This week’s prompt is:

How did your early schooling influence the development of your masculinity?


Relevant passage from The Will to Change by bell hooks:

"Teachers of children see gender equality mostly in terms of ensuring that girls get to have the same privileges and rights as boys within the existing social structure; they do not see it in terms of granting boys the same rights as girls—for instance, the right to choose not to engage in aggressive or violent play, the right to play with dolls, to play dress up, to wear costumes of either gender, the right to choose.”

  • stepan@lemmy.ca
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    9 months ago

    Pretty much all female teachers, constantly scolded and lectured boys, said they were aggressive and misbehaved (honestly the boys were really mild in kindergarten)

    Fast forward to seventh grade, the boys turned out exactly the way the teacher said but worse.

    All female teachers through the years of elementary, except for like 1

    • Biorix@lemmy.world
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      9 months ago

      Do you think it’s a kind of learned helplessness that led to that or that the boys were going to be like that regardless? Or that’s because that’s the example they received from older boys?

  • spadufOPM
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    9 months ago

    Please post suggestions for next week below

  • punkisundead [they/them]
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    9 months ago

    I dont really remember much, but one thing is that in sports many times the activities where seperated between boys and girls and sometimes we even did different things like soccer vs volleyball or horizontal bar vs balance beam. I dont know when the separation actually started, so it might have started later than early schooling.