What Boys Need Most

“Boys are found everywhere, on top of, underneath, inside of, climbing on, swinging from, running around or jumping to. A boy is Truth with dirt on its face, Beauty with a cut on its finger, Wisdom with bubble gum in its hair and the Hope of the future with a frog in its pocket.”
— Alan Beck quoted in Ian Lillico, Boys and Their Schooling (2000).

It is a risk being born a boy. Statistics show clearly that boys, and men, are more at risk of the following:

  • injury as the result of an accident;
  • admission to hospital as a result of an accident;
  • injury during sport;
  • injury doing risky behaviours;
  • failure at school;
  • death or injury in motor vehicle accidents;
  • offences involving criminal activity;
  • imprisonment;
  • being killed as a pedestrian;
  • death at work;
  • circulatory system diseases;
  • diagnosis with cancer;
  • death from cancer;
  • permanent disability from work;
  • alcohol and drug abuse;
  • suicide.

This is based on research reported in Richard Fletcher’s book An Introduction to the New Men’s Health, published by Men’s Health Project, University of Newcastle (1995).

These scary statistics tell us what many of us have discovered in our schools and homes. It is much riskier being a boy than a girl.

Boys and emotions

More and more, boys in our schools are becoming aggressive and violent. This is happening at younger and younger ages. A ‘boys in education’ expert, Ian Lillico states that much of the hostility in homes and schools stems from denial of boys’ feelings, and I agree with him.

Many boys are also in emotionally charged situations that challenge and confuse them. Many boys are frustrated in school systems that are conditioned against boys, or that have teachers untrained adequately to meet the learning needs and styles of most boys.

Unless you can build rapport with a boy you will struggle in your ability to really connect and communicate with him. To do this, we need to better understand how boys see the world, what they need and what challenges them.

It is a well-accepted fact that boys learn through their teacher, rather than just learning from what is taught. Indeed boys who feel liked, valued and accepted will perform better in our classrooms.

Many boys have gone backwards academically because they have not had a positive relationship with a teacher. Girls cope much better in our schools because of this fact alone.

Why are boys so sensitive to feeling disconnected? As I’ve covered in previous articles, boys struggle with emotional vulnerability and feel the need to mask their emotional state, which causes even more uncertainty and confusion.

Emotions become more confused when boys think they are their mask! Many boys and men bury their anger and rage over many years until this unexpressed anger turns into depression, or just bitterness, sarcasm, irritability or pettiness.

Sometimes, boys ‘armour’ their hearts so as not to feel pain. Unfortunately they freeze out the positive feelings at the same time, which makes it difficult for them to maintain loving relationships.

Adults who try to give advice to boys often unintentionally inflame emotions. If you wish to control boys’ behaviours, overtly or more indirectly, then watch out! Women who question and nag their boys only add to the volatility of relationships. Boys, of course, learn to become selectively deaf very early in life and sometimes do this unconsciously; in classes they miss valuable learning opportunities.

I write about this in my book Saving Our Children: Teaching Children the Magic of Silence and Stillness.

I have noticed that the boys who cope best in school have strong auditory processing abilities, and that the reverse is also true.

Auditory learners usually make up around 15% of the population. People learn in different ways. In research by Professors Ken and Rita Dunn, from St John’s University, New York, they reported the following:

  • only a third of students remember even 75% of what they hear in a normal class period;
  • tactile or kinaesthetic learners are the main candidates for failure in traditional school classrooms;
  • tactile-kinaesthetic learners often drop out of school because they cannot focus well when forced to sit down, hour after hour;
  • many high schools are geared to academic two-dimensional learning styles, that is: linguistic and logical. Many people involved in administration are high achievers in these two learning styles, so to them that environment works best;
  • Most underachievers are motivated by peers to be so.

— From: Gordon Dryden and Jeannette Vos, The Learning Revolution (1997).

If we could ensure that boys get what they need within our school structures, I am sure their behaviour would improve. Yes they do have much higher needs of physicality and less emotional competence just in case you haven’t worked that out!

Boys need the following:

  • Boys like to explore the natural world in a much more physical way than girls.
  • They need to investigate how things work.
  • They need balls to kick, things to climb and to pit themselves against a challenge.
  • They need structure and boundaries.
  • They need goals and coaching in how to persist.
  • They need a safe environment and a zero tolerance towards ridicule.

– Ian Grant, Growing Great Boys: How to bring out the best in your son (2008).

Boys who are highly tactile, or kinaesthetic, suffer most as teaching methods generally use auditory and visual channels of communication.

This is especially true in the case of our Indigenous children. Their culture is highly kinaesthetic, using a lot of touch and movement; they are often uncomfortable with verbal communication and their auditory processing skills may be weak or undeveloped. I often found such students in my class to be intuitively very strong and they knew almost instantly if a new contact was comfortable with them, or was just pretending. Tactile people can be threatening for an auditory person as they will mismatch in the ways they communicate.

Drawing or doodling actually helps a tactile person to stay ‘online’ so that they listen better. This can be disconcerting to people who like eye contact to get feedback and validation during communication. Sensing any degree of threat in their immediate environment also stops many Indigenous children learning. I believe we would see these children have more success at school if they were taught by tactile-kinaesthetic teachers, especially in the early years when the foundations of learning are built.

In my counselling experience with boys suffering despair, depression or even ideas of suicide, I found these boys often felt overwhelmed by their emotions. Emotions are unresolved, running rampant inside them. Many of these boys feel deeply flawed and a failure; they believe that those closest to them do not love them. They feel completely misunderstood. The use of shaming, sarcasm and strong criticism when dealing with poor boy behaviour can scar boys for life.

Boys need to have significant adults who ‘see them’ and accept them. Sometimes it may be a family member, an aunty, uncle or special grandfather. Sometimes it may be a school chaplain or a family friend who is trusted to keep confidentiality; or a sporting coach or teacher the boys believe likes them. Boys need a safe person in the school who acts as an adult ally or mentor who he can trust help him when he needs help. This is a profound need in today’s schools to help boys better cope with our confusing school environment.

Boys need quiet time

In my experience with boys in schools and of course with my own sons, I have discovered that boys need quiet spaces to help sort out their thoughts.

I am sure that many parents and teachers overcrowd their boys with too much talk and too many questions! It took me a while to realise that my boys settled better by playing by themselves outside, especially after a full school day. “Silence is often an excellent way of letting our sons find their own solutions rather than us imposing our own.” (Ian Lillico: Boys and Their Schooling, 2000).

Even though most boys are activity based, they still need turn-off times to re-charge their batteries. Chilling out in front of TV or playing on computers are ways that boys do this, ‘tuning out’ to conversation is another, or daydreaming. Time spent alone in their bedrooms also works well. Boys often need separation time to adjust from school to being in the home environment. School and home are two different battlefields, in a sense, and the armouring needs to change

In classrooms where regular relaxation and silent time occurs, the most noticeable positive benefit is the improvement in boys’ behaviour and cooperation.

In classrooms, boys generally need more time than girls to think before answering any questions that require emotional analysis. Boys prefer quiet spaces to think, and yet they often are the ones making the noise!

Just like girls, boys learn best when they feel safe and cared for and are in environments with adults who treat them with kindness and fairness.

I believe that boys who learn how to bring more silence and stillness into their lives manage the emotional roller coaster of adolescence better than those who have no idea about how to become quiet and still.

The constant activity and busy-ness of boys may also lead them to create stress-related illnesses in later adulthood. Heightened cortisol levels, from being in the go-go-go state, can create serious problems with anxiety and later fear-based mental health problems. Constant activity can also cause sleep deprivation as winding those bodies and busy heads down for sleep is not easy. The magic of silence and stillness for boys must be taught as well as modelled because it is not a normal activity for most boys. The earlier the better!

Boys grow into men; the type of man they become is based on their experiences in childhood and in life in general. All boys, and men, want to be loved, valued and appreciated, and they want to be in effective relationships.

Our school experiences shape who we become and boys deserve to be seen as different and valuable in our schools and we must throw out the toxic shaming discipline techniques of old, and meet boys with new understanding and enthusiasm.

 

This article was first published in 2012 in Teachers Matter magazine. www.spectrumeducation.com

 

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