Close X
Tuesday, March 11, 2025
ADVT 
Life

Single-Sex Schools Help Girls Shine More In Academics

Darpan News Desk IANS, 29 Apr, 2015 11:21 AM
    Single-sex education is better for teenage girls as it takes the pressure off to try and impress boys in a "sexualised world", the headmistress of one of Britain's best boarding schools claimed.
     
    Rhiannon Wilkinson, head of Wycombe Abbey in Buckinghamshire, suggested it was best for girls' education to grow in a "boys-free" environment.
     
    She added single boys hold girls back because girls mature faster.
     
    "My wide educational experience in both mixed and girls' schools has shown me clearly that girls are best served educationally in their teenage years in a boys-free work environment," she was quoted as saying by the Telegraph.
     
    "Most psychological studies suggest that girls and boys develop at different rates and that girls are far in advance of boys through the teenage years: it is in a girl's best interest to be educated separately, at least until boys catch up with her," she added.
     
    Wilkinson said another benefit of an all-girls education is that they can focus on their education without the distraction of wanting to please boys.
     
    She said: "In co-ed environments, lots of girls, when adolescence kicks in, want to be liked by boys not just for their intelligence and want to be popular with boys.
     
    "In a girls' environment you're free from that. Most of the time you're focusing on your education, on who you are, you don't feel you're not being yourself in the classroom, you're not afraid to throw yourself in the sport field.
     
    "A single-sex education does not mean a single-sex life and there are many opportunities at girls' schools for girls to mix with boys socially and enjoy sharing time together in a non-competitive way," she added.

    MORE Life ARTICLES

    Stagnant relationships kill pleasant memories

    Stagnant relationships kill pleasant memories
    While highly committed people remember their relationship history accurately, couples in trouble do not, says new research....

    Stagnant relationships kill pleasant memories

    Poor societies more likely to believe in gods

    Poor societies more likely to believe in gods
    Societies living in harsh environments are more likely to believe in gods, says a study, suggesting that societies with less access to food and water are more likely...

    Poor societies more likely to believe in gods

    Mothers' education key to kid's academic success

    Mothers' education key to kid's academic success
    Researchers have found that the academic success of your kids depends a lot on the education provided by mothers as children born to relatively older....

    Mothers' education key to kid's academic success

    Selfie obsession may cost you your job

    Selfie obsession may cost you your job
    According to a study, users who click too many 'selfies' not only reflect narcissistic traits but also demonstrate a lack of self-control to employers....

    Selfie obsession may cost you your job

    Sad tunes could lift your mood after a break-up

    Sad tunes could lift your mood after a break-up
    One can experience four different cognitive rewards of music-evoked sadness - reward of imagination, emotion regulation, empathy and no "real life" implications...

    Sad tunes could lift your mood after a break-up

    Early schooling hours not in tune with kids' sleep patterns

    Early schooling hours not in tune with kids' sleep patterns
    Early schooling hours could deprive teenagers of adequate sleep and hamper their academic performance, a study suggests....

    Early schooling hours not in tune with kids' sleep patterns