The Boys Are All Right
By DAVID VON DREHLE
Fri Jul 27, 5:10 PM ET
My son was born nearly 10
years ago, and I remember telling him that morning that he
was one lucky baby. Forget Dr. Spock or Dr. Brazelton--I
took my cue from Dr. Pangloss. If this was not the best of
all possible worlds, it was certainly the best time and best
place to be starting out healthy and free in a land of vast
possibilities. In the months and years that followed,
however, there came a steady stream of books and essays
warning that I had missed something ominous: our little guy
had entered a soul-crushing world of anti-boy influences.
There was, for example,
Harvard psychologist William Pollack's Real Boys (1998),
which asserted that contemporary boys are "scared and
disconnected," "severely lagging" behind
girls in both achievement and self-confidence. The following
year, journalist Susan Faludi argued in Stiffed that the
cold calculus of global economics was emasculating American
men. In 2000 philosopher Christina Hoff Sommers blamed
off-the-rails feminism for sparking The War Against Boys,
and two years later writer Elizabeth Gilbert found The Last
American Man living in a teepee in the Appalachian
Mountains. By the time our boy was headed to third grade,
magazine editors were grinding out cover headlines like BOY
TROUBLE and THE BOY CRISIS, and I was getting worried. The
voyage to manhood had come to seem as perilous and
flummoxing as the future of Iraq.
It's enough to make people
long for the good old days. Sure enough, one of the hot
books of the summer is a zestfully nostalgic celebration of
boyhood past. The Dangerous Book for Boys, by brothers Hal
and Conn Iggulden, flits from fossils to tree houses, from
secret codes to go-carts, from the Battle of Gettysburg to
the last voyage of Robert Falcon Scott. A sensation last
year in Britain, the book has been at or near the top of the
New York Times best-seller list since late spring.
The Dangerous Book, bound
in an Edwardian red cover with marbled endpapers, has many
of the timeless qualities of an ideal young man: curiosity,
bravery and respectfulness; just enough rogue to leaven the
stoic; an appetite for any challenge, from hunting small
game to mastering the rules of grammar. It celebrates trial
and error, vindicates the noble failure. Rudyard Kipling
would have loved it.
These charms alone can't
explain the popularity of an amalgam of coin tricks,
constellations and homemade magnets, however. Clearly, The
Dangerous Book has tapped into a larger anxiety about how
we're raising young men. This is a subject worth digging
into, because it reflects not just on our sons but also on
their sisters, on the kind of world these kids might make
together--and on the adults who love them, however imperfect
we prove to be. With fresh eyes on fresh facts, we might
find that an upbeat message to a newborn boy is not so
misguided after all.
THE MYTH OF THE BOY CRISIS
"I don't think anyone
will deny that girls are academically superior as a group.
Girls are more academically powerful. They make the grades,
they run the student activities, they are the
valedictorians."
Christina Hoff Sommers, a
fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, was explaining
how she came to worry deeply about boys. In the book-lined
parlor of her suburban Washington home, she ticked through a
familiar but disturbing indictment: More boys than girls are
in special-education classes. More boys than girls are
prescribed mood-managing drugs. This suggests to her (and
others) that today's schools are built for girls, and boys
are becoming misfits. As a result, more boys than girls drop
out of high school. Boys don't read as well as girls. And
America's prisons are packed with boys and former boys.
Meanwhile, fewer boys than
girls take the SAT. Fewer boys than girls apply to college.
Fewer boys than girls, in annual surveys of college
freshmen, express a passion for learning. And fewer boys
than girls are earning college degrees. Even sperm counts
are falling. "It's true at every level of society"
that boys are stumbling behind, Sommers continued.
Observers of the boy crisis
contend that families, schools and popular culture are
failing our boys, leaving them restless bundles of
anxiety--misfits in the classroom and video-game junkies at
home. They suffer from an epidemic of "anomie," as
Harvard psychologist William Pollack told me, adrift in a
world of change without the help they need to find their
way. Even in the youngest grades, test-oriented teachers
focus energy on conventional exercises in reading, writing
and other seatwork, areas in which girls tend to excel. At
the same time, schools are cutting science labs, physical
education and recess, where the experiential learning styles
of boys come into play. No wonder, the theory goes, our boys
get jittery, grow disruptive and eventually tune out.
"A boy will get a reputation as hell on wheels that
follows him from one teacher to the next, and soon they're
coming down on him even before he screws up. So he learns to
hate school," says Mike Miller, an elementary school
teacher in North Carolina. Miller's principal has ordered
every faculty member to read a book this summer titled Hear
Our Cry: Boys in Crisis.
In short, society treats
"boyhood as toxic, as a pathology," says Sommers--who
may have been guilty of this herself when she wrote several
years ago that the Columbine killers were emblematic of
turn-of-the-century boyhood. But she's right that it's not
girls who are shooting up their classrooms--and boys are at
least five times as likely as girls to die by suicide.
There are statistics to
back up every point in that sad litany, but I also found
people eager to flay nearly every statistic. For instance:
Is it bad that more boys are in special education, or should
we be pleased that they are getting extra help from
specially trained teachers? And haven't boys always tended
to be more restless than girls under the discipline of high
school and more likely to wind up in jail? A growing
congregation of writers have begun to argue that the trouble
with boys is mostly a myth. Sara Mead is one; she was until
recently a senior policy analyst at Education Sector, a
Washington think tank largely funded by the Gates
Foundation. Intrigued by the wave of books and articles
about failing boys, Mead crunched some numbers, focusing
narrowly on the question of school performance. The former
Clinton Administration official concluded that "with a
few exceptions, American boys are scoring higher and
achieving more than they ever have before."
In particular, Mead decided
that boys from middle- and upper-income families--especially
white families--are doing just fine. "The biggest issue
is not a gender gap. It is these gaps for minority and
disadvantaged boys," she told me recently in the think
tank's conference room. Boys overall are holding their own
or even improving on standardized tests, she said; they're
just not improving as quickly as girls. And their total
numbers in college are rising, albeit not as sharply as the
numbers of girls. To Mead, a good-news story about the
achievements of girls and young women has been turned into a
bad-news story about laggard boys and young men.
The more I probed, the more
I realized that the subject of boys is a bog of sociology in
which a clever researcher, given a little time, can unearth
evidence to support almost any point of view. I also came to
the sad realization that this field, like so many others,
has been infiltrated by our left-right political noise
machine. Our boys have become cannon fodder in the
unresolved culture wars waged by their parents and
grandparents. On one side, concern for boys is waved off as
a mere "backlash against the women's movement," as
two writers declared dismissively in the Washington Post
last year. The opposing side views any divergence from the
crisis theme as male-bashing feminism.
Then I came across a new
report from the Federal Government: Uncle Sam's annual
attempt to paint a broad statistical portrait of the
nation's young people. In long rows of little numbers
printed on page after page of tables, this report told a
different story from that of either the woe bearers or the
myth busters.
WHAT THE NUMBERS SAY
"America's Children:
Key National Indicators of Well-Being, 2007" is the
work of many agencies, from the Department of Justice to the
Department of Education to the Bureau of the Census and
beyond. It gathers a trove of data, and as I made my way
through it, I concluded that there's real substance to the
boy crisis, and there have been good-faith reasons for
sounding an alarm.
Statistics collected over
two decades show an alarming decline in the performance of
America's boys--in some respects, a virtual free fall. Boys
were doing poorly in school, abusing drugs, committing
violent crimes and engaging in promiscuous sex. Young males
lost ground by many behavioral indicators at some point in
the 1980s and '90s: sharp plunges on some scales, long
erosions on others. I was forced to confront a fact that I
had secretly known all along: that teens of 30 years ago--my
generation--were the leading edge of an epidemic of thugs,
dolts and cads.
No wonder so many writers
began calling for change in the late 1990s. Reliable
social-science data often lag a couple of years behind the
calendar; it takes time to gather and compile a nation's
worth of numbers. Stories about social trends that you read
today may be describing the reality of 2004 or 2005. The
groundbreaking boy books were a response to statistics
portraying the worst of a physical, mental and moral health
crisis.
There's more to the story,
however. That downward slide has leveled off--and in many
cases, turned around. Boys today look pretty good compared
with their dads and older cousins. By some measures, our
boys are doing better than ever.
The juvenile crime rate in
2005 (the most recent year cited in the report) was down by
two-thirds from its peak in 1993. Other Justice Department
statistics show that the population of juvenile males in
prison is only half of its historic high. The number of high
school senior boys using illegal drugs has fallen by almost
half compared with the number in 1980. And the percentage of
high school boys drinking heavily is now the lowest on
record. When I was in high school, more than half of all
senior boys told researchers they had downed five or more
drinks in a row within the previous two weeks--a number that
I have no trouble believing. By last year, that figure was
fewer than 3 in 10.
Today's girls are also
doing well by these measures, but their successes in no way
diminish the progress of the boys. In fact, together our
kids are reversing one of the direst problems of the
previous generation: the teen-pregnancy epidemic. According
to the new report, fewer than half of all high school boys
and girls in 2005 were sexually active. For the boys, that's
a decrease of 10 percentage points from the early 1990s.
Boys who are having sex report that they are more
responsible about it: 7 in 10 are using condoms, compared
with about half in 1993. As a result, teen pregnancy and
abortion rates are now at their lowest recorded levels.
What about school? Boys in
the fourth, eighth and 12th grades all score better--though
not dramatically better--on math tests than did the
comparable boys of 1990. Reading, however, is a problem. The
standardized NAEP test, known as the nation's report card,
indicates that by the senior year of high school, boys have
fallen nearly 20 points behind their female peers. That's
bad, not because girls are ahead but because too many boys
are leaving school functionally illiterate. Pollack told me
of one study that found even the sons of college-educated
parents had a 1 in 4 chance of leaving school without
becoming proficient readers. In an economy increasingly
geared toward processing information, an inability to read
becomes an inability to earn. "You have to be literate
in today's world," says Sommers. "We're not going
to get away with not teaching boys to read."
Even here, though, there
may be grounds for a hopeful outlook. Boys at the fourth-
and eighth-grade levels are showing modest improvement in
reading and now trail their female classmates by slightly
smaller margins than before. If that's a sign of improved
teaching and parental focus on reading, then we ought to
expect gains in the higher grades soon.
"I think it would be
an error not to be optimistic," says Michael Gurian,
author of several books about raising boys. "But at the
same time there is reason to worry." He sketches the
sinking trajectory of undereducated males as blue-collar
jobs move to low-wage countries. Though definitive data on
the dropout rate are as elusive as Bigfoot, there's little
question that a worrisome gap is opening between boys who
finish high school and those who don't. Boys with diplomas
are now far more likely to go immediately to college than
the boys of my era were. Solution: we need more boys with
diplomas.
And that can be done. A
generation of enlightened teaching and robust encouragement
has awakened American girls to the need for higher
education. Women now outnumber men in college by a ratio of
4 to 3, and admissions officers at liberal-arts colleges are
struggling to find enough males to keep their classes close
to gender parity. "We've done wonderfully with girls.
Now let's do the same for boys," says Gurian. One way
to start might be to gear advanced training to
male-dominated occupations--already the case in many
female-oriented fields. Schoolteachers and librarians
(roughly 70% female) must go to college, but firefighters
and police officers (pushing 90% male)? Not necessarily. Top
executive secretaries are college educated; top carpenters
may not be.
About the only scale on
which today's boys are faring dramatically worse than the
boys of my era is the bathroom scale. When I was in high
school in the late 1970s, roughly 1 boy in 20 was obese;
today 1 boy in 5 is.
My favorite statistic
seemed to sum up all the others: fewer boys today are
deadbeats. The percentage of young men between 16 and 19 who
neither work nor attend school has fallen by about a quarter
since 1984. The greatest gains in this category have been
made by black youths. In 1984, 1 out of 3 young black men
ages 18 and 19 were neither in school nor working. That
proportion has been cut almost in half, to fewer than 1 in
5.
Today's boys may wear their
pants too damned baggy and go around with iPod buds in their
ears. They know everything about Xbox 360 and nothing about
paper routes. I doubt that they slog to school through deep
snow as I recall doing back before the globe warmed up. But
judging from the numbers, they are pulling themselves up
from the handbasket to hell.
SO WHERE DID WE GO RIGHT?
Unfortunately, it's one
thing to observe human behavior--count the crime reports and
the teen births and the diplomas awarded and so on--but
quite another to explain it. Popular science and the
best-seller lists skip eagerly from one theory to the next,
lingering with delight on the most provocative if not always
the most plausible. A recent paper suggested that falling
crime rates can be explained almost entirely by reduced lead
exposure in childhood. Which was odd, because last year
economist Steven Levitt's best seller Freakonomics chalked
up the improvement to legalized abortion, which, he
theorized, cut the number of unwanted children prone to wind
up as criminals.
Or take the teen-pregnancy
numbers. It's not enough to credit the virtues of
responsibility and better sex education. Something racier is
desired. According to some writers, fewer teens are getting
pregnant because they've all switched to oral sex. Or maybe
the phenomenon is due to a still unexplained decline in
sperm counts.
But before we go dizzy on
cleverness, let's pull out Occam's razor and consider a
simple possibility: maybe our boys are doing better because
we're paying them more attention. We're providing for them
better; the proportion of children living in poverty is down
roughly 2% from a spike in 1993. And we're giving them more
time. Parents--both fathers and mothers--are reordering
their priorities to focus on caring for their kids. Several
studies confirm this. Sociologists at the University of
Michigan have tracked a sharp increase in the amount of time
men spend with their children since the 1970s. Another
long-range survey, reported by University of Maryland
researchers, has asked parents since the 1960s to keep
detailed diaries of their daily activities. In 1965
child-focused care occupied about 13 hours per week, the
vast majority of it done by moms. By 1985 that had dropped
to 11 hours per week as moms entered the workforce. The 2005
study found parents spending 20 hours a week focused on
their kids--by far the highest number in the history of the
survey. Both moms and dads had dramatically shifted their
energies toward their kids.
Are there risks of
overparenting boys? Sure. And here's where the success of
The Dangerous Book gets interesting, because it suggests
that as parents spend more time with their sons, we may be
reconnecting with the fact that the differences between boys
and girls need not be threatening and that not all the lore
of the past about how to raise boys was wrong.
Gregory Hodge is a good
example of this return to tradition. He is principal at the
Frederick Douglass Academy, a public school in Harlem. His
school was one of three recently honored by the Schott
Foundation for excellence in educating black male
students--the most troubled cohort but also the group making
the greatest progress in many areas. Hodge told me that when
he arrived at the combination middle school and high school
11 years ago, the academy was already a great success--but
the student body was 80% female. The new principal made it
his business to recruit more boys. Today, of the academy's
1,450 mostly poor and minority students, half are male. Yet
the dropout rate remains virtually zero, and this year (like
most years) every member of the senior class graduated and
was college-bound. Every one.
Hodge says the secret is to
reach boys before they get into trouble--he uses the
academy's basketball facilities to lure youngsters still in
grade school. Once you have their attention, you must show
them a world of possibilities that you genuinely believe
they can achieve. "Young people are looking for
validation," he says. "You are important. You will
be successful. We don't talk about 'if' you go to college.
Around here it's 'when' you go to college."
Frederick Douglass Academy
students adhere to a strict dress code and accept rigid
discipline. Many of them virtually live at the school, even
on Saturdays, doing hours of homework, attending required
tutorials if they lag behind, participating in dozens of
sports and activities, from basketball to lacrosse and
ballet to botany. "Everything a private school would
offer a rich kid," Hodge explains. But within this
highly structured setting, the school recognizes that many
boys need room to learn in their own way. "Some of the
kids are hardheaded," Hodge says in a gravelly Bronx
roar. "That's what makes a boy. They've gotta
experiment, learn the hard way that his head won't break
concrete. Male students tend to want to find things out for
themselves--so why don't you use that as a teacher?
"I once had about 15
boys very close to dropping out," the principal
continues. "They weren't into sports. I had to find
something for them to get into. Finally I made a recording
studio for the little meatheads, and they ran with that. All
of them made it through to graduation. I'll try
anything--dance, chess, hydroponics, robotics--anything to
let these kids know that this is a world they can fit into,
where they can be successful."
THE BASICS OF BOYHOOD
Nothing Hodge says is
remotely ground-breaking or experimental--and that's
precisely the point. Only in recent decades have societies
seriously begun to unlock the full potential of girls, but
the cultivation of boys has been an obsession for thousands
of years. "How shall we find a gentle nature which also
has a great spirit?" Socrates asked some 2,500 years
ago--essentially the same question parents ask today.
Ours is far from the first
society to fear for its sons. Leo Braudy of the University
of Southern California, in his 2003 book From Chivalry to
Terrorism, noted recurring waves of anxiety. Europeans of
the 18th century imagined that free trade and the death of
feudalism would spell the end of honor and chivalry. Then,
with the dawn of the Industrial Age, writers like John
Stuart Mill worried that progress itself--with its speed and
stress and short attention spans--would cause a sort of
"moral effeminacy" and "inaptitude for every
kind of struggle." By the end of the 19th century, a
manhood malaise permeated the entire Western world: in
France it inspired Pierre de Coubertin to create the Olympic
movement; in Britain it moved Robert Baden-Powell to found
the Boy Scouts; in the U.S. it fueled a passion for the new
sport of football and helped make a hero of rough-riding
Theodore Roosevelt.
All these reforms shared a
common impulse to return to the basics of boyhood--quests,
competitions, tribal brotherhoods and self-discovery. There
was a recognition that the keys to building a successful boy
have remained remarkably consistent, whether a tribal
chieftain is preparing a young warrior or a knight is
training a squire or a craftsman is guiding an
apprentice--or Gregory Hodge is teaching his students. Boys
need mentors and structure but also some freedom to
experiment. They need a group to belong to and an opponent
to confront. As Gurian put it in The Wonder of Boys, they
must "compete and perform well to feel worthy."
The success of The
Dangerous Book for Boys is one sign of a society getting in
touch with these venerable truths. Nothing in the book
suggests that boys are better than girls, nor does the book
license destructive aggression. But it does exude the
confidence of ages past that boys are to be treasured, not
cured. "Is it old-fashioned?" the authors ask
themselves about their book. "Well, that depends. Men
and boys today are the same as they always were ... You want
to be self-sufficient and find your way by the stars."
A TRIP TO BOY HEAVEN
If The Dangerous Book were
a place, it would look like the Falling Creek Camp for Boys
in North Carolina--a rustic paradise complete with a rifle
range, nearby mountains to climb and a lake complete with
swimming dock and rope swing. The choice of activities at
the camp is dizzying, from soccer to blacksmithing, from
kayaking to watercolors, but no pastime is more popular than
building forts of fallen tree limbs and poking at turtles in
the creek. Leave your cell phones, laptops and iPods at
home.
There I met Margaret
Anderson, a pediatric nurse from Nashville and a member of
the faculty at Vanderbilt University. She works in the
infirmary while her 11-year-old son Gage discovers the woods
on multi-day pack trips. "I call this place Boy
Heaven," she says.
Falling Creek subscribes to
a philosophy of "structured freedom," which is
essentially the same philosophy paying dividends among boys
at the opposite end of the economic ladder at the Frederick
Douglass Academy. It works across the board, says Anderson,
and she wishes more of the boys she sees in her busy
Nashville practice lived lives of structured freedom too.
"Whether it's urban
kids who can't go outside because it's too dangerous or the
overscheduled, overparented kids at the other end of the
spectrum--I'm worried that boys have lost the chance to play
and to explore," Anderson told me. Our society takes a
dim view of idle time and casts a skeptical eye on free
play--play driven by a boy's curiosity rather than the
league schedule or the folks at Nintendo. But listen to
Anderson as she lists the virtues of letting boys run
themselves occasionally.
"When no one's looming
over them, they begin making choices of their own," she
says. "They discover consequences and learn to take
responsibility for themselves and their emotions. They start
learning self-discipline, self-confidence, team building. If
we don't let kids work through their own problems, we get a
generation of whiners."
That made sense to me. As I
watched the boys at Falling Creek do things that would scare
me to death if my own son were doing them--hammering
white-hot pieces of metal, clinging to a zip line two
stories above a lake, examining native rattlesnakes--I
didn't notice many whining boys. Yates Pharr, director of
Falling Creek, seemed to read my mind. "It's the
parents who have the anxieties nowadays, far more than the
boys," he said. "We've started posting photographs
of each day's activity on our website, and still I'll get
complaints if we don't have a picture of every camper every
day."
Worrying about our
boys--reading and writing books about them, wringing our
hands over dire trends and especially taking more time to
parent them--is paying off. The next step is to let them
really blossom, and for that we have to trust them, give
them room. The time for fearing our sons, or fearing for
their futures, is behind us. The challenge now is to believe
in them. [This article contains charts. Please see hardcopy
or pdf.]
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