Current:Home > MarketsBoys graduate high school at lower rates than girls, with lifelong consequences -FundPrime
Boys graduate high school at lower rates than girls, with lifelong consequences
PredictIQ Quantitative Think Tank Center View
Date:2025-04-10 23:45:52
BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP) — They attend the same classes with access to the same programs, and even come from the same families. But girls consistently are outperforming boys, graduating at higher rates at public high schools around the country.
The gap between them is wide, often as wide as the achievement gap between students from affluent and low-income families, a problem that officials have tracked closely for years. But the reasons why boys are falling short are not as clear.
Interviews with students, educators and researchers point to several factors. Men generally can earn the same wages as women with less education. But boys also are more likely to face suspensions or other discipline knocking them off track, and they don’t pursue help as often when they face mental health challenges.
Some boys are fine when they first drop out, landing jobs providing steady incomes. But over the long term, lacking a high school degree can hold men back. Studies show young men who drop out of high school earn less over their lifetimes and are more likely to end up in jail.
Bryant West was halfway through high school in Pascagoula, Mississippi, when he dropped out in 2020. Instead of learning algebra and other things he couldn’t imagine ever needing, he felt his time was better spent working at Popeye’s and on landscaping crews to help his mother with bills.
“I feel like it was pointless,” he said.
West, 18, planned instead to earn his GED, which he received three years later, in September. “It was just another way that I wanted to do it,” he said.
In some cases, boys like West aren’t in as much of a hurry to graduate as girls because they haven’t needed a high school degree to cover rent and groceries, said Beth Jarosz, a program director at research organization PRB.
A man without a high school diploma often earns as much as a woman who has completed a year or two of college, Jarosz said.
The U.S. government doesn’t require states to report graduation data by gender the way they must break it out by racial and ethnic groups and for children with disabilities, English language learners and homeless students. But in every state reporting high school graduation rates by gender, research shows female students graduate at higher rates.
More than 45,000 fewer boys than girls graduated high school in 2018, according to an estimate by researcher Richard Reeves based on data available from 37 reporting states.
That year, about 88% of girls graduated on time compared with 82% of boys, according to Reeves, who this year left the Brookings Institution to launch the American Institute for Boys and Men. The gap was still 6 percentage points in 2021, according to a follow-up analysis this year.
The gender gap has gone largely unaddressed by schools, but some have found effective strategies.
The city of Yonkers, New York, raised graduation rates for boys of color through supports such as mentoring. Former Superintendent Edwin Quezada said addressing the racial gap in graduation rates was useful toward understanding the overall gender gap, which was 7 percentage points in 2022.
Boys are referred to special education at higher rates than girls in early grades and are suspended at higher rates throughout school, all of which can derail plans for an on-time graduation, Quezada said.
“When the decks are stacked differently for young men than they are for young ladies, why should we expect different outcomes?” asked Quezada, who retired from the district in July.
In Buffalo, Benjamin Nichols’ troubles in school started early. After his parents divorced when he was 6, he started acting out and was held back. By the time he turned things around in high school, Nichols was older than his classmates and a better fit for an accelerated-credit night program, he said. He enrolled, only to be told the program was being shut down.
“I was lashing out because I wasn’t OK,” said Nichols, who ended up leaving high school after ninth grade. “The more and more of me getting punished and reprimanded, I just lashed out more.”
There would be more than 10 years of starts and stops before he earned his GED in 2019. Nichols, now 33, earned a two-year degree in electrical construction and maintenance this past year.
“The best piece of advice that I probably would have given teachers back then when dealing with me is to ask if I’m OK,” he said. “No one even bothered really to ask the question.”
Like Yonkers, Buffalo schools have incorporated initiatives from “My Brother’s Keeper,” the program started by former President Barack Obama to help boys succeed in school. Buffalo also has enlisted education advocacy group Say Yes Buffalo to provide mentoring to male students and recruit men to teach, spokesman Jeffrey Hammond said. Still, the urban district posted a 10-point graduation gender gap in 2022 (84%-74%) and an 11-point gap (84%-73%) in 2021.
Research is clear, Hammond wrote in an email: “Girls nationally succeed in school over boys because they are more apt to plan ahead, set academic goals and put forth effort in achieving these goals.” Plus, he said, girls receive fewer school suspensions, showing they are generally more likely to follow rules and receive more close instruction from teachers.
Only 10 states reporting graduation rates by gender break it down further by race, making it difficult to understand how much race is a factor in the gender gap. But Reeves found in his latest analysis that the gender gaps in the five largest states in the group were much larger between Black girls and boys than they were between white girls and boys or Asian girls and boys.
The graduation gender gap “is harder to explain than some of the other disparities we see,” PRB’s Jarosz said. “We know that structural racism is part of the explanation for why Black youth and Hispanic, Latino youth and American Indian youth are less likely to graduate.”
“But it’s not a structural racism issue for boys versus girls,” she said.
___
The Associated Press education team receives support from the Carnegie Corporation of New York. The AP is solely responsible for all content.
veryGood! (7)
Related
- 2025 'Doomsday Clock': This is how close we are to self
- Kate Middleton Channels Princess Diana With This Special Tiara
- Maduro orders the ‘immediate’ exploitation of oil, gas and mines in Guyana’s Essequibo
- DeSantis wants to cut 1,000 jobs, but asks for $1 million to sue over Florida State’s football snub
- McKinsey to pay $650 million after advising opioid maker on how to 'turbocharge' sales
- Grand Theft Auto VI trailer is released. Here are 7 things we learned from the 90-second teaser.
- Rep. Patrick McHenry, former temporary House speaker, to retire from Congress
- What Is Rizz? Breaking Down Oxford's Word of the Year—Partly Made Popular By Tom Holland
- Juan Soto to be introduced by Mets at Citi Field after striking record $765 million, 15
- Tyler Goodson, Alabama man who shot to fame with S-Town podcast, killed by police during standoff, authorities say
Ranking
- Residents worried after ceiling cracks appear following reroofing works at Jalan Tenaga HDB blocks
- Extreme Weight Loss Star Brandi Mallory’s Cause of Death Revealed
- A bedbug hoax is targeting foreign visitors in Athens. Now the Greek police have been called in
- What does the NCAA proposal to pay players mean for college athletics?
- Which apps offer encrypted messaging? How to switch and what to know after feds’ warning
- Frontier Airlines settles lawsuit filed by pilots who claimed bias over pregnancy, breastfeeding
- Former top staffer of ex-congressman George Santos: You are a product of your own making
- Northwest Indiana boy, 3, dies from gunshot wound following what police call an accidental shooting
Recommendation
Opinion: Gianni Infantino, FIFA sell souls and 2034 World Cup for Saudi Arabia's billions
What does the NCAA proposal to pay players mean for college athletics?
Florida man, already facing death for a 1998 murder, now indicted for a 2nd. Detectives fear others
NFL power rankings Week 14: Several contenders clawing for No. 2 spot
California DMV apologizes for license plate that some say mocks Oct. 7 attack on Israel
Attorneys for family of absolved Black man killed by deputy seeking $16M from Georgia sheriff
2 plead guilty in fire at Atlanta Wendy’s restaurant during protest after Rayshard Brooks killing
Beyoncé climbs ranks of Forbes' powerful women list: A look back at her massive year