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single sex vs mixed schools

13

Comments

  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 118 ✭✭LastApacheInjun


    Thing is, in South County Dublin, if you have the money and the inclination to send your child to a private school, there are far more single sex school than there are co-ed ones. And I know, that to get into one of the co-ed ones, you need to either send your child to the private primary school by fifth class, or be a past pupil, or be the right religion, in order to guarantee your place. The co-ed private schools are massively more oversubscribed than the single sex ones.

    Perhaps it is different outside of Dublin?

    Primarily, parents want to send their child to the best school for academics and sport/afterschool activities. The gender mix of the school is somewhat of a secondary consideration - a "nice to have" rather than a red line requirement.

    The few mixed private schools that I can think of nearby are Wesley, St Andrews, St Columba's, Conleths and Sandford Park. All of which have excellent reputations regarding academics and extra curricular activities. I can't say that the mental health of its students is more or less healthy than those who go to single sex schools - I don't think anyone has done a review on that. But I do know, anecdotally, of some recent incidences of severe bullying in some of the girls-only private schools (including Barbara Ennis' school) that perhaps, having a mixture of genders might help with. So I am less convinced that somehow girls are more protected from societal expectations or are happier in single sex schools.

    Having attended single sex schools all my life, I found the first six months at university a very disconcerting experience. I am naturally not a shy person, but I found myself a bit at a loss on how to converse with men, given all my experiences to that point were at discos or house parties. I mean, I got there after a while, but I remember thinking, even at the time, that it was such an artificial way to educate children.



  • Moderators, Category Moderators, Arts Moderators, Sports Moderators Posts: 50,256 CMod ✭✭✭✭magicbastarder


    There’s lots of data collected by the ESRI but I can’t find the answer
    to a simple question- do girls in same-sex schools want change?

    simple to do some number crunching from that report; "43% of students attended girls’ schools, 30% attended boys’ schools, and 27% were enrolled in coeducational schools."

    so 59% of respondents from single sex schools were girls. it's simply impossible to get to the low numbers of single-sex students in favour of single sex schools without a majority of the girls favouring co-ed.

    if a majority of girls were in favour of single sex, and no boys were, the total in favour would be a minimum of about 30%. but the total (girls and boys combined) in single sex schools, in favour of single sex schools is 14%.

    or another way, if every one of those 14% were girls, with no boys providing that answer, that means less than a quarter of girls gave that response.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,525 ✭✭✭Caquas


    Amazing! Our national research institute leaves us to guess the gender-breakdown on a gender-based question.

    That would be a career-ending omission in any research which arrived at the “wrong” results. And one can always avoid a “wrong” result in the social “sciences” - as we saw with the UL study, just pile on those “controls” and soon the “bad” news will disappear.

    Even if a majority of girls said they wanted change, why deprive the (sizeable) minority of their choice when Co-Ed alternatives are readily available to the majority?



  • Moderators, Category Moderators, Arts Moderators, Sports Moderators Posts: 50,256 CMod ✭✭✭✭magicbastarder


    You think not having the data in a specific way you want is egregious enough to be 'career ending'?



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,525 ✭✭✭Caquas


    Not the “way I want”. The way all social research is done. Can you find a single Irish social research project in this century on any topic which didn’t provide a gender breakdown? Or where that factor was not highlighted in the media?

    Yet here we have research precisely about gender which ignores/buries the girls’ data.

    Definitely career-ending - if it had reached the “wrong” conclusion, e.g. “single-sex schooling is an option valued by many girls and their parents because of its demonstrated academic and developmental benefits and it should be supported as an alternative at this crucial educational stage”.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 35,580 ✭✭✭✭Hotblack Desiato


    Because everyone can get their child into the type of school they prefer.

    Arrant nonsense.

    Scrap the cap!



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,525 ✭✭✭Caquas


    Congratulations- another perfect Strawman!

    What I did say was that there is no shortage of co-Ed schools in South County Dublin (the area in question). Or do you imagine that anyone was forced to send their daughter to this school? 😅



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,294 ✭✭✭downtheroad


    If you watch the movie Remember the Titans you'll think it was ludicrous that school kids were segregated by colour in the states, yet we happily accept segregation by gender in so many schools in this country.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 731 ✭✭✭Kurooi


    In my experience, mixed all the way. You just have to know how to work with the opposite sex.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 35,580 ✭✭✭✭Hotblack Desiato


    No shortage? Can you substantiate this at all?

    Scrap the cap!



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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,525 ✭✭✭Caquas


    Yes, I can.

    Googled it for you. 18 secondary schools in Dun Laoghaire Rathdown, the local authority in question here. Most are mixed gender. Lots more in South Dublin and on the south side of Dublin City.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_schools_in_County_Dublin

    You’re welcome.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,525 ✭✭✭Caquas


    You do know no one is forced to go to a single-sex school? Certainly not in South County Dublin.

    This is not about discrimination. This is about diversity and parental choice. But we are getting “one-size fits all”


    The ESRI have the audacity to call their report

    EMBRACING DIVERSITY IN ALL ITS FORMS’: THE VOLUNTARY SECONDARY SECTOR IN IRISH EDUCATION

    Although its main aim is to drive the abolition of an important option for secondary schools.

    Post edited by Caquas on


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 35,580 ✭✭✭✭Hotblack Desiato


    Whooosh

    The existence of schools is not the same thing as the availability of places in those schools.

    Not all of south county Dublin is in DLR anyway. It's an area with the highest density of fee-paying schools in the country and almost all of them are single-sex.

    Even they can see which way the wind is blowing though, parental demand is increasingly for coeducation.

    Can you provide us with a single good reason to retain schools which discriminate on the basis of gender?

    Scrap the cap!



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,525 ✭✭✭Caquas


    Isn’t it obvious?
    Because many parents and their teenage children (especially girls) prefer it.

    And the majority who prefer mixed-sex have no shortage of choices whereas the Department is nearing completion of its unannounced but long-standing policy to remove the choice of single-sex schools.

    Not forgetting that some of the best-performing schools are single-sex. Isn’t that why parents/students who want change don’t leave?

    My question to you - why change a school which is performing very well? (Can’t be because of parents who want mixed-sex education but sent their kids to a single-sex school anyway.)



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 35,580 ✭✭✭✭Hotblack Desiato


    Ask the schools which are changing why they are changing. They're not being forced to do so. It's quite apparent by now anyway you're just arguing for the sake of it, you cannot provide a single good reason for gender discrimination in education. In particular, many girls' schools offer very limited science / engineering / technology subjects, how is that in anyone's interest? It's not in boys' interests to not be taught how to cook, either, but practically no boys' schools offer home economics.

    If this wasn't just a legacy of tradition (which is literally the worst reason possible to do something, "it's always been done like this") we certainly would not be introducing it now.

    Scrap the cap!



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,624 ✭✭✭Treppen


    I think the school in question (SCD moving to co-ed) is changing simply because of falling numbers... Look at admissions for other girl's schools in the area (from reports of admission numbers every year by school). They're well oversubscribed.

    Now is the falling population in that school due to parental choice to go to co-ed in another school? We don't know. There is a bit of a myth going around of parents choosing a school like a takeaway from just-eat. Like the myth of "if you don't like a religious school you can choose elsewhere".

    Maybe the school cost to much to run with such low numbers and less privately paid teachers were employed, extra curricular coaches too etc. A downward spiral.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,525 ✭✭✭Caquas


    If this is the reason, let them say so and give over with the mumbo jumbo in the media.

    250 students is probably smaller than average but surely not unviable. Does anyone know what is the average school size and what is considered unviable? The Department doesn’t share this information readily. I just see reams of data on “average” class size (for the benefit of the teachers’ unions?). I would love to see a cigire go down to some small town and tell them their secondary school is not viable because it has only 250 students. Tar and feathers freely distrib 😅

    Or do the parents of Killiney have different standards?



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,525 ✭✭✭Caquas


    A letter in today’s IT from the Principal of a large boys secondary school, making the point that the findings of the ESRI study should not be misconstrued -

    I hope that this wouldn’t be construed to imply that students in single-sex schools are unhappy with where they currently are. Many students thrive and are very happy in single-sex schools…

    He also highlights the difference between schools which are heavily over-subscribed and those which are struggling for numbers where

    the attraction to coeducation could be more about school survival, rather than any other factor.

    Invest in these schools, not more reports, is his plea.

    https://www.irishtimes.com/opinion/letters/2024/05/03/esri-report-and-coeducational-schools/



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 523 ✭✭✭csirl


    Its not true to say that single sex schools perform better. In my area, there are 2 x single sex secondary schools and they are considered to be failed schools. Any parent who can, sends their children to one of a number of mainly mixed schools in adjacent areas. There are long waiting lists for the mixed schools.

    Its been said a number of times on this thread that single sex schools benefit girls academically. I dont see how. The girls school near me only offers science at junior cert level to 60% of students (3 of 5 classes). Many girls lose out in the lottery to get into the science classes. In an era where girls are being encouraged to do STEM subjects this is unacceptable. Effectiivly 40% of the girls in this school are denied the chance to study any science related courses in third level or pursue a career in a sten area.



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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,525 ✭✭✭Caquas


    Another strawman! No one said all single-sex schools do better.

    The UL study found that, overall and on average, students at single-sex schools did significantly better in the OECD tests. The researchers then subjected the data to a plethora of “controls” until they eliminated this unwelcome result and the media could report “no difference” in performance.

    Of course the Department has a mountain of data on the Leaving Cert results of every school over decades but we will never see that data because … parents and students could start making informed choices😱.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 35,580 ✭✭✭✭Hotblack Desiato


    Almost all of the exclusionary, fee-charging schools in the State are single-sex.

    Correlation is not causation.

    Scrap the cap!



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,525 ✭✭✭Caquas


    It is true that, despite all the media BS about “no academic advantage” , parents readily pay fees for excellent single-sex schools.

    And the Department is doing everything to ensure that option is not available to those who can’t afford the fees (or prefer to spend their money elsewhere) .



  • Registered Users Posts: 4 reekieóg


    Most fee-paying schools in South Dublin charging at the lower end of the spectrum are single-sex. Parents aren't paying "readily" for the single-sex aspect but rather that they want the exclusivity of a private school and can't afford to send their kids to the more expensive co-ed ones.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,525 ✭✭✭Caquas


    I call BS.

    If there is any correlation between the level of fees and whether schools are mixed or single-sex, it may be in the other direction.

    Or do you think parents only send their sons to Blackrock and their daughters to Mount Anville because they lack the funds for the co-ed schools?



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 35,580 ✭✭✭✭Hotblack Desiato


    Whooooosh yet again

    If they want to pay fees (keep their kids away from plebs, SEN and all that) then pretty much their only option is a single sex, religious order run school.

    That doesn't mean that single sex education, or religious order education, confers any advantage, they're just accidents of history and the perpetuation of intergenerational privilege.

    Scrap the cap!



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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 523 ✭✭✭csirl


    Girls not having access to STEN subjects, including JC science, is hardly a "strawman argument" against single sex schools. Every child should have equal opportunities.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,624 ✭✭✭Treppen


    It's fee charging school so I'd imagine the economics and viability are different to non-fee charging. And probably they wouldn't disclose as they are looking for new intake of boys but still remaining fee charging. Even a slight dip in demand can indicate a trend.

    As quoted above by a principal:

    "the attraction to coeducation could be more about school survival, rather than any other factor."

    St Patrick's co-ed school (beside st Patrick's cathedral) had to go public because of falling numbers and rising costs. The principal said the only way to stay viable was to increase numbers within the free system.

    So to my mind both of those schools faced the exact same issue and ascribing gender preference as a cause mightn't be correct. Maybe parents have the choice for other fee charging girls (and boys) in the area... Holy Child Killiney , Mount Anvil , loretto foxrock, loretto dalkey, Rosemont , Wesley etc. We're at the peek of the population wave now so it might not be about having viable numbers now but they're planning for 10 years down the line, maybe they got a hint of things to come with subscriptions and can't wait 10 years or so and then decide to change.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,624 ✭✭✭Treppen


    Meh! There's about a difference of €2000. I don't think it's about parents in SCD not being able to afford that 🤣.

    But you've raised an interesting point about a school surviving (and being able to pay for all the extras) considering the loss per head in single sex is 2k, extrapolate that out and it's a difference of a couple of hundred thousand euros per annum. So it's more of a supply side issue as opposed to demand side (using my Leaving Cert Economics here lol).



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,525 ✭✭✭Caquas


    https://www.independent.ie/opinion/comment/louise-mcsharry-the-kids-want-co-ed-so-why-are-so-many-irish-schools-still-single-sex/a309712947.html

    More media tripe on single-sex schools.

    This reads like click-bait but, on the whole, I think Louise McSharry is writing from ignorance rather than cynicism. Her uncritical reliance on those ESRI and UL studies to back up her anecdotal evidence is a giveaway. She doesn't even notice the absence of a gender breakdown in the ESRI survey (!) and she was never going to look at the raw data buried by UL.

    What astonishes me most is her praise for the American public school system (apparently she attended school there).

    Is her ignorance so profound that she genuinely believes that in America

    there is no agonising where your children go to school

    School choice i.e. the ability to choose a school other than the one nearest the family residence - is one of the hottest topics in American politics. Largely because many big city public schools are failing catastrophically while teachers' unions have immense clout within the Democratic Party (granted, Louise is correct to say that "each student is treated equally").

    https://www.usnews.com/education/k12/articles/what-school-choice-is-and-how-it-works

    The politics are high-stakes and, like most things for Joe Biden ….complicated. “Doctor” Jill should straighten him out

    https://eu.statesman.com/story/news/politics/elections/2020/07/20/fact-check-does-joe-biden-want-to-end-school-choice/42466037/

    But at least there is a debate in America. Not our think-tank/bureaucracy/media ”consensus”.

    What does Minister Norma Foley think? She has been entirely reticent on this issue but so, I think, have all her predecessors. (Correct me if I'm wrong.)

    Let the ESRI study be her moment to confirm the policy which the Department has imposed rigorously for decades without democratic mandate or even, it seems, Ministerial approval. She would have the near-unanimous support of Boards.ie

    Will she then have the courage of her (newly-espoused) convictions and put public pressure on her former school, Presentation Secondary School in Tralee, to abandon its "discriminatory" girls-only and give the parent and students of Tralee what (the ESRI claims) they really want? Let that be a top commitment in her election literature and to hell with the Healy-Raes!😆


    And here’s an essential fact that you will not read anywhere in the media - 70% of Irish post primary schools are already co-Ed , which means that the current balance is a fair reflection of parents and students preferences in the ESRI report. But the Department won’t be happy until it is 100%.

    Post edited by Caquas on


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,525 ✭✭✭Caquas


    More media blather, from the Sindo’s Julia Moloney who paints a grim picture of her girls-only schooling. Sounds like "Mean Girls" (except that was a co-ed school in America where "there is no agonising where your children go to school")

    The concepts of diversity and choice, which are supreme values in other areas affecting gender, are simply ignored in this drive to eliminate single-sex schooling.

    https://www.independent.ie/opinion/comment/julia-molony-one-false-move-at-my-school-and-youd-be-in-social-siberia-why-single-sex-education-must-go/a1692790238.html

    Post edited by Caquas on


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  • Registered Users Posts: 4 reekieóg


    You make a good point in terms of rich South Dublin parents lol. But for the ones that aren't so rich that send their kids to fee paying schools (for whatever reason), the 2-3k could make a big difference



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,624 ✭✭✭Treppen


    I don't think so. Although when this school goes co-ed I wonder will the raise the fees to €7k mark to compete? Or are they hoping the extra headcount will do for now



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 35,580 ✭✭✭✭Hotblack Desiato


    Most of that is a load of crap not relevant to education in Ireland.

    Scrap the cap!



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,398 ✭✭✭am_zarathustra


    Agreed, any more than you could compare our health systems, complete strawman!

    From teaching in all variants of school that exist, plenty of kids in single sex wanted mixed and I've never really come across a kid in mixed who wanted to go the other direction. Some of the single sex schools in our areas run off very arcane ethos and would openly admit things like "oh he's very different he'd be much better off with you" about students moving schools instead of seriously engaging with the aggressive and often homophones behaviour within the school. This serves no one when these young people are turned out into society later on.

    The lack of subject options is a clear issue for me, and the emphasis from management ,internally promoted from within those systems to keep the status quo. I look at the girls doing woodwork and the boys in Home Ec in my school and I'm genuinely delighted they have the opertunities a lot of girls/boys of my generation didn't.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,525 ✭✭✭Caquas


    Thanks. Exactly what I meant about the Sindo piece 😎



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,939 ✭✭✭Dickie10


    id say it wouldnt be any harm at all that all boys schools go into the historical dustbin, i think girls would have a very good effect on the toxic nature of some all boys schools, so they should be first priority. what would people think are the main advantages to male students of not having girls in their schools? i can think of a lot of advantages to not having boys in an all girls school to be honest. i see it everyday as to how much they feel like they can express themselves in different ways that i didnt see in mixed schools. not sure if theres any real advantage to all boys schools at all. love to hear though



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,525 ✭✭✭Caquas


    Finn McRedmond and Jen Hogan "debate" in today's IT (without responding to each other)

    Finn quotes her schoolfriends

    all of whom agreed on the benefit of their single-sex education.

    And concludes that

    single-sex education – at least for girls – is the radical act. And the slow descent into a monoculture of co-ed schools is a rather depressing and retrograde idea.

    In contrast, Jen has

    yet to speak to a single [parent] who thought it was important that their sons and daughters went to two separate schools. 

    although

    their children, like mine, mostly happily ran into [single-sex] primary school every day. 

    Despite the views she espouses today, Jen sent all seven of her children to single-sex schools and she doesn't express any regret for doing so, apparently because the schools were "local". She does not say where she lives but nowhere in Dublin is far from a Co-Ed school. She does not want parents to have that choice.

    You might like to contribute to this "debate" but the IT shut down its comment section two years ago and has done nothing to fulfil its bogus promise of an alternative comment system.

    Not long ago, freedom of thought, inquiry and expression in Ireland were constrained by an atmosphere of deference towards, and even fear of, the Catholic Church. We now have an intellectual "monoculture", that is a ready conformity to the received wisdom of a new hierarchy of self-appointed ideologues, often attached to educational institutions.

    The corollary is an inability to formulate critical thoughts independently or even to engage intelligently with alternative viewpoints. A cursory read of the negative and dismissive comments here is a sad illustration of the phenomenon. We are now close to an educational "monoculture" in Ireland which aims to eliminate real choice in schooling and even the spirit of open enquiry which is the fount of true education.

    https://www.irishtimes.com/opinion/2024/05/07/the-debate-has-single-sex-education-had-its-day-jen-hogan-and-finn-mcredmond-debate/



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 35,580 ✭✭✭✭Hotblack Desiato


    Jen Hogan does not live in Dublin afaik.

    The notion that everyone in Dublin has the choice of a range of school types on their doorstep is incorrect. In some places single-sex is the only option. It's the newer / growing suburbs which have ETs etc. The older areas which haven't seen population growth in a long time are stuck with Catholic religious order single-sex and maybe a gaelscoil. The divestment process is a farce designed to fail.

    Scrap the cap!



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 35,580 ✭✭✭✭Hotblack Desiato


    I bet Finn went to a very nice SoCoDu fee charging girls' school. This means her experiences and those of her schoolmates are not representative.

    Her article has nothing to offer but anecdotes and appeal to tradition but that's a very familiar tune from the advocates of enforcing gender segregation in our education system.

    She was hired to be an "Indo style" would-be controversialist-for-the-sake-of-it and that's not a positive move by the IT. It's driven by the need for clicks at all costs.

    Scrap the cap!



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,525 ✭✭✭Caquas


    Four letters to the IT today. 3 to 1 in favour of choice.

    Let’s see if any Government politician has the honesty to campaign openly against single-sex schooling during the forthcoming elections.

    ‘Has single-sex education had its day?’https://www.irishtimes.com/opinion/letters/2024/05/08/has-single-sex-education-had-its-day/



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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,624 ✭✭✭Treppen


    I think education has more pressing issues

    Post edited by Treppen on


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,624 ✭✭✭Treppen


    Its like the landlord/TD question.

    How many TDs went to single sex schools... Fee paying ones at that.



  • Registered Users Posts: 4 reekieóg


    I would love to see the statistics on that, can think of about 10 off the top of my head.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,525 ✭✭✭Caquas


    I don't think anyone knows.

    If your suggestion is that TDs won't support co-ed schools because they went to single sex schools, consider this: it is safe to say that the vast majority of TDs went to Catholic schools at primary and/or second-level… including some fee paying ones at that …but this has not prevented them from backing (almost unanimously) a series of measures strongly opposed to Catholic teaching. That may be a very good thing for democracy but it puts a big hole in your thesis. I might make a similar argument about landlord TDs if I could fathom the government's housing policy.

    Politicians are in hiding on single-sex schools -even the Minister! - because changing successful schools is a vote loser locally and all our elections are local.

    Notice how quiet Left-wing parties have been - the dogs that haven't barked are leaving Labour to wither on the ideological high-ground.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,624 ✭✭✭Treppen


    this has not prevented them from backing (almost unanimously) a series of measures strongly opposed to Catholic teaching.

    I can't see much change on Catholic teaching since I went to school in the 80s!

    What's changed?

    Btw Wikipedia has most of the tds / ministers education.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,056 ✭✭✭applehunter


    Aodháns world view seems to stem from being bullied at school.

    I'd like to see how the rest of his classmates got on in life.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 35,580 ✭✭✭✭Hotblack Desiato


    Dude, it's 2024.

    Scrap the cap!



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,939 ✭✭✭Dickie10


    are there any examples of all girls schools that have changed to boys and girls , whatif any was the change like? vice versa anyone any experience of all boys going to mixed, i think jarlaths in tuam did this. and a few others seems very sicessful with a famous school in mullingar



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,525 ✭✭✭Caquas


    This is exactly the kind of study which should be done by one of our growing army of Educational Ph.d candidates if the elimination of single-sex schools was about improving education.

    In reality, no researcher will touch this issue with a barge pole. What if it emerged that single-sex schools were better, academically and socially? 😳

    Then the most torturous statistical “controls” would have to be applied to eliminate this result- the kind of alchemy which UL needed to tell the media that the single-sex schools offered “no significant advantage” although their pupils clearly outperformed the co-ed pupils in the OECD PISA tests.

    Remember when politicians used to talk about evidence-based policies? 🤣



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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 35,580 ✭✭✭✭Hotblack Desiato


    Schools outperform other schools for all sorts of reasons - socioeconomic status of the parents being the main one.

    Scrap the cap!



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