378 results on '"COEDUCATIONAL SCHOOLS"'
Search Results
2. PRINCIPALLY SPEAKING... The principal as a role model.
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SCHOOL principals ,COEDUCATIONAL schools ,SPORTS ,LEADERSHIP ,TEACHERS - Abstract
The article discusses the role of the principal as a role model and the importance of positive relationships within a school community. It provides an overview of Yarra Valley Grammar School, emphasizing its co-educational nature, campus life, and diverse programs. The article also highlights the priorities for the school, leadership strategies, and the significance of schools to their communities.
- Published
- 2023
3. Brisbane city and eastern suburbs.
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COEDUCATIONAL schools ,DAY schools ,EDUCATION methodology ,CURRICULUM ,CATHOLIC school teaching - Abstract
The article offers information on some of the schools located in Brisbane city and eastern suburbs including Anglican Church Grammar School, Brisbane Girls Grammar School (see inset map), and Moreton Bay Boys' College . It discusses that Moreton Bay Boys' College is an independent Early Years to Year 12 Uniting Church School for boys; Anglican Church Grammar School, has as its central mission the development of young men of good character, strong intellect and generous spirit.
- Published
- 2022
4. Directory Listing.
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CATHOLIC universities & colleges ,COEDUCATIONAL schools - Published
- 2022
5. Anglican Schools.
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COEDUCATION ,COEDUCATIONAL schools - Abstract
The article discusses Arden Anglican School is a vibrant, Christian school providing a positive learning and caring environment that inspires girls and boys to thrive.
- Published
- 2022
6. VCE STEM subject enrolments in co-educational and single-sex schools.
- Author
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Forgasz, Helen and Leder, Gilah
- Subjects
STEM education ,COEDUCATIONAL schools ,MATHEMATICS education ,GENDER - Abstract
The debate on the relative merits of single-sex and co-educational schooling for girls and boys persists. There are also on-going concerns in Australia about declining enrolments in the STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics) disciplines at both the tertiary and school levels. In this article, we summarise some core findings from the scholarly literature on single-sex and co-educational learning settings and then present official enrolment data from the Victorian Certificate of Education (VCE) for the period 2001–2017 on mathematics and other STEM subjects to determine whether or not attendance at a single-sex school appears to affect participation in these subjects. No consistent pattern was found for boys' and girls' enrolments across VCE STEM subjects by school type (single-sex or co-educational). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Northern suburbs and Sunshine Coast.
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COEDUCATIONAL schools ,DAY schools ,EDUCATION methodology ,CURRICULUM ,CATHOLIC school teaching - Abstract
The article offers information on the some of the schools in Northern suburbs and Sunshine Coast of Australia such as Clayfield College, Genesis Christian College, and Grace Lutheran College. It discusses Grace Lutheran College, a community-based, co-educational private high school based on Brisbane northside; Southern Cross Catholic College, a school from Prep through to Year 12, transformations occur which embrace the academic, sporting, spiritual, social and emotional growth of all students.
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- 2022
8. Co-educational Schools.
- Subjects
COEDUCATIONAL schools ,COEDUCATION ,SINGLE sex schools ,EDUCATION ,SELF-esteem - Abstract
The article discusses William Clarke College is a highly respected Preparatory to Year 12, independent, co-educational, Anglican College located in Kellyville, in Sydney's Hills District. The College is known for delivering quality education within a Christ-centered community, focusing on developing extraordinary learners with a passion to serve.
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- 2022
9. Girls' Schools.
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COEDUCATION ,COEDUCATIONAL schools - Abstract
The article discusses Meriden has been providing girls an enriching learning environment that empowers them to achieve their potential. Educating students from Pre- Kindergarten to Year 12, Meriden is one of Sydney's top-performing independent girls' schools.
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- 2022
10. Gender Dynamics in Schooling: A Comparative Study of Co-educational Practices in Two Socio-cultural Milieux.
- Author
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Narwana, Kamlesh and Rathee, Sharmila
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EDUCATION ,COEDUCATIONAL schools ,EDUCATION policy - Abstract
Different forms of schooling, single sex or co-educational, have been discussed in educational academia from the perspective of their impact on gender equality. The debate revolves around the question: which form of schooling (single or co-educational) will be effective in combating prevalent gender stereotypes? With the contradictory evidence, this discussion remains inconclusive. With the help of inferences from evidence both factual and anecdotal, the paper attempts to delineate the need to consider socio-cultural dimensions for developing a deeper understanding of gender dynamics in schools. Understanding the role of the social context called for a comparative analysis of two co-educational schools from different socio-cultural contexts: a rural government school in a state characterised by traditional gender norms and an elite private school in a metropolitan city. By drawing linkages between socio-cultural aspects and schooling practices, it endeavours to analyse parental concerns, the role of the school as an agency, the interface of caste, culture and tradition and their impact on peer behaviour in both the schools. The study has led to the conclusion that a combination of factors retards or promotes the accomplishment of education policies in individual schools. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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11. WILL GIRLS BE GIRLS? RISK TAKING AND COMPETITION IN AN ALL‐GIRLS' SCHOOL.
- Author
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Laury, Susan K., Lee, Daniel J., and Schnier, Kurt E.
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SCHOOLGIRLS , *RISK-taking behavior , *EDUCATION of girls , *COEDUCATIONAL schools , *SINGLE sex schools - Abstract
We conduct an experiment that examines the relationship between girls only schooling and risk taking and competitive behavior. In it, we compare decisions made by students in an all‐girls' school to those made by students in a closely matched coeducational school. We further investigate the developmental nature of this behavior by comparing choices made by younger students (Grades 7 and 8) with those of older students (Grades 11 and 12). We focus on the differences between those who select into the all‐girls' school, and find that although girls educated in a single sex environment are the most risk averse, they are also among the most competitive. These results lend texture to the hypothesis that "nurture matters" in the gender differences debate. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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- View/download PDF
12. Fifth-graders' social interactions in a student-designed games unit.
- Author
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Vidoni, Carla and André, Mauro
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SOCIAL interaction , *PHYSICAL education , *PHYSICAL education students (Education students) , *STUDENT participation , *COEDUCATIONAL schools - Abstract
Student-designed games (SDG) are a student-centred approach that motivates students to work together while designing and playing their own games based on their ability level. The purpose of this study was to investigate students' social interactions during 11 lessons of SDG focused on target games. Participants were 27 fifth-graders. Lessons were based on Hastie (2010) [Student-designed games. Champaign, IL: Human Kinetics]. Five-Step SDG implementation process. Field notes and post-intervention interviews transcriptions were analysed through a systematic process of inductive analysis. Two themes were generated based on field note observations and students' focus interviews: (a) who is the leader and (b) leadership dispute. The results showed that within coeducational groups, girls took the leadership roles. It was found that during intra-group interactions, leaders who took a more democratic approach motivated students engagement, and promoted opportunities for compromising during decision-making process. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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13. 'Due to all this fear, we're getting less freedom': young people's understandings of gender and sexual violence in New Delhi, India.
- Author
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Iyer, Padmini
- Subjects
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SEXUAL assault , *GENDER inequality , *FEAR , *SECONDARY schools , *COEDUCATIONAL schools , *GANG rape , *HUMAN sexuality - Abstract
This paper explores young people's understandings of gender and sexual violence in New Delhi, India, based on multi-method research conducted with young people (aged 15-17) in three co-educational secondary schools. Fieldwork took place shortly after the 2012 Delhi gang rape that sparked widespread debates about violence against women in India, and so sexual violence became an important frame for students' discussions around gender and sexuality. Young people's understandings are considered within gender narratives - of 'can-do' and 'vulnerable' girlhood, and of 'hero' and 'good boy' masculinities - which already shaped their day-to-day experiences of schooling. Findings suggest that tensions arising from these often contradictory narratives led to frustrations among girls, while the dominance of conversations about sexual violence led to confusions in both girls' and boys' understandings of sexuality. Reflections are offered on ways schools can better support young people as they learn about gender and sexuality from diverse and contradictory sources. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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14. One Small Step For Personkind: Observations And Suggestions For Sex Equity In Coeducational Physical Education Classes.
- Author
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Griffin, Patricia Scott
- Subjects
EDUCATION ,TEACHERS ,HUMAN sexuality ,EDUCATIONAL equalization ,COEDUCATION ,UNIVERSITIES & colleges ,COEDUCATIONAL schools ,STUDENTS ,TEACHER-student communication - Abstract
The article reports on observations and suggestions for sex equity in coeducational physical education classes. It describes the four categories of teacher behavior related to sex equity which include class organization strategies, teacher-student interaction, teacher language, and teacher role modeling. It presents suggestions for sex equitable class organization, suggestions for sex equitable teacher-student interactions, suggestions for sex equitable teacher language, and suggestions for sex equitable role modeling.
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- 1981
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15. CHANGES IN WOMEN'S MAJORS FROM ENTRANCE TO GRADUATION AT WOMEN'S AND COEDUCATIONAL COLLEGES.
- Author
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Solnick, Sara J.
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WOMEN'S colleges ,COEDUCATIONAL schools ,HIGHER education ,SINGLE sex colleges ,WOMEN'S education - Abstract
Using data on the anticipated and final majors of 1700 students at eight women's colleges and 818 female students at seven coed colleges, the author tests whether women at single-sex institutions were more likely than their counterparts at coed schools to remain in traditionally male-dominated subjects and whether they were more likely to shift from traditionally female-dominated subjects. Depending on how broadly "female-dominated majors" is defined, 40% to 75% of women at women's colleges who began in such majors shifted to neutral or male-dominated fields during their college careers, compared to only about 25% of women at coed schools. Approximately 22% of women at both types of school left male-dominated majors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1995
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16. Improvement in game performance and adherence after an aligned TGfU floorball unit in physical education.
- Author
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Morales-Belando, María T., Calderón, Antonio, and Arias-Estero, José L.
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PHYSICAL education , *TEACHING games for understanding , *DECISION making , *PHYSICAL education teacher education , *COEDUCATIONAL schools , *SPORTS instruction , *TEACHING methods , *PERFORMANCE evaluation - Abstract
Background: Although a great deal of research has been undertaken from 1982 on TGfU, teachers consider its implementation to be complex and are reluctant to integrate it into their teaching practice. Furthermore, some TGfU literature does not suggest how it might be implemented and how problems might be overcome. On the other hand, a review of TGfU studies showed three shortcomings. First, most of them only compared TGfU with a technique-based approach in the school setting. Second, the studies did not follow the fidelity guidelines for models-based practice research and it is therefore difficult to contrast their results. Third, lesson design was not aligned on the principles of play. Thus, this study provide additional support for going forward from comparative studies in educational settings, and enacting an aligned TGfU unit of floorball contextualized in the principles of play. Purpose: To verify whether pupils improved in variables related to performance and adherence after the enactment of an aligned TGfU unit. Method: An eight lessons unit was designed, validated, and enacted using a mixed-methods quasi-experimental pre-test and post-test design. Participants were 41 pupils (23 boys and 18 girls; M = 11.73, SD = .66 years old) from two regular physical education classes with the same teacher. The teacher was trained in the TGfU approach. In pre-test and post-test assessments, data from decision-making, technical execution, cover, support, game performance, game involvement, enjoyment, perceived competence, and intention to be physically active were collected, using the Game Performance Assessment Instrument, two psychological scales, and two focus groups interviews with the pupils and the teacher. We analysed quantitative data using t-tests and qualitative data following an open and axial coding based on the preexisting categories. Results: Pupils improved in decision-making, technical execution, cover, support, game performance, game involvement, enjoyment, perceived competence, and intention to be physically active after implementation of the TGfU unit. The pupils and the teacher perceived improvement in all the variables analysed as a consequence of the intervention. Conclusion: After the implementation of the aligned TGfU floorball unit, pupils improved in the variables related to performance and adherence. Based on participants'key comments, four aspects appeared to be essential for the success of the unit: (a) the lesson design; (b) collaboration from planning to teaching the unit between the researcher and the teacher; (c) the inclusion of learning tasks linked with cover and support; and (d) the use of two reflective periods that helped pupils to understand and apply new knowledge. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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17. The Education of Women in 19th-century Serbia.
- Author
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Popovitch, Ružica
- Subjects
WOMEN'S education ,COEDUCATIONAL schools ,COEDUCATION - Abstract
The article focuses on the history of women's education in 19th-century Serbia, detailing the slow progress and societal resistance to educating girls, with some early efforts from prominent figures and the eventual inclusion of girls in coeducational schools from the 1830s onward.
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- 2018
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18. Affective Domain Progression in Single-Sex and Coeducational Schools.
- Author
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Dhindsa, Harkirat S. and Salleh, Siti-Zahrani Binti Haji Md
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COEDUCATIONAL schools ,SECONDARY education ,CURRICULUM ,TEACHER-student relationships ,ACADEMIC achievement - Abstract
Students who study science in single-sex and coeducational schools have attracted lots of attention from the education community. However, changes to students’ attitudes toward science as they progress to higher grades in these schools are not clearly understood. The aim of this study was to compare the changes in attitudes toward science among lower secondary students (Grade 7 to Grade 9) in single-sex and coeducational schools in Brunei. A cross-sectional survey design was used to collect data from 1,034 students. Despite a significant nonlinear decline in attitudes toward science from Grade 7 to Grade 9, the attitudes remained positive. This decline in attitudes toward science was at a minimum for students in the coeducational school, and it followed the following order: single-sex boys > single-sex girls > coeducational students. The decline was independent of the initial perceived values of the students’ attitudes, and it followed different trends when the data of the same-sex students from single-sex and coeducational schools were compared. Male students from the SSB school had more chances for significant decline as they progressed from Year 7 to Year 9. Brunei and countries with similar intentions to expand single-sex and coeducation school systems can target communication between single-sex and coeducation schools so they may learn from each other to improve the effectiveness of science teaching and learning processes. We expect that academics and administrators can benefit from the results of this study to guide their secondary science education policies, curriculum reforms, and teaching practices. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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19. AMPLIFY Model: Supporting teachers and students to work collaboratively to reflect on and improve instructional practice.
- Author
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Cronin, Murray
- Subjects
STUDENTS ,COEDUCATIONAL schools ,LEARNING - Published
- 2019
20. Educación diferenciada y coeducación: continuar el debate y proteger la ciencia.
- Author
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GORDILLO, Enrique G.
- Subjects
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SINGLE sex schools , *COEDUCATIONAL schools , *COEDUCATION , *SCIENCE education , *EDUCATIONAL evaluation , *SCHOOL administration - Abstract
In the context of the current debate regarding the best school setting (single-sex schooling v. coeducation) several advocates of coeducation have published emblematic papers that implicitly suggest that the debate should be considered as finished and that further research regarding this topic is not needed. This essay aims to refute the combined arguments of those articles using methodological and empirical facts, and show that the debate about this question and research into it should not be seen as complete, but instead should be promoted. At the same time, the essay identifies certain features in the aforementioned articles that present a risk of distorting science by moving towards arguments of an ideological nature, and it underlines the problem this represents for the debate itself and for science in general. The article does not seek to defend single-sex education, only the need for further research into it. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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21. A STUDY ON THE TYPE OF SCHOOL DURING THE DAWN OF MODERN EDUCATION IN BHUTAN.
- Author
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TAKEHIRO HIRAYAMA
- Subjects
PRIMARY education ,COEDUCATIONAL schools ,PRIVATE schools - Abstract
The article focuses on a study which discusses the state of education in Bhutan at the time when modern education was just introduced. Topics discussed include a school opening in Trashigang District in 1952 where Hindi was the medium of education, transformation of Haa school into a co-education system by the then prime minister Jigme Palden Dorji, construction of private schools by Nepali immigrants and modern education with English as the mode of instructions being introduced in 1964.
- Published
- 2015
22. Discussions in the Process of Transition to Co-education in Turkey.
- Author
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Batır, Betül
- Subjects
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COEDUCATION , *COEDUCATIONAL schools , *EDUCATION , *SEGREGATION in education , *EDUCATIONAL equalization , *EDUCATIONAL change , *HISTORY - Abstract
Being one of the education reforms of Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, Co-education has been realized based on the logic that science does not have gender. After the proclamation of the law of Uniformity in education, all the Turkish educational institutions, primary and secondary schools, high schools and universities passed on to co-education in 1924; thus, girls and boys had the right to study together. However, as in all reforms, it has been rather challenging to orient society towards co-education. In our study, this educational transformation that Ataturk's Turkey experienced in 1924 will be analyzed by means of archival documents, newspapers and memoranda and parliament speeches of the period. In addition, model applications from the schools of the period will be presented. The aim of this study is to present Mustafa Kemal Ataturk's attempts to raise awareness in society; prove his rejection of gender segregation in the fields of education and science; and reveal his attempts to raise the status of women- the fundamental component of society - who was ignored until his time. To this end, the study will provide evidence for society's learning and implementation of the concept of equality between men and women with the assertion that the upbringing of man and woman side by side is only possible by means of modern education. Evidently, Ataturk's model of a new education system for the new country he founded will be analyzed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
23. Understanding the Gender Gap in Science and Engineering: Evidence from the Chilean College Admissions Tests.
- Author
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Gándara, Fernanda and Silva, Monica
- Subjects
SCIENCE education ,ENGINEERING education ,GENDER differences in education ,UNIVERSITIES & colleges ,UNIVERSITY & college admission ,COEDUCATIONAL schools ,ACADEMIC achievement ,EDUCATIONAL outcomes - Abstract
This study seeks to develop a better understanding of the underrepresentation of women in science and engineering by analyzing the gender gaps (a) in the interest in pursuing a science degree and (b) on science achievement. We use national-level college admissions data to examine gender differences and to explore the association between these outcomes and the attendance to single-sex or co-educational schools. The Chilean college admissions system provides a unique context to study these gender differences, since applicants who wish to pursue an undergraduate degree in science or engineering are required to take a high-stakes standardized science achievement test as part of the admission battery. This test has three subjects: biology, physics, and chemistry, and applicants must choose to be tested in only one of them. Significant gender differences exist for the examinees in their choice of subject and achievement on (the tests). Gender gaps favoring males are observed in the three forms. Both interest and achievement in science are associated with the sex composition of the school attended. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Improving 10th Graders' English Communicative Competence Through the Implementation of the Task-Based Learning Approach.
- Author
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Campo, Ana Carolina Buitrago
- Subjects
COMMUNICATIVE competence ,ENGLISH as a foreign language ,LEARNING ,COEDUCATIONAL schools ,EDUCATION ,ACTION research - Abstract
Copyright of Profile: Issues in Teachers' Professional Development is the property of Universidad Nacional de Colombia, Facultad de Ciencias Humanas and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. The Debate Over Single-Sex Schooling.
- Author
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Pahlke, Erin and Hyde, Janet S.
- Subjects
- *
SINGLE sex schools , *ACADEMIC achievement , *GENDER stereotypes , *COEDUCATIONAL schools , *STUDENT attitudes , *CHILD development - Abstract
Supporters of single-sex schooling believe that separating boys and girls, by classrooms or schools, increases students' academic achievement. Critics of single-sex schooling believe that gender segregation increases students' gender stereotypes and has no effect on students' achievement. In this article, we present these rationales, focusing on developmental issues that may affect the effectiveness of single-sex schooling. We then review the research on the effectiveness of single-sex schooling. Overall, findings suggest that single-sex schooling is not more effective than coeducational schooling at improving students' academic achievement or attitudes. More work is needed to explore a broader range of outcomes, examine developmental factors that may influence the effectiveness of various types of schooling, and communicate results to parents, educators, and policymakers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Learning Organization Orientation in Gender-Based Categories of Schools.
- Author
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Thomas, Martin, Madden, Margaret, and Qazi, Wasim
- Subjects
ORGANIZATIONAL learning ,COEDUCATIONAL schools ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,EDUCATION - Abstract
A study by Akram, Watkins, and Sajid (2013), found that a statistically significant difference exists between boys and girls' schools in most of the dimensions of a learning organization. The current study is an extension of this previous research as it explores whether or not statistically significant differences exist among boys, girls and co-education schools on the dimensions of a learning organization. Using the Dimensions of Learning Organization Questionnaire (DLOQ) by Watkins and Marsick (1997), 100 sample cases were gathered by using the survey method, from a girls, a boys' and a co-education school in Karachi, Pakistan. The analysis of data revealed that statistically significant differences exist among the three gender-based categories of schools with the girls' school ranking first and the boys' school last in terms of the organizational learning orientation prevailing within the selected schools. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
27. Student Academic Self-Concept and Perception of Classroom Environment in Single-Sex and Coeducational Middle Grades Mathematics Classes.
- Author
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Kombe, Dennis, Carter, Traci L., Che, S. Megan, and Bridges, William
- Subjects
- *
PSYCHOLOGY of students , *SELF-perception , *CLASSROOM environment , *MATHEMATICS education , *MATHEMATICS students , *COEDUCATIONAL schools - Abstract
In this article, we present findings from a study that investigated the relationship between all-girls classes, all-boys classes, and coeducational classes on student mathematics self-concept and student perception of classroom environment. Further, we compared responses of girls in all-girls classes to girls in coeducational classes and responses of boys in all-boys classes to boys in coeducational classes. Using the Mathematics Attitude Scale and the What Is Happening in This Class? questionnaire, we found no significant differences in student responses on any of the subscales or domains for any of the subgroups, except for Math as a Male Domain. Our findings indicate that student mathematics self-concept and student perception of the classroom environment are similar regardless of whether students are in a single-sex or a coeducational class. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Region, Religion, and Competing Visions of Mountain Mission Education in the Ozarks.
- Author
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BLEVINS, BROOKS
- Subjects
- *
MISSION schools , *EDUCATION , *RELIGION & education , *COEDUCATIONAL schools , *HISTORY - Abstract
The article discusses several competing visions regarding mountain mission education programs in the Ozark Mountain region of Northwestern Arkansas, and it mentions the mission boards of the Southern Baptist Convention organization and the Ozark Division of Mountain Mission Schools led by superintendent Hugh D. Morton. The Newton County Academy coeducational school is examined, along with the relationship between religion and education. The Kingston Institute school is also assessed.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
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29. 'Good Teaching Is Good Teaching for All'.
- Author
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Vincent, Sarah
- Subjects
- *
JESUIT education , *CATHOLIC education , *COEDUCATIONAL schools - Abstract
The article focuses introduction of coeducation in Loyola High School in Quebec, Canada. Topics include the education system for Jesuit community of the school includes requirement of government certificate of permission to take admission in Loyola school; diversified education culture in the school and special features of the school focusing on Jesuit Catholic identity giving equal chance to every gender to study there in all shift.
- Published
- 2022
30. BENEFITS BEYOND ACHIEVEMENT? A Comparison of Academic Attitudes and School Satisfaction for Adolescent Girls in Single-Gender and Coeducational Classrooms.
- Author
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Hart, Laura C.
- Subjects
TEENAGE girls ,COEDUCATIONAL schools ,CLASSROOMS ,STUDENT participation ,ANALYSIS of variance ,TEENAGER attitudes - Abstract
Overall, the research on the effectiveness of single-gender education is inconclusive. However, research also indicates that some benefits beyond academic achievement may be possible. These findings may be significant for middle school girls, who often struggle with social interactions related to adolescence that create barriers in successfully transitioning to middle school. As these issues for middle school girls are sometimes unique to their gender, advocates argue that single-gender education emerges as a possible solution. This study investigated the potential benefits of participation in a single-gender classroom for sixth-grade females over a 3-year period. A total of 109 participants were involved. Girls in single-gender classrooms were compared to those in coeducational classrooms on variables of academic attitudes and student satisfaction with school. Statistical significance using MANOVA was observed on student satisfaction with school; descriptive statistical data from single-gender participants indicated a high degree of satisfaction with the single-gender program. Results showed that participation in single-gender programs can produce higher levels of student satisfaction with school (as explored in this study). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
31. Is the Frame Broken? Seeking New Metaphors for Textual Study in English.
- Author
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McKnight, Lucinda
- Subjects
ENGLISH language education ,CURRICULUM planning ,COEDUCATIONAL schools - Abstract
This article draws from a doctoral study of how female teachers design English curriculum around girls' popular culture in a contemporary coeducational secondary setting and focuses on how English teachers contemplate the study of texts in the space of school-based curriculum planning. The article presents an argument for reflexivity around how we create both texts and identity through curriculum design. It advocates the pursuit of new metaphors for contemplating the study of text that might challenge models of education as delivery in a neoliberal imaginary, where curriculum design is depicted as the anonymous and rational articulation of aims and pedagogy to achieve outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
32. "Where is ____?": Culture and the Process of Change in the Development of Inclusive Schools.
- Author
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McMaster, Christopher
- Subjects
INCLUSIVE education ,SCHOOL environment ,COEDUCATIONAL schools ,HIGH schools ,PROFESSIONAL learning communities ,REFLECTION (Philosophy) - Abstract
The modern school is a multi-layered and complex institution. For inclusive values and practices to embed in educational systems the nature of school culture and the change process must be considered. Qualitative data was gathered during a year-long ethnographic study of inclusive change in a co-educational high school. This paper applies a model of culture to demonstrate that the development of inclusion within a whole school culture is a process of continued personal and collective reflection, re-negotiation, and experience carried out over a sustained period of time. In order to foster the sustained development of inclusive cultures in schools it is vital to understand the nature of change within school culture, and to provide the time to reflect on deeply held beliefs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
33. Influence of gender, single-sex and co-educational schooling on students’ enjoyment and achievement in mathematics.
- Author
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Prendergast, Mark and O'Donoghue, John
- Subjects
- *
MATHEMATICS education (Secondary) , *GENDER differences in education , *MATHEMATICS students , *SINGLE sex schools , *COEDUCATIONAL schools , *EDUCATION , *SECONDARY education , *ATTITUDE (Psychology) - Abstract
This research investigates the influence that gender, single-sex and co-educational schooling can have on students’ mathematics education in second-level Irish classrooms. Although gender differences in mathematics education have been the subject of research for many years, recent results from PISA (Programme for International Student Assessment) show that there are still marked differences between the achievement and attitude of male and female students in Irish mathematics classrooms. This paper examines the influence of gender in more detail and also investigates the impact of single-sex or co-educational schooling. This is a follow on study which further analyses data collected by the authors when they designed a pedagogical framework and used this to develop, implement and evaluate a teaching intervention in four second-level Irish schools. The aim of this pedagogical framework was to promote student interest in the topic of algebra through effective teaching of the domain. This paper further analyses the quantitative data collected and investigates whether there were differences in students’ enjoyment and achievement scores based on their gender and whether they attended single-sex or co-educational schools. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Self-efficacy in introductory physics in students at single-sex and coeducational colleges.
- Author
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Blue, Jennifer, Mills, Mary Elizabeth, and Yezierski, Ellen
- Subjects
- *
SELF-efficacy in students , *PHYSICS , *STUDENTS , *SINGLE sex colleges , *COEDUCATIONAL schools , *SURVEYS , *GENDER integration of women's colleges - Abstract
We surveyed 88 students at four colleges: one men's college, two women's colleges, and one coeducational college. The questions, modified from Reid (2007), asked about in-class participation, how fulfilled they were by their achievement in their calc-based physics class, their attitude toward their class, and their self-efficacy (Bandura 1994) in the class. While a t-test showed no difference between men and women, an ANOVA showed a significant interaction between sex and type of school. Detailed results will be presented and discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. A Bridge to Nowhere: An Examination of Adolescent âDonât Knowâ Responses to Political Knowledge Questions.
- Author
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Prough, Elizabeth
- Subjects
- *
YOUTH in politics , *POLITICS & gender , *POLITICAL knowledge , *POLITICAL attitudes , *COEDUCATIONAL schools - Abstract
The gender gap exists between adult men and women in political behavior and engagement. In particular, men have higher levels of political knowledge. We know that adult men tend to guess more than adult women on political knowledge tests suggesting an inflated disparity. While women choose a âdonât knowâ (DK) option more often than men, questions remain as to why or when in the life cycle this trend begins. Using a sample of single-sex and coeducational schools in Southeast Michigan the frequency of DK responses is examined in an attempt to discover if this phenomenon is evident among late adolescents, whether school environment is a factor, and to further solve the gender gap puzzle. ..PAT.-Unpublished Manuscript [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
36. Male Tokenism and the Regendering of an Organization.
- Author
-
Moore, Laura
- Subjects
GENDER identity ,TOKENISM ,INTERVIEWING ,COEDUCATIONAL schools ,MASCULINITY ,STUDENTS - Abstract
Data gathered from interviews with six male token students and twelve female students at a historical women's college both before and after the college's transition to a coeducational institution (between 2002 and 2005) are analyzed from three interrelated theoretical approaches - tokenism, gendered organizations, and hegemonic masculinity. The study provides particular insights into how individuals and organizations negotiate around and/or with hegemonic masculinity in a process of "doing gender". ..PAT.-Unpublished Manuscript [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
37. Chapter 1: Introduction Coeducation: An Uneven Progression.
- Subjects
COEDUCATION ,COEDUCATIONAL schools ,UNITED States education system ,UNIVERSITIES & colleges - Abstract
Chapter 1 of the book "Going Coed: Women's Experiences in Formerly Men's Colleges & Universities 1950-2000," edited by Leslie Miller-Bernal and Susan L. Poulson, is presented. It discusses the history of coeducation and institutional changes in the U.S. which started in 1833 at Oberlin College in Oberlin, Ohio. It explores the cultural context, advert reactions against coeducation, and factors that favor the coeducational setting.
- Published
- 2004
38. Lutheran schools.
- Subjects
COEDUCATIONAL schools - Abstract
The article offers information on the Lutheran schools located in Brisbane, Australia which includes Grace Lutheran College, a co-educational private high school based on Brisbane Northside which is open to all families who are willing to support the college ethos, without discrimination.
- Published
- 2022
39. Southern suburbs and the Gold Coast.
- Subjects
COEDUCATIONAL schools ,DAY schools - Abstract
The article offers information on some of the colleges in Southern suburbs and the Gold Coast which includes Lindisfarne Anglican Grammar School, a leading coeducational independent school serving the southern Gold Coast, Tweed Coast and northern New South Wales.
- Published
- 2022
40. BUILDING FUTURE READY GRADUATES.
- Subjects
COEDUCATIONAL schools ,DAY schools ,EDUCATION methodology ,CURRICULUM - Abstract
The article offers information on the Lakes College which is an independent Uniting Church co-educational primary and secondary day school located in the suburb of North Lakes in the Moreton Bay Region, Queensland, Australia. It discusses that the Lakes College have been exploring the implications of megatrends that will dominate the coming decades and the impact that these megatrends will have on the future of education.
- Published
- 2022
41. Southern Cross Catholic College.
- Subjects
CATHOLIC schools ,COEDUCATIONAL schools ,CURRICULUM ,CATHOLIC education - Abstract
The article offers information on the Southern Cross Catholic College located on the Redcliffe Peninsula in Scarborough, Australia where the meaningful curriculum is future focused and attentive to the needs of today's youth and their world. It discusses that the Lasallian school nurtures in its members an awareness of the living presence of God in world; and calls its members to a solidarity with the poor and victims of injustice.
- Published
- 2022
42. CANTERBURY COLLEGE, LOGAN: ‘A BIG SCHOOL WITH A SMALL SCHOOL FEEL’.
- Subjects
COEDUCATIONAL schools ,DAY schools ,SCHOOL children ,SCHOOL enrollment ,COLLEGE students - Abstract
The article offers information on the Canterbury College which is a proud boys and girls Anglican College, serving the fast-growing Logan, southern Brisbane and northern Gold Coast corridor since 1987 in Australia. It discusses that the College Student Futures Office supports graduates after school with pathways into tertiary education, trade apprenticeships, professional careers and more.
- Published
- 2022
43. JOHN PAUL COLLEGE makes a difference.
- Subjects
COEDUCATIONAL schools ,PRIVATE schools ,CURRICULUM ,EDUCATIONAL standards - Abstract
The article offers information on the John Paul College (JPC) which is one of Queensland's largest independent Early Learning to Year 12 co-educational schools which was founded in 1982 as the state's first Christian Ecumenical school, the College has a collective enrolment of approximately 1950 students, with 48 boarders calling the school home. It discusses that the College believes its core purpose in boarding is to care for and nurture the students who have been placed in their care.
- Published
- 2022
44. LINDISFARNE ANGLICAN GRAMMAR SCHOOL.
- Subjects
COEDUCATIONAL schools ,PRIVATE schools ,CURRICULUM ,EDUCATIONAL standards - Abstract
The article offers information on the Lindisfarne Anglican Grammar School which is a high quality, independent, Anglican, co-educational grammar school that serves the southern Gold Coast, Tweed Coast and northern New South Wales. It discusses that the school Principal, Stuart Marquardt, has been honoured by being named Non-Government Australian School Principal of the Year, as part of the Educator Awards for 2021.
- Published
- 2022
45. 2017 Adolescent Success Award Winner: Most Innovative Use of Space in a School Setting.
- Author
-
McCarthy, Robyn
- Subjects
COEDUCATIONAL schools ,MIDDLE school education ,CURRICULUM planning - Published
- 2017
46. PURSUING PERFECTION: DISTRESS AND INTERPERSONAL FUNCTIONING AMONG ADOLESCENT BOYS IN SINGLE-SEX AND CO-EDUCATIONAL INDEPENDENT SCHOOLS.
- Author
-
Coren, Sidney A. and Luthar, Suniya S.
- Subjects
- *
HIGH school boys , *PERFECTIONISM (Personality trait) , *CHILDREN of the rich , *PERFECTION , *COEDUCATIONAL schools , *SINGLE sex schools , *FATHER-son relationship - Abstract
This study extends past findings of heightened problems among affluent youth by examining adjustment patterns among boys in two academically elite, independent high schools: one for boys only and the other co-educational. Both samples manifested disproportionately high rates of internalizing and externalizing symptoms, but only the co-educational boys showed elevations in substance use. Boys in both schools showed elevations in a new outcome domain examined: exhibitionistic narcissism. Multivariate analyses of predictors showed that parent criticism-a defining feature of youths' maladaptive perfectionism-and perceived maternal depression emerged as major vulnerability factors for both samples in relation to symptom levels. On other parenting dimensions, boys in the single-sex school seemed to be particularly sensitive to feelings of alienation from their fathers and perceived paternal depression. Envy of peers' attractiveness was associated with adolescent distress in both samples, but appeared to be especially critical for co-educational boys. Results are discussed, focusing on the costs and benefits of boys' attendance at a single-sex versus co-educational school, along with implications for practice and future research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Gender differences in faculty attrition in the USA.
- Author
-
Deutsch, Francine M. and Yao, Beier
- Subjects
- *
GENDER differences (Psychology) , *UNIVERSITIES & colleges , *FAMILY conflict , *FAMILIES , *COEDUCATIONAL schools , *WOMEN in higher education - Abstract
In this study, we examined possible gender differences in reasons for faculty attrition during the last 20 years at a small women's liberal arts college. The attrition rate was calculated from archival data collected through old college directories. As in earlier studies, the attrition rate was higher for women (31%) than for men (18.5%). Reasons for leaving the college were assessed in an online survey completed by 45 out of 66 tenure-track or tenured professors who left (excluding retirees). Work–family conflict was the most frequently cited reason for leaving, with disproportionately more women than men giving this reason. Open-ended responses revealed that work–family conflict typically referred to the difficulty of coordinating two careers. Female faculty who left were also significantly more dissatisfied than males with the support for balancing work and family life at the college. The need for colleges to create spousal policies to help faculty coordinate dual careers was discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Reasoning About Single-Sex Schooling for Girls Among Students, Parents, and Teachers.
- Author
-
Pahlke, Erin, Bigler, Rebecca, and Patterson, Meagan
- Subjects
- *
REASONING , *GIRLS' schools , *COEDUCATIONAL schools , *GENDER differences in education , *STUDENT attitudes , *PARENT attitudes , *TEACHER attitudes - Abstract
The number of United States public schools offering single-sex education for girls has increased dramatically in the past decade. Rationales for all-girls schools are diverse and grounded in differing gender ideologies. We examined reasoning about all-girls schools among school stakeholders (i.e., individuals affected by single-sex schools, including students, parents, and teachers) in the Southwestern United States. Specifically, middle school students attending all-girls ( n = 398) and coeducational ( n = 191) schools, mothers of middle school students attending all-girls ( n = 217) and coeducational ( n = 64) schools, and teachers employed at all-girls ( n = 18) and coeducational ( n = 97) middle schools rated the veracity of multiple rationales for girls-only schools. Specifically, we examined rationales for single-sex schooling related to gender differences in learning, gender differences in interests, girls' ingroup preference, and gender discrimination. Endorsement of rationales differed across participant role (student, parent, teacher) and school type (single-sex, coeducational). Overall, stakeholders affiliated with an all-girls school were more supportive of each rationale than stakeholders affiliated with coeducational schools. Teachers affiliated with the single-sex school strongly endorsed gender differences in learning as a rationale for single-sex schooling. Endorsement of rationales did not vary across participant gender. The implications of these findings for educational policy and the interpretation of research on single-sex schooling are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. The Effects of Single-Sex Compared With Coeducational Schooling on Students' Performance and Attitudes: A Meta-Analysis.
- Author
-
Pahlke, Erin, Hyde, Janet Shibley, and Allison, Carlie M.
- Subjects
- *
SINGLE sex classes (Education) , *COEDUCATIONAL schools , *COMPARISON (Philosophy) , *ACADEMIC achievement , *ATTITUDE (Psychology) , *META-analysis - Abstract
Proponents of single-sex (SS) education believe that separating boys and girls, by classrooms or schools, increases students' achievement and academic interest. In this article, we use meta-analysis to analyze studies that have tested the effects on students of SS compared with coeducational (CE) schooling. We meta-analyzed data from 184 studies, representing the testing of 1.6 million students in Grades K-12 from 21 nations, for multiple outcomes (e.g., mathematics performance, mathematics attitudes, science performance, educational aspirations, self-concept, gender stereotyping). To address concerns about the quality of research designs, we categorized studies as uncontrolled (no controls for selection effects, no random assignment) or controlled (random assignment or controls for selection effects). Based on mixed-effects analyses, uncontrolled studies showed some modest advantages for single-sex schooling, for both girls and boys, for outcomes such as mathematics performance but not for science performance. Controlled studies, however, showed only trivial differences between students in SS versus CE, for mathematics performance (g = 0.10 for girls, 0.06 for boys) and science performance (g = 0.06 for girls, 0.04 for boys), and in some cases showed small differences favoring CE schooling (e.g., for girls' educational aspirations, g = -0.26). Separate analyses of U.S. studies yielded similar findings (e.g., for mathematics performance g = 0.14 for girls and 0.14 for boys). Results from the highest quality studies, then, do not support the view that SS schooling provides benefits compared with CE schooling. Claims that SS schooling is particularly effective for U.S. ethnic minority boys could not be tested due to the lack of controlled studies on this question. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Patterns of Bullying in Single-Sex Schools.
- Author
-
Johnson, Dominique and Gastic, Billie
- Subjects
BULLYING ,SINGLE sex schools ,GENDER differences (Psychology) ,COEDUCATIONAL schools ,HIGH schools ,MASCULINITY - Abstract
This study explores how the relationship between students' risk of being bullied and their gender conformity differs depending on whether they attend single-sex or coeducational high schools. Findings indicate that gender nonconforming students, and students who vary from their dominant school gender norms, are most likely to experience bullying regardless of school context. Single-sex schools emerge as a protective factor for gender nonconforming females, possibly due to a privileged position female masculinity holds in a single-sex female context. These findings contribute to a complicated terrain emerging in the research literature on single-sex schools. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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