31 January 2024

Are the days of single-sex schools over?

| Zoya Patel
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school grounds

Newington College has plans to admit girls by its 170th anniversary in 2033. Photo: Newington College.

On the first day of the new school year, parents of boys attending Newington College in Sydney gathered outside the school to protest against the announced decision to make the school co-ed by 2033.

Although they clearly want to retain the status quo of what they deem to be an ‘elite’ all-boys private school, the exact reasons why they’re so angry are harder to discern from the interviews.

In fact, I struggle to understand why parents choose to send their kids to single-sex schools in the first place – presumably, it’s based on some ideological standpoint about how children learn better when segregated by sex. Or perhaps it’s simpler than that and parents just want their kids to have the same school experience they had at the same institutions they attended.

Personally, I can’t think of anything worse than a single-sex school, and considering the shift to co-ed that many private schools are undergoing (including Canberra Grammar, which has been fully co-ed since 2018), I’m not alone in this opinion. There is no consistent research that can demonstrate that single-sex education results in better academic outcomes for boys or girls, whereas it’s not hard to see the social and psychological benefits of co-educational environments on all kids.

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For a start, school is an important opportunity for young people to learn about social dynamics and engage with more people outside their immediate family and friends. This should include all genders, just as their future interactions in society will include all genders.

Equally, having diversity of all kinds in classrooms leads to more various and holistic discussions inclusive of more perspectives, which is vital to creating well-rounded world views.

But beyond those obvious benefits, it has to be acknowledged that gender identities are more fluid than the binary of boys and girls, and separating students is no longer as simple as picking a school according to the sex they were assigned at birth.

Regardless of your views on non-binary or transgender identities, they exist and it’s understandable that young people don’t want to be categorised in contradiction to how they identify. Equally, as young people grow and explore their gender identities or sexualities, being in an environment where they can experiment without drawing attention or being distinctly in the minority is important to offering a safe space for their development.

Up until now, it has seemed like a simple enough issue – both co-ed and single-sex schools exist, and the choice has been left up to parents.

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As more single-sex schools make the shift to integrating all genders, however, it seems the writing is on the wall – it isn’t financially viable to stay single-sex, with enrolments dwindling and the social tide turning towards co-ed.

I’m glad to see this change, but I am also aware that I attended co-educational public schools and only ever heard the negatives of single-sex education from friends anecdotally.

Reading about the parents protesting at Newington College, I couldn’t work out if their frustration was about the change to the traditions of an institution many feel a close connection to as alumni or if there were more specific concerns about the impact on boys already attending the school.

Am I missing something here? Do you send your kids to single-sex schools, and if so, why? Or am I right in thinking the days of single-sex schools existing are numbered?

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Australia is a multicultural country now. Perhaps rather than generalising from a single (Western elite) viewpoint and then emptily pontificating about diversity, punditry on this issue should consider the possibility that other creeds may have entirely different ideas than the new elite-centred conformity around gender ideology.

William Newby9:21 am 04 Feb 24

Private boys schools are obviously fair game, as we have seen here in the ACT.
But imagine the outcry in society if a private girls school was overrun by boys.

GrumpyGrandpa9:09 pm 03 Feb 24

I went to an agricultural, all boys boarding-school. It was a school that farmers sent their sons, pending their return to the farm. Agricultural was one of our subjects, in addition to the practical experience of running the school’s commercial dairy, piggery, poultry and vegetable gardens. There were strong sporting culture, particularly in football and cricket.

45 years later, that boarding school now has more girls than boys. The on-farm operations have been reduced and the strong sporting culture has basically vanished. Farm girls like horses, so equine activities now have a big focus.

While the author uses the term single-sex schools, the reality is that it’s the all boys schools in the news. I’m not aware of any all girl schools opening their doors to boys.

Just like the single-sex (all boys) school I went to, the reason these all boy schools are now being forced into accepting girls, has nothing to do with changing community standards or the academic inadequacy of single-sex schools, it’s simply about economics; falling enrolments and fees.

While this article argues that single-sex schools should make way for co-ed students, Genevieve Jacobs argues that boys should be held back from schooling. IE start school a year later than girls.

The boys can’t win. Boys only schools should become co-ed. Boys should be held back from school for an extra year.

With boys and girls being different, if anything, I’d argue that a single-sex schools might be the better option.

It’s true. All of it. All of it is true. In the past, when all boys’ schools were never challenged, thanks to the more conservative culture in this country, in general, at that time, boys and girls were so misguided as to think that there were only two genders that were assigned at birth. The anguish caused by this mental instability must have been awful, and so it’s wonderful to see that, as the march of progress continues at pace, boys and girls have become much more psychologically healthy, which has seen a considerable increase in them identifying as practically anything they want. That, at the same time as all this, statistics show mental health problems being drastically on the rise, is something, I’m sure, that can just be ignored, as it couldn’t possibly say anything about the progress we see everywhere, and the 180 degree changes it brings into peoples’ lives.

@Vasily M
I have to admit, I can’t disagree with what you say – primarily because I can make no sense whatsoever of what you are on about.

Their days are over if they are boy’s schools. If the same happened to a girl’s school there would be no end to justifications why girl’s should have separate school. Typical of the diversity brigade these days!

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