School alienation, patriarchal gender-role orientations and the lower educational success of boys

A mixed method study

Andreas Hadjar, Stefanie Gysin, Susanne Backes

This paper is an empirically backed contribution to the current ‘failing boys’ debate in regard to their lower educational success. The cross-sectional analysis focuses on two possible factors behind the lower educational success of boys in secondary school: school alienation and patriarchal gender-role orientations (as an expression of the ‘hegemonic masculinity’). School deviance on the behavioural level is considered as a main mediator between these factors and educational success. Furthermore, teaching style, peer attitudes and social origin are taken into account as important factors of educational success. Analyses are based on a Swiss mixed-method study (questionnaires among 872 eighth-graders, group discussions, class room observations). Results indicate that the gender gap in educational success is caused partly by boys being more alienated from school and preferring patriarchal gender-role orientations. The impacts of these factors on educational success are mediated by school deviance. An authoritative teaching style can largely reduce school alienation.

Suggested Citation

Hadjar, A., Backes, S [Susanne] & Gysin, S. (2015). School alienation, patriarchal gender-role orientations and the lower educational success of boys: A mixed method study. Masculinities and Social Change, 4(1), 87–116.

https://doi.org/10.4471/MCS.2015.61

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