Single-sex Education: What Does Research Tell Us?
Navigation – Plan du site

AccueilNuméros171La mixité scolaire : une thématiq...Single-sex Education: What Does R...

La mixité scolaire : une thématique (encore) d’actualité ?

Single-sex Education: What Does Research Tell Us?

Non-mixité à l’école : que nous dit la recherche actuelle ?
La no-mixidad en la escuela: ¿qué nos aprende la investigación actual?
Monoedukation in der Schule: was sagt uns die Forschung?
Emer Smyth
p. 47-58

Résumés

Il y a actuellement dans beaucoup de pays un nombre considérable de travaux de recherche et de discussions concernant la non-mixité à l’école et dont le but est de savoir si elle offre aux garçons et aux filles des avantages sur le plan social ainsi que sur les résultats scolaires. De nombreux pays tels que l’Australie, la Nouvelle-Zélande et l’Irlande continuent d’avoir un nombre conséquent d’écoles non mixtes. Dans d’autres pays, comme les États-Unis et le Royaume-Uni, les écoles ou, plus souvent, les classes non mixtes se développent de façon croissante afin de répondre aux mauvais résultats scolaires que l’on remarque chez les garçons ou à la persistance des stéréotypes dans les choix d’orientation des garçons et des filles. Cet article met en évidence quelques conclusions de recherches conduites dans les pays anglophones et portant sur l’éducation non mixte.
On a avancé un certain nombre de raisons expliquant les différences entre les structures mixtes et non mixtes dans les processus éducatifs et, par voie de conséquence, pour les résultats des élèves : parmi elles, le comportement des garçons monopolisant l’attention en classe, le déficit de concentration des adolescents se retrouvant avec des élèves du sexe opposé et le fait que les écoles servent de lieu de construction de la masculinité et de la féminité. Bien que plusieurs études soulignent les différentes facettes que recouvrent les structures mixtes, la plupart avancent l’hypothèse selon laquelle les différences significatives dans les parcours scolaires et les résultats sont dues à la mixité dans les classes. Cet article s’intéresse aux recherches concernant l’impact d’une éducation non mixte sur les résultats scolaires, les orientations et options choisies, sur le développement personnel et social ainsi que sur les conséquences à l’âge adulte. Il montre des variations considérables en fonction des pays, voire au sein de ces pays, en ce qui concerne les conclusions obtenues ; ces variations dépendent des méthodes de recherche, des techniques d’analyse et des résultats utilisés. Il semble qu’il y ait peu de consensus sur le fait de savoir si une éducation non mixte est plus avantageuse pour les filles ou pour les garçons en termes de résultats scolaires. On peut identifier deux catégories de pays : les pays (comme le Royaume-Uni et les États-Unis) où les écoles non mixtes forment, en tout cas actuellement, un petit groupe d’établissements plutôt sélectifs et les pays (tels que l’Australie, la Nouvelle-Zélande et l’Irlande) qui ont un nombre important d’écoles non mixtes, même si les différences de composition du public d’élèves entre ces deux types d’école sont importantes et nombreuses.
Dans le passé, des recherches faites au Royaume-Uni suggéraient qu’une éducation mixte préparait mieux les garçons et les filles à la vie adulte. Cependant l’utilisation, dans les années quatre-vingt et quatre-vingt-dix, de techniques employant des modèles à plusieurs niveaux ont montré, lorsque des comparaisons systématiques étaient possibles, le manque de différences significatives entre ces deux types d’école. Plus récemment, des recherches britanniques ont trouvé que des différences significatives dans les résultats scolaires existaient bien entre les établissements mixtes et non mixtes, même si l’existence de telles différences est dépendante des types de résultats étudiés et du sous-groupe d’élèves considéré. Une partie de ces études a été menée aux États-Unis où, jusqu’à une période récente, l’éducation non mixte se limitait à l’enseignement privé, surtout catholique. Plusieurs études sur cet enseignement catholique ont montré que la mixité avait, entre autres choses, des effets négatifs significatifs sur les résultats scolaires des filles. Cependant certains commentaires arrivent à des conclusions différentes en ce qui concerne cet effet positif observé dans les écoles catholiques.
La République d’Irlande est un des pays pour lesquels l’école non mixte est inscrite dans une tradition historique. Une vaste étude sur l’éducation secondaire en Irlande ne montre globalement aucune différence significative sur les résultats scolaires entre les écoles mixtes et non mixtes, pour les garçons comme pour les filles. De la même façon, l’Australie et la Nouvelle-Zélande ont un nombre conséquent d’écoles non mixtes. Certaines études australiennes ont montré qu’il y avait peu de différences dans les performances des élèves entre les écoles mixtes et non mixtes. En Nouvelle-Zélande, des chercheurs sont arrivés à des conclusions différentes concernant les effets d’une éducation non mixte sur les résultats scolaires. D’autres études sur les écoles mixtes se sont intéressées non seulement aux résultats scolaires dans leur ensemble, mais aussi à l’attitude adoptée par les élèves dans certaines matières, dites plus appropriées pour les filles ou les garçons, et à la manière dont ces matières sont choisies. Nous avons, ici, la preuve que les filles des écoles mixtes adoptent des attitudes plus favorables envers les matières dites masculines, telles que les mathématiques et la physique. Cependant les choix des matières non conformes aux stéréotypes de genre résultent de processus bien plus profonds et non d’un effet spécifique de la mixité ou de la non-mixité.
Tout en s’intéressant aux processus éducatifs que cela implique, un certain nombre d’études ont évalué l’importance de l’influence d’une éducation non mixte sur le plan du développement personnel et social chez les jeunes. Il semble y avoir un consensus général sur le fait que les élèves des écoles mixtes, filles et garçons confondus, voient leur école de façon plus positive et sont plus positifs aussi sur les différents aspects de leur enseignement. La situation devient plus complexe lorsque d’autres aspects de la perception et de l’image qu’ils ont d’eux-mêmes sont pris en compte : on arrive à des résultats qui sont divisés en deux parties égales entre ceux en faveur d’une éducation non mixte et ceux ne trouvant pas de différences probantes entre les deux systèmes. Peu de travaux de recherche se sont intéressés aux conséquences à long terme d’une éducation non mixte. Cependant, pour aller dans le même sens que les résultats indiquant l’affaiblissement des stéréotypes sur les matières scolaires au collège et au lycée, certaines études suggèrent que les femmes qui sont allées dans des écoles non mixtes ont plus de chance d’étudier des matières dites « masculines » et moins de chance d’étudier des matières plus « féminines » aux niveaux post-bac et universitaire.
Ces dernières années, on a vu renaître la non-mixité à l’école dans un certain nombre de pays dont les États-Unis, le Royaume-Uni et l’Australie, sous la forme de classes non mixtes au sein d’écoles mixtes ou d’écoles séparant les garçons et les filles. Il semble que les conclusions et les avis soient partagés sur ces initiatives de politique éducative dont le but est de promouvoir l’éducation non mixte. Cela reflète peut-être la difficulté de reconnaître quels effets sont attribuables à la non-mixité et lesquels proviennent d’autres facteurs. De plus, l’éducation non mixte seule serait inefficace si elle ne débouchait pas sur une contestation des notions dominantes de masculinité et de féminité. En regardant les études portant sur l’éducation non mixte, on soulève un certain nombre de problèmes plus vastes appartenant au domaine de la recherche pédagogique. Il semble que, dans l’avenir, il y ait un potentiel considérable dans l’exploration des relations possibles entre les différentes manières qu’a chaque sexe de se construire (et se reconstruire) dans la société, mais aussi au niveau plus restreint de l’école. D’importantes questions se posent sur la nature de la comparaison faite : sommes-nous intéressés par les différences engendrées par les milieux scolaires mixtes eux-mêmes ou par le plus grand nombre de facteurs scolaires qui caractérisent souvent les écoles non mixtes ? En d’autres termes, définir davantage leurs bases de comparaison permettrait peut-être de trouver un moyen d’évaluer les mérites des éducations mixte et non mixte.

Haut de page

Texte intégral

Introduction

1A number of countries, including Australia, New Zealand and Ireland, continue to have a sizeable number of single-sex schools. In other countries, such as the United States and Britain, there has been a growing promotion of single-sex schools, or more usually of single-sex classes, in response to perceived underachievement by boys or to the persistence of gendered patterns of subject take-up. This article outlines some of the findings from research on single-sex education conducted in English-speaking countries. In doing so, it attempts to provide a critical perspective on some of the key issues involved in comparing the two types of settings.

2A number of explanations have been proffered for differences between single-sex and coeducational settings in educational processes, and ultimately, in student outcomes. One of the most commonly discussed differences between the two types of settings relates to the dominant presence of boys in the classroom. Most studies have indicated that boys contribute more to classroom interaction (for example, by “calling out” answers) and dominate in “hands-on” activities, such as laboratory work and computer sessions (Askew and Ross 1988; Howe 1997; Francis 2004). Furthermore, boys tend to be more disruptive in the classroom and experience more negative interaction with teachers as a result of their misbehaviour (Francis 2000; Warrington and Younger 2000). From this perspective, the presence of boys in the classroom is seen as having a negative effect on girls’ academic engagement and achievement. Other commentators have pointed to the “distraction” inherent in mixed gender educational settings for adolescents. Coleman’s (1961) study pointed to the strong emphasis on “rating and dating” in American high school culture, with peer groups having a negative effect on achievement, especially among girls (see also Riordan 2002). A number of studies have explored the way in which schools serve as sites for the construction of masculinity and femininity. Thus, particular subjects areas, such as mathematics and physics, may become constructed as “masculine”, leading to tensions for female students in selecting these subjects and performing well in them (Mendick 2005). Discussions of single-sex education must be placed in the broader context of research on, and policy attention to, male underachievement, which is variously attributed to the absence of male role models in schools, gender differences in learning styles, and the emergence of a “laddish” culture, among other factors (for an overview, see Smyth 2007). In sum, although different studies emphasise different aspects of a mixed gender setting, most hypothesise that significant differences in school process and outcomes will be evident depending on the gender mix of the class. The following section outlines the main findings from research on the impact of single-sex education on student outcomes.

Single-sex education and student outcomes

Academic Achievement

3The discussion of the influence of single-sex education on student outcomes has chiefly focused on academic performance, either using a summary measure of overall achievement or examining achievement in particular subject areas. Findings have differed across and within countries, according to the method of analysis used and the specific outcome selected. Two sets of countries can be identified: countries (such as Britain and the United States) in which single-sex schools, at least currently, make up a small, somewhat selective, group; and countries (such as Australia, New Zealand and Ireland) which have a sizeable number of single-sex schools, albeit with some important compositional differences between single-sex and coeducational schools.

4One of the first large-scale studies of single-sex education was conducted by Dale (1969, 1971, 1974) in the British context. Dale’s research suggested that coeducation provided the optimal preparation for adult life for both sexes. In relation to academic performance, he found that girls’ educational progress was not held back by coeducation, although the research findings indicated some disadvantages for girls, especially in mathematics and science performance. A number of further studies conducted in Britain in the 1970s and 1980s indicated that girls tended to have higher academic achievement levels in single-sex classes and/or schools (Ormerod 1975; Spender and Sarah 1980; Deem 1984). Many of the latter studies were small-scale in nature and did not control for important social background and prior achievement differences between students attending single-sex and coeducational schools. In a meta-analysis of existing studies, Bone (1983) argued that broader school factors were more important than the gender mix of the school. The availability of multilevel modelling techniques led to increased attention to school-level effects in British research from the 1980s onwards. Using National Child Development Survey data on the cohort of young people born in 1958, Steedman (1983a, 1983b), using statistical controls for prior student ability and family social background, found that “very little in their examination results is explained by whether schools are mixed or single-sex once allowance is made for differences in intake” (1983a, 98). Similarly, other British studies found no significant advantage in the educational achievement of girls in single-sex schools, once intake differences among schools were taken into consideration (Goldstein et al., 1993; Thomas et al. 1994).

5Three more recent studies point to somewhat different conclusions on the effects of single-sex schooling in the British context. Spielhofer et al. (2004) found that, in England, average academic achievement levels for males do not differ significantly between single-sex and coeducational settings, but there are some performance gains for lower-achieving boys in single-sex schools. For females, an advantage was found for those attending single-sex schools across a range of achievement outcomes, with the greatest advantages found in the area of science and for the lowest prior attainment group. Malacova (2007) found that both boys and girls in more selective single-sex schools had a performance advantage but, within non-selective schools, only lower ability boys and girls achieved higher grades in a single-sex setting. Sullivan et al. (2010), using the 1958 cohort data previously analysed by Steedman, found that girls in single-sex schools had higher chances of obtaining five or more pass grades in the State O-level exam (Ordinary level exam), taken at the age of 16, than girls in coeducational schools, all things being equal. However, the difference was non-significant if other achievement cutoffs were used. Furthermore, single-sex/coeducational differences were not significant in overall grades in the A-level exam (Advanced level exam), a State exam taken at the end of upper secondary education at the age of 18. Some differences were evident across different subject areas. For O-level exams, girls were more likely to obtain science and mathematics passes in single-sex than coeducational schools; in contrast, boys were more likely to obtain language passes in single-sex than coeducational schools. Gendered patterns were also evident at A-level, with single-sex girls receiving more mathematics, physics, and chemistry passes and single-sex boys receiving more passes in English and modern languages. Studies in Northern Ireland, which has a different school structure to that in England and Wales, have found no significant difference in overall achievement levels between single-sex and coeducational schools (Daly 1996). Similarly, no significant differences are found in science, English and mathematics performance (Daly 1995, 1996; Daly and Shuttleworth 1997).

6A number of research studies have been carried out in the United States, where (until very recently) single-sex education was confined to the private school sector, especially to Catholic schools. Early studies, such as that by Coleman (1961), indicated that coeducation had a negative effect on girls’ academic achievement due to peer pressure to prioritise relations with the opposite sex rather than schoolwork. Several studies of the Catholic school sector have indicated small but significant negative effects of coeducation on girls’ achievement as well as on other outcomes (Lee and Bryk 1986, 1989; Bryk et al. 1993). Bryk, Lee, and Holland (1993) used a range of control variables (including social background, prior achievement and so on) and found clear positive effects for girls’ academic achievement as well as for social and personal development outcomes in girls’ schools. However, analyses of the Catholic school sector by Marsh (1989a, 1989b) have found no significant differences in overall achievement or in reading, writing and vocabulary test scores once controls are used. Similarly, Gilson (2002) found no differences in mathematics and quantitative ability test scores between single-sex and coeducational school girls. Comparing Catholic single-sex schools with Catholic and public coeducational high schools, Riordan (1985) found a significant achievement advantage to single-sex education for females but no significant difference for males. Other American studies have further explored the extent to which any advantage of single-sex education is confined to certain groups of students. Riordan (2002) indicates a positive effect of single-sex schooling for the school engagement and achievement of both boys and girls but he suggests that the effect is much greater for, if not limited to, low socio-economic status and ethnic minority students. Similarly, Riordan (1994) had found an advantage to single-sex education among African American and Hispanic schools. In contrast, Garcia (1998) points to no significant difference in achievement between the two sectors for Asian and African American girls.

7The Republic of Ireland is one of the countries with a historical tradition of single-sex schooling, with single-sex schools still making up over a third of all secondary schools. Single-sex and coeducational schools differ in their intake by social class background and prior academic ability levels. Controlling for these prior differences, a large-scale study indicated no significant differences in overall academic achievement between single-sex and coeducational schools for both girls and boys at lower and upper secondary levels (Hannan et al. 1996). Further analyses indicated similar non-significant differences for performance in English. However, there was evidence that girls achieved somewhat lower mathematics grades in coeducational than in single-sex schools.

8A number of studies examining the effects of single-sex schooling have been conducted in the Australian context. Carpenter’s (1985) study showed that, controlling for social background, prior performance and a range of other factors, there was little overall difference between single-sex and coeducational schools in student performance. Later Australian studies indicated the existence of some performance differences in particular subject areas. Yates and Firkin (1986) found that high performers in mathematics were more likely to come from single-sex schools, all things being equal. Young and Fraser’s (1990) study of science achievement suggested significant advantages of single-sex education for girls (but somewhat in contradiction to their later 1992 study indicated no significant differences in physics performance; see also Young 1994).

9In New Zealand, achievement advantages to single-sex education were found for both males and females, even controlling for background and prior attainment (Woodward et al. 1999). However, Harker and Nash (1997) found no significant differences in English, mathematics and science test scores for female students, all things being equal. Harker (2000) found non-significant differences in English, mathematics and science achievement for both males and females once controls were introduced.

10A systematic review of international research on single-sex education included only those studies which met certain methodological criteria (Mael et al. 2005). These studies were mainly American and related to secondary rather than primary schools. Of the studies on achievement reviewed, 23 indicated “null” (or non-significant) findings, 15 indicated an advantage to single-sex education and only one study showed an advantage to coeducational schooling. Assessing findings across a range of outcomes, the authors suggest that the review provides “a degree of support for SS [single-sex] schooling” (Mael et al. 2005, xvii). In contrast, a review by Smithers and Robinson (2006) suggested that existing research “found little evidence of consistent advantages in either single-sex or co-education” (Smithers and Robinson, 2006, i) and the authors point to the difficulty in making accurate comparisons between single-sex and coeducational schools, given the selectivity of the former.

11Surprisingly little attention has been given to the question of whether the effect of single-sex education is context-specific, with the exception of two studies. Baker et al. (1995) point to cross-national variation in the size of single-sex/coeducational effect and suggest that this variation is likely to be related to the size and selectivity (“national context”) of the single-sex sector. In countries, such as New Zealand and Belgium, where the single-sex sector is larger, between-sector differences in achievement are small and mostly non-significant. In contrast, in countries such as Thailand, where the single-sex sector is small and selective, girls do better academically in single-sex schools. However, the orientation of single-sex schools is also important since in Japan females do worse in single-sex schools, which are traditionally oriented towards “educating” females for higher status marriage but not competitive careers. Gorard and Smith (2004), using data from the PISA survey, explore cross-national variation in the proportion of single-sex schools. They find no relationship between size of the single-sex sector and the gender gap in literacy scores. However, they find a strong correlation between the size of the single-sex sector and the proportion of religious schools, reflecting the historical origins of many single-sex schools.

Subject Take-up

12The introduction indicated that girls and boys may construct their gender identities differently in coeducational and single-sex settings. On this basis, we might expect to see differences in the take-up of traditionally “male” or “female” subjects across school sectors. In keeping with this hypothesis, a number of studies have pointed to more gender-stereotyped subject attitudes and choices in coeducational schools. Thus, girls in coeducational schools have been found to have less favourable attitudes to “male” subjects such as mathematics and physical sciences (Vockell and Lobonc 1981; Bryan and Digby 1986; Stables 1990; Gill 1992). Differential attitudes translate into the greater take-up of “male” subjects among girls in single-sex schools (Ormerod 1975; Shaw 1976; Ditchburn and Martin 1986; Spender and Sarah 1980; Deem 1984; Bone 1983). In Catholic schools in the US, girls in single-sex schools show a greater interest in mathematics and are more likely to enrol on mathematics courses (Lee and Bryk 1986). In England, Spielhofer et al. (2004) indicate higher enrolment on higher level mathematics and science among both girls and boys in single-sex schools. Girls in single-sex schools are somewhat less likely to take traditionally “female” subjects (such as foreign languages and Food Technology). However, contrary to expectations, boys in single-sex schools were even less likely than coeducational boys to take non-traditional subjects. In fact, such findings are not universal. In the US, analyses by Marsh (1991) found no difference in mathematics, science and vocational course take-up between single-sex and coeducational Catholic schools. Similarly, in Australia, Ainley and Daly (2002) found that, all things being equal, there were no significant differences between single-sex and coeducational schools in the take-up of physical sciences or biology. In the Irish context too, the take-up of science subjects is found to reflect school-level characteristics rather than the gender mix of the school (Smyth and Hannan 2006).

Personal and Social Development

13As well as looking at the educational processes involved, a number of studies have assessed the extent to which single-sex education can influence aspects of personal and social development among young people. There appears to be a general consensus that male and female students in coeducational settings are more positive about their schools and about the developmental aspects of their schooling (Feather 1974; Schneider and Coutts 1982; Schneider, Coutts, and Starr 1988; Stables 1990). For example, Dale (1969, 1971, 1974) found that both boys and girls were more satisfied with coeducation, seeing it as a more “natural” environment and feeling it helped their relationships with the opposite sex. Similarly, Hannan and Shortall (1991) found that male and female ex-students of coeducational schools in Ireland were more positive about the personal and social development aspects of their schooling.

14The picture is once again more complex when other aspects of self-concept are considered. In a systematic review of studies concerning a wide range of measures including locus of control, attitudes to school, and homework engagement, the results are almost evenly divided between those favouring single-sex education and those finding no statistically significant differences (Mael et al. 2005). Some studies have indicated that girls are more likely to develop higher academic, and socially competent, self-images in the less competitive environment of single-sex classrooms and schools (Carpenter 1985; Mahony 1985; Rowe 1988). Thus, girls in single-sex schools are more positive about their own abilities and their control over their lives, have less stereotyped gender role attitudes and hold higher aspirations for the future (Bryk et al. 1993; see also Cairns 1990). Other studies have explored self-concept across different subject areas. Sullivan (2009) indicates that the gender gap in self-concepts (with males having higher ratings of their aptitude in mathematics and science, and females in English) is reduced in single-sex settings. Thus, to some degree, single-sex schooling promotes a gender-atypical self-concept. In contrast, other studies (see, for example, Marsh 1991) have indicated no significant differences in academic self-concept and locus of control when systematic comparisons are made. Indeed, a small number of studies indicate that single-sex schools may be more academically competitive with consequent negative effects on academic self-image (Schneider et al. 1988).

Adult Outcomes

15Fewer research studies have looked at the longer term consequences of having attended a single-sex school (Mael et al. 2005). Sullivan et al. (2010), in Britain, find no difference in the attainment of post-school qualifications or in literacy and numeracy scores tested at age 42. However, in keeping with their findings on reduced subject stereotyping, they find that women who attended a single-sex school are more likely to study “male” subjects and less likely to study “female” subjects at their highest post-school qualification. Similarly, Billger (2009) finds no significant differences in college entry rates in the US (see also Marsh 1991). However, a number of studies have indicated that single-sex school-leavers tend to enter the least segregated fields of study within college education (Karpiak et al. 2007; Billger 2009; Sax 2009). In relation to labour market outcomes, Marsh (1991) finds no differences in the likelihood of post-secondary unemployment in the US, in contrast to Woodward et al. (1999) who suggest lower post-school unemployment chances among single-sex-educated males and females in New Zealand. Billger (2009) finds variable results in relation to income in the US, with some income gains for African Americans and low income groups. Overall, very few studies have looked at the labour market impact of single-sex schooling.

The rebirth of single-sex education?

16The discussion so far has indicated cross-national variation in the size of the single-sex sector. Recent years have seen a rebirth of single-sex schooling, either in the form of single-sex classes within otherwise coeducational schools or in separate single-sex schools, in a number of countries including the US, Britain and Australia (Datnow and Hubbard 2002; Younger and Warrington 2005). Such interventions have had different motivations, relating to a desire to address male underachievement and/or to promote mathematics and science course take-up and achievement among girls. This subsection considers the nature of such initiatives and their consequences for student outcomes.

17In the United States, the legality of single-sex provision in public schools was unclear until 2006. Before then, a number of initiatives had been introduced regarding single-sex schooling. The 1990s saw the Single-Gender Academies Pilot Program in California, initially intended to provide single-sex schools but subsequently focussing on providing single-gender classes within coeducational schools. Teachers saw the initiative as “working for the girls” but that “boys were becoming more troublesome” (Herr and Arms 2002). Issues were raised about the lack of attention to challenging gender stereotypes and about the fact that the intervention was driven by the desire to improve test results rather than to foster gender equity (Herr and Arms 2002). Within a very short period, the number of California districts providing single-sex classes had reduced significantly. The sustainability of the initiative has been seen as being undermined by a lack of clear commitment among administrators and teachers to single-sex education as well as principal and teacher turnover and concerns over legality (Hubbard and Datnow 2002).

18In 2006, the Department of Education confirmed the legality of single-sex classes in the US (Billger 2009; Spielhagen 2008), and, since then, there has been a proliferation of single-sex provision. In 2008, 442 public schools in the US offered single-sex education, mostly through single-sex classes within coeducational schools (Datnow and Hubbard 2008), and this figure grew to over 500 in 2009 (Jackson 2010). As with the earlier California initiative, schools are found to differ in their motivations for introducing single-sex education which, in conjunction with different school and class climates, is likely to lead to variable outcomes for students (Datnow and Hubbard 2008). Streitmatter (2002) examined perceptions of students in single-sex mathematics classes (which were taught by the same teacher) in one US public high school. Girls reported less distraction and more self-confidence in their mathematics ability, which they contrasted with male dominance and misbehaviour in other classes. Boys had more neutral views but felt being in a single-sex class had made no difference to their mathematics achievement. Positive results from such interventions have also been reported by Salomone (2006) but it is too early for any effects of the expansion of single-sex schooling in the US to be apparent.

19In Britain, the Raising Boys’ Achievement initiative was introduced in 2000 to combat male underachievement: one of the measures introduced was the use of single-sex classrooms. Younger and Warrington (2006) reported mixed results in relation to actual achievement levels and varying perceptions across the case-study schools of the value of single-sex schooling, related in part to teacher commitment to the concept. They suggest that single-sex classes have the potential to raise the achievement of both boys and girls and to have a positive influence on learning climate but only if “developed within gender relational contexts” (Younger and Warrington 2006, 579) – that is, in ways which challenge existing gender stereotypes. A study of all-female computer science classes revealed positive effects on achievement (Crombie et al. 2002) as did single-sex physics classes for girls (Gillibrand et al. 1999). However, some studies of single-sex mathematics classes indicated no significant effects for either boys or girls (Marsh and Rowe 1996; Dunlap 2002; Gilson 2002).

20In parts of Canada, single-sex classes were introduced in the 1980s and 1990s to address low take-up of – and achievement in – mathematics and science among girls. Research indicated that single-sex schooling did not necessarily result in learning gains (Demers and Bennett 2007). Teachers and students were found to be positive about the safe and secure climate in single-sex classrooms, but challenges remained in bringing about a fully inclusive climate and in actively promoting gender equity (Sanford and Blair 2002). This section has indicated mixed findings from interventions promoting single-sex education. However, a number of common issues can be identified from existing studies. Firstly, single-sex classes are rarely introduced in isolation from other school reform measures: “Single-sex arrangements are often part of multi-faceted educational reforms that include changes in curriculum delivery and discipline policies.” (Spielhagen 2008) It is therefore often difficult to disentangle the effects of single-sex schooling from those of related interventions (Herr and Arms 2002; Younger and Warrington 2006). Secondly, such interventions have been criticised for relying on essentialist notions, positing “false binaries” of “male” and “female”, rather than allowing for differences within as well as between groups of male and female students (Jackson 2010). Consequently, single-sex schooling on its own is unlikely to be effective unless it challenges dominant notions of masculinity and femininity (Jackson 2002; Younger and Warrington 2006).

Conclusions

21This article has attempted to summarise the main research findings on the potential impact of single-sex education on student outcomes. It points to considerable variation between and within countries in the conclusions reached, depending on the research methods and analytical techniques employed, and outcomes considered. There appears to be very little consensus on whether single-sex education is advantageous to girls’ or boys’ academic achievement. However, there does appear to be, at least tentative, evidence that attitudes to subject areas may become more gender-stereotyped in a coeducational setting. Looking at studies of single-sex education raises a number of broader issues for educational research. The first issue relates to the societal context within which coeducational and single-sex education take place. With a few notable exceptions, researchers have tended to neglect the potential influence of the national context on the processes at play. In particular, there appears to be considerable potential for the future in exploring the potential relationship between the broader “gender régime” (Connell 2002) and way in which gender is constructed (and reconstructed) within single-sex and coeducational schools.

22Secondly, it is difficult to systematically compare single-sex and coeducational schools or classes. In many countries, single-sex schools are highly selective in their social and ability profile; even in countries with a larger number of single-sex schools, the two school sectors differ in their intake. How then do we “control” for these differences in assessing the impact of single-sex education? Researchers have used a variety of statistical techniques (including multilevel modelling) but any such techniques will not solve the problem of comparison if the two sectors are very different indeed. Researchers have also differed about the kinds of variables to be controlled for in looking at the net impact of single-sex grouping. Some control for intake differences (such as social background and prior ability or achievement) while others control for a number of school climate factors. This raises very important questions as to the appropriate comparison to be made: are we concerned with the differences that result from having a mixed gender setting per se or from the broader nexus of school factors that are often characteristic of single-sex schools? More clearly specifying the basis of comparison may provide a way forward in assessing the merits of single-sex and coeducational education.

Haut de page

Bibliographie

Ainley, J., and P. Daly. 2002. Participation in science courses in the final year of high school in Australia. In , ed. A. Datnow and L. Hubbard, 243-262. New York: RoutledgeFalmer.

Askew, S., and C. Ross. 1988. . Milton Keynes: Open University Press.

Baker, D. P., C. Riordan, and M. Schaub. 1995. The effects of sex-grouped schooling on achievement: The role of national context. 39:468-482.

Billger, S. M. 2009. On reconstructing school segregation: The efficacy and equity of single-sex schooling.  28:393-402.

BONE, A. 1983. . Manchester: Equal Opportunities Commission.BRYAN, K., AND A. DIGBY. 1986. Performance in maths and science at 16 plus: A case for coeducational schooling?  9:9-19.

BRYK, A., V. LEE, AND P. HOLLAND. 1993.  Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.

CAIRNS, E. 1990. The relationship between adolescent perceived self-competence and attendance at single-sex secondary school.  60:207-211.

Carpenter, P. 1985. Single-sex schooling and girls’ academic achievements. 21:456-472.

COLEMAN, J. S. 1961. . New York: Free Press of Glencoe.

Connell, R. W. 2002. . Cambridge: Polity Press.

Crombie, G., T. Arbarbanel, and A. Trinneer. 2002. All-female classes in high school computer science: Positive effects in three years of data.  27:385-409.

Dale, R. 1969. Vol. 1 of  London: Routledge / Kegan Paul.

Dale, R. 1971. Vol. 2 of  London: Routledge / Kegan Paul.

Dale, R. 1974. Vol. 3 of  London: Routledge/Kegan Paul.

Daly, P. 1995. Science course participation and science achievement in single-sex and co-educational schools.  9:91-98.

Daly, P. 1996. The effects of single-sex and coeducational schooling on girls’ achievement.  11:289-306.

Daly, P., and I. Shuttleworth. 1997. Determinants of public examination entry and attainment in mathematics: Evidence on gender and gender-type of school from the 1980s and 1990s in Northern Ireland.  11:91-101.

Datnow, A., and L. Hubbard, eds. 2002. . New York: RoutledgeFalmer.

Datnow, A., and L. Hubbard. 2008. What is the place for single sex schooling in public education? , October 13.

Deem, R. ed. 1984. . Milton Keynes: Open University Press.

Demers, S., and C. Bennett. 2007. Single-sex classrooms. In . Ontario: Literacy and Numeracy Secretariat.

Ditchburn, G., and J. Martin. 1986.  Victoria: Non-government Schools Participation and Equity Project.

Dunlap, C. E. 2002. An Examination of gender differences in today’s mathematics classrooms: Exploring single-sex mathematics classrooms. Master’s thesis, Cedarville University. http://www.eric.ed.gov/ERICDocs/data/ericdocs2sql/content_storage_01/0000019b/80/1a/30/bf.pdf.

FEATHER, N. T. 1974. Coeducation, values and satisfaction with school.  66:9-15.

Francis, B. 2000. . London: RoutledgeFalmer.

Francis, B. 2004. Classroom interaction and access: Whose space is it? In , ed. H. Claire, 42-49. London: Association of Teachers and Lecturers.

GARCIA, D. M. 1998. Single-sex vs. coeducational public schooling for girls: A high school comparison study.  59, 2434A.

Gill, J. 1992. Rephrasing the question about single-sex schooling. In , ed. A. Reid and B. Johnson. Adelaide: Painters Prints.

Gillibrand, E., P. Robinson, R. Brawn, and A. Osborn. 1999. Girls’ participation in physics in single-sex classes in mixed schools in relation to confidence and achievement.  21:349-362.

Gilson, J. E. 2002. Single-gender education versus coeducation for girls. Paper presented at the annual meeting of the American Educational Research Association conference, Montréal. http://www.eric.ed.gov/ERICDocs/data/ericdocs2sql/content_storage_01/0000019b/80/17/8c/ad.pdf.

GOLDSTEIN, H., J. RASBASH, M. YANG, G. WOODHOUSE, H. PAN, D. NUTTALL, AND S. THOMAS. 1993. A multilevel analysis of school examination results.  19:425-433.

GORARD, S., AND E. SMITH. 2004. An international comparison of equity in education systems.  40:15-28.

HANNAN, D. F., AND S. SHORTALL. 1991.  Dublin: ESRI.

Hannan, D. F., E. Smyth, J. McCullagh, R. O’Leary, AND D. McMahon. 1996.  Dublin: Oak Tree Press / ESRI.

Harker, R. 2000. Achievement, gender and the single-sex/coed debate.  21:203-218.

Harker, R., and R. Nash. 1997. Paper presented at the American Educational Research Association conference, Chicago.

Herr, K., and E. Arms. 2002. The intersection of educational reforms: Single-gender academies in a public middle school. In , eds. A. Datnow and L. Hubbard, 74-89. New York: RoutledgeFalmer.

Howe, C. 1997. . Edinburgh: SCRE.

HUBBARD, L., AND A. DATNOW. 2002. Are single-sex schools sustainable in the public sector? In , eds. A. Datnow and L. Hubbard. New York: RoutledgeFalmer.

Jackson, C. 2002. “Laddishness” as a self-worth protection strategy.  14:37-51.

JACKSON, J. 2010. “Dangerous presumptions”: How single-sex schooling reifies false notions of sex, gender, and sexuality.  22:227-238.

Karpiak, c. p., j. p. buchanan, M. hosey, and a. smith. 2007. University students from single-sex and coeducational high schools: Differences in majors and attitudes at a Catholic university.  31:282-289.

LEE, V. E., AND A. S. BRYK. 1986. Effects of single sex secondary schools on student achievement and attitudes.  78:381-395.

LEE, V. E., AND A. S. BRYK. 1989. Effects of single-sex schools: A response to Marsh.  81:647-650.

LEE V. E., H. MARKS, AND T. BYRD. 1994. Sexism in single-sex and coeducational independent secondary school classrooms.  67:92-120.

Mael F., A. Alonso, D. Gibson, K. Rogers, and M. Smith. 2005. . Washington, DC: US Department of Education.

MAHONY, P. 1985. . London: Hutchinson.

Malacova, E. 2007. Effect of single-sex education on progress in GCSE.  33:233-259.

MARSH, H. 1989a. The effects of attending single-sex and Catholic coeducational high schools on achievement, attitudes and behaviours and on sex differences.  81:70-85.

MARSH, H. 1989b. The effects of single-sex and co-educational schools: A response to Lee and Bryk. 81:651-653.

MARSH, H. 1991. Public, Catholic single-sex and Catholic coeducational high schools: Their effects on achievement, affect and behaviours. 99:320-356.

Marsh, H., and K. Rowe. 1996. The effects of single-sex and mixed-sex mathematics classes within a coeducational school.  40:147-162.

Mendick, H. 2005. A beautiful myth? The gendering of being/doing “good at maths”. 17:203-219.

Nuttall, D. L., H. Goldstein, R. Prosser, and J. Rasbash. 1989. Differential school effectiveness.  13:769-776.

ORMEROD, M. B. 1975. Subject preference and choice in coeducational and single-sex secondary schools.  45:257-267.

Riordan, C. 1985. Public and Catholic schooling: The effects of gender context policy.  93:518-540.

Riordan, C. 1994. Single-gender schools: Outcomes for Africans and Hispanic Americans.  10:177-206.

Riordan, C. 2002. What do we know about the effects of single-sex schools in the private sector? Implications for public schools. In , eds. A. Datnow and L. Hubbard. New York: RoutledgeFalmer.

ROWE, K. 1988. Single-sex and mixed-sex classes: The effect of class type on student achievement, confidence and participation in mathematics.  32:180-202.

Salomone, R. 2006. Single-sex programs: Resolving the research conundrum. 108:778-802.

Sanford, K., and H. Blair. 2002. Engendering public education: Single-sex schooling in western Canada. In , eds. A. Datnow and L. Hubbard. New York: RoutledgeFalmer.

SAX, L. J. 2009. . Los Angeles: Sudikoff Family Institute for Education & New Media.

SCHNEIDER, F., AND L. COUTTS. 1982. The high-school environment: A comparison of coeducational and single-sex schools. 74:898-906.

SCHNEIDER, F., L. COUTTS, AND M. W. STARR. 1988. In favour of coeducation: The educational attitudes of students from coeducational and single-sex high schools. 13:479-496.

SHAW, J. 1976. Finishing school: Some implications of sex-segregated education. In , eds. D. Barker and S. Allen. London: Tavistock.

Smithers, A., and P. Robinson. 2006. . Buckingham: Carmichael Press.

Smyth, E. 2007. Gender and education. In , eds. M. Duru-Bellat and R. Teese. Springer Press: International Handbook on Education Series.

Smyth, E., and C. Hannan. 2006. School effects and subject choice: The uptake of scientific subjects in Ireland.  17:303-327.

SPENDER, D., AND E. SARAH, eds. 1980.  London: The Women’s Press.

SPIELHAGEN, F. R. 2008. Single-sex education: Policy, practice, and pitfalls. , October 7.

Spielhofer, T., T. Benton, and S. Schagen. 2004. A study of the effects of school size and single-sex education in English schools.  19:133-159.

STABLES, A. 1990. Differences between pupils from mixed and single-sex schools in their enjoyment of school subjects and in their attitudes to sciences and to school.  42:221-230.

STEEDMAN, J. 1983a.  Manchester: Equal Opportunities Commission.

STEEDMAN, J. 1983b.  London: National Children’s Bureau.

Streitmatter, J. 2002. Perceptions of a single-sex class experience: Females and males see it differently. In , eds. A. Datnow and L. Hubbard. New York: RoutledgeFalmer.

Sullivan, A. 2009. Academic self-concept, gender and single-sex schooling.  35:259-288.

Sullivan, A., H. Joshi, and D. Leonard. 2010. Single-sex schooling and academic attainment at school and through the lifecourse.  47:6-36.

Thomas, S., H. Pan, and H. Goldstein. 1994. . London: AMA/Institute of Education, University of London.

VOCKELL, E. L., AND S. LOBONC. 1981. Sex-role stereotyping by high school females in science. 18:209-219.

Warrington, M., and M. Younger. 2000. The other side of the gender gap. 12:
493-508.

Woodward, l. j., d. m. fergusson, and l. j. horwood. 1999. Effects of single-sex and coeducational secondary schooling on children’s academic achievement. 43:142-156.

YATES, J., AND J. FIRKIN. 1986. . Victoria: Curriculum Assessment Board.

YOUNG, D. 1994. Single-sex schools and physics achievement: Are girls really advantaged?  16:315-325.

YOUNG, D. J., AND B. J. FRASER. 1990. Science achievement of girls in single-sex and coeducational schools.  8:5-20.

YOUNG, D. J., AND B. J. FRASER. 1992. . Paper presented at the American Educational Research Association annual conference, San Francisco.

YOUNGER, M. R., AND M. WARRINGTON. 2005. . In collaboration with J. Gray, J. Rudduck, R. McLellan, E. Bearne, R. Kershner, and P. Bricheno. London: Department for Education and Skills.

Younger, M. R., and M. Warrington. 2006. Would Harry and Hermione have done better in single-sex classes?  43:579-620.

Haut de page

Pour citer cet article

Référence papier

Emer Smyth, « Single-sex Education: What Does Research Tell Us? »Revue française de pédagogie, 171 | 2010, 47-58.

Référence électronique

Emer Smyth, « Single-sex Education: What Does Research Tell Us? »Revue française de pédagogie [En ligne], 171 | avril-juin 2010, mis en ligne le 01 juin 2014, consulté le 18 avril 2024. URL : http://journals.openedition.org/rfp/1896 ; DOI : https://doi.org/10.4000/rfp.1896

Haut de page

Auteur

Emer Smyth

emer.smyth@esri.ie
Social Research Division,
Economic and Social Research Institute

Haut de page

Droits d’auteur

CC-BY-NC-ND-4.0

Le texte seul est utilisable sous licence CC BY-NC-ND 4.0. Les autres éléments (illustrations, fichiers annexes importés) sont « Tous droits réservés », sauf mention contraire.

Haut de page
Rechercher dans OpenEdition Search

Vous allez être redirigé vers OpenEdition Search