom Jackson activities

34
More Cooperative Structures
  • Gallery Tour
  • List, Group, Label
  • Centerpiece
  • Showdown
  • Think-Pad Brainstorming

35
a note about boys and group work.
  • When teachers put boys in small groups for a
    learning experience, boys will spend much of
    their time trying to determine who is going to be
    the leader.

  • Slocumb,
    Ed.D.

36
Hazard Precautions
  • 1. Remember the risky shift.
  • (boys in groups do stupid things)
  • Supervised is better than unsupervised.
  • (football vs. the streets)
  • Assert your authority.
  • (dont argue or negotiateno means no)

  • Dr. Leonard Sax,M.D.,Ph.D

37
The male brain needs to RECHARGE.
  • The male brain is set to renew, recharge, and
    reorient itself between tasks by moving to what
    neurologist Ruben Gur has called a rest state.
    The rest state, which MRIs have now discovered
    to be essential to male brain activity, can
    create big problems in the classroom.
    Gurian, The Minds of Boys

38
Recharging?
39
Look to the pros for help with reading and
writing
  • Michael Smith / Jeff Wilhelm
  • Ralph Fletcher
  • Janet Allen
  • Cris Tovani

40
The Boy Code
41
At the heart of the Boy Code
  • -The sturdy oak
  • -Give em hell
  • -No sissy stuff
  • -The big wheel

42
Toss in the impact of the ever-present Media
  • In action films, Gurian explains, images move
    faster than the brain can process. The brain
    becomes overly stimulated.
  • Drugs, sex, and even video games can cause brain
    cells to release excessive amounts of the
    neurotransmitter dopamine in the brain. Boys
    between the ages of 8 and 15 are the biggest
    consumers of video games. Slocumb

43
Finally, there is television
  • Children have learned adult behavior from
    television.
  • Television reveals adult secrets.
  • With no secrets, where does childhood go?
  • Television continues to loosen its rules.

44
20th Century Family
Nuclear Family Parents, brothers, sisters
Extended Family Grandparents, godparents,
neighbors, friends
Community Entities School, church, media
45
21st Century Family Single parents, stepparents,
same-gender parents, grandparents,
brothers, sisters, stepchildren, half-brothers
and sisters, and THE MEDIA Slocumb, Ed.D.
46
Differences in welfare, working-class, and
professional class preschoolers language
experience (Ruby Payne Ph.D.)
47
Mean girls
48
What, in your opinion, is a major problem with
girls today?
49
Other girls, They get in ourway because theyre
so mean.
Karres, Ed.D, Mean Chicks, Cliques And Dirty
Tricks
50
Hidden culture of aggression
  • A world where beneath a chorus of voices, one
    girl glares at another, then smiles silently at
    her friend. The next day a ringleader passes
    around a secret petition asking girls to outline
    the reasons they dislike the targeted girl. The
    day after that, the outsider sits silently next
    to the boys in class, head lowered, shoulders
    slumped forward.
  • The damage is neat and quiet, and the
    perpetrator and victim invisible.

51
Silence is woven into the fabricof the female
experience.
Simmons, Odd Girl Out
52
Aggression may be biological, but the face of
anger is learned.
Simmons, Odd Girl Out
53
The Perfect Girl
  • Sugar and Spice
  • Sweet and Caring
  • Precious and Tender
  • Have lots of friends
  • Never bossy, never mean
  • Always kind
  • Speaks quietly and calmly

54
Princess Syndrome
  • Every little girl wants to be a princess.
  • Every parents wants their daughter to be a
    princess.

and/or
55
a good girl
  • is nice before she is anything else- before
    she is vigorous, bright, even before she is
    honest.
  • Orenstein, Schoolgirls

56
Girl Aggression
  • Relational aggression
  • Indirect aggression
  • Social aggression

57
Relational Aggression
  • Harm others
  • Uses relationships as weapon

58
Indirect aggression
  • Covert behavior
  • Rumors

59
Social Aggression
  • Damage social status
  • Hidden from adults

60
Girl Codes
  • shes all that
  • flirt
  • Im so fat
  • copying

61
Mean Girl Acts
  • The Snob
  • The Gossip
  • The Teaser
  • The Bully
  • The Traitor

62
The Snob
  • But isnt the point of being popular to have
    friends? So why would you want to make enemies by
    acting like youre too good for other girls? Its
    senseless. Marie, 15
  • I always felt like I was not good enough for any
    of them. Thats the way other girls were treating
    me. Mandee, 15

63
The Gossip
  • There was this girl who would be so mean to me.
    Whenever she made a crude remark or gossips about
    me, one of my best friends who was in the class
    with me would just laugh like so loud, but it all
    went on behind my back. Later, I found out about
    it. This lowered my self-esteem so much. Im
    still having trouble. Carmen, 19

64
The Teaser
  • Being called a name and made fun of is the
    worst feeling in the world. It hurts! Carinn, 16

65
The Bully
  • There are so many girls who are the victims of
    bullying peers. It often happens after school,
    that they get scratched or pinched for no reason
    except just being there. Leila, 14

66
Girls who bully Boys who bullytypically. ty
pically.
  • Have any friends
  • Are socially skilled
  • Act in groups to isolate a single girl
  • Are doing well in school
  • Know the girls they are bullying
  • Have few friends
  • Are socially inept
  • Act alone
  • Are doing poorly in school
  • Dont know the boys (or girls) they bully

67
The Traitor
  • When your best friend turns on you and says
    mean things to you or about you- oh, the pain
    and agony! Phoebe, 15

68
Cliques
  • Who will survive?

69
Isolation.
  • Worthy of attention
  • Terrifying experience

70
Cyber-RA
  • sending or posting harmful or cruel text or
    images using the internet or phones.

71
Facts about Cyber Bullying
  • 99 of students have used the internet
  • 48 of students use the internet for at least one
    hour a day.
  • One in four youth, ages 11-19, has been
    threatened via their computers or cell phones.
  • One in five parents thought that cyber bullying
    was not very common or never happened.
  • About 37 of parents were not worried that their
    child could be bullied by someone using a mobile
    phone.

72
Ways Girls Cyber Bully
  • Sending messages via instant messenger or text
    message
  • Creating websites that ridicule others
  • Breaking into someones e-mail account and
    sending material to others

73
Signs that a child might be involved with Cyber-RA
  • Spending long hours on the computer
  • Closing down the screen when an adult enters the
    room
  • Being secretive about activities online
  • Change in behavior

74
Ten Tips for Girls to Stop Cyber-RA
  • Always tell someone you trust what is happening.
  • You may need to tell the local police.
  • Never reply to a bully or send a nasty message
    back.
  • Keep and save messages.
  • Take a break from your phone or computer.
  • Make sure only good friends and family are in
    your phone/e-mail address book.
  • Sign up for a chat room with a different chat ID.
  • Be careful who you give your cell number.
  • Your cell phone provider can change your number.
  • Keep telling yourself This is wrong, its
    not my fault, and Im not putting up with it.

75
Point to ponder
  • With troubled boys, the problem is biologically
    based and requires adapting skills.
  • With mean girls, the problem is behavioral and
    requires a social change.

76
The Power of One
  • Teach the difference between harmless teasing and
    hurting hateful words.
  • Educate yourself and others about bullying.
  • Suggest a Newcomers Club
  • Provide women leaders/role models to share the
    effects of mean girl acts.
  • Provide resources for girls.

77
What a good teacher does
  • 1. Tries to get to know me personally
  • 2. Cares about me as an individual
  • 3. Attends to my interests in some way
  • 4. Helps me learn and work to make sure I
    have learned
  • 5. Is passionate, committed, works hard, and
    knows his/her stuff
  • Smith, Wilhelm

78
Resources to Use
  • Why Gender Matters, Leonard Sax, M.D., Ph.D.
  • The Minds of Boys, Michael Gurian
  • Boys and Girls Learn Differently, Michael Guiran
  • Real Boys, William Pollack, Ph.D.
  • Hear Our Cry, Boys in Crisis, Paul D. Slocumb,
    Ed.D.
  • Odd Girl Out, Rachel Simmons
  • Mean Chicks, Cliques and Dirty Tricks, Erika V.
    Shearin Karres, Ed. D.
  • www.guyread.com
  • www.rockhall.com

79
rpdc.mst.edu
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