Richard Reeves: Of Boys and Men | Real Time with Bill Maher (HBO)

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Brooking Institution Fellow and author Richard Reeves joins Bill to discuss the struggles facing modern males and what can be done about it.
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Пікірлер: 881

  • @DonaldAMisc
    @DonaldAMisc Жыл бұрын

    "If responsible people don't address real problems in a straightforward way, irresponsible people are going to exploit them." 💥

  • @miggans21012

    @miggans21012

    Жыл бұрын

    Looks like to me that's what's happening now.

  • @marie_84

    @marie_84

    Жыл бұрын

    It's not that easy, when u f.e. were born in a narcissistic family. It's normal for the child. It takes yrs...to recognize what's going on. And the damage is done. And maybe u not gonna make it alive out of it.

  • @RJT80

    @RJT80

    Жыл бұрын

    I'm sure that sounds great to liberals who fear Republicans while it was liberal governors and mayors who sent police out to beeches to chase people off during Covid and buried skateparks in sand but the reality is this started long ago. The suffrage activists were in lockstep with the birth control activists who didn't want Italian and Irish immigrants from aiv g too many kids. They both wanted to massively disrupt the family system overall and emancipate women. They'd also go on to get prohibition passed. The results of all their actions are obvious.

  • @kipapula6838

    @kipapula6838

    Жыл бұрын

    We need more responsible men to come out and speak. And we should back them when they get attacked by companies and organizations who like shutting people

  • @ChildrensRightsFirst947

    @ChildrensRightsFirst947

    Жыл бұрын

    No one has a problem with men speaking up for men. I just want to know why Bill Maher and many others aren't showing the same concern for making certain male dominant places being more desirable places for women to join. Does Bill care about getting more women into STEM? Women started to excel over men in one area other than fashion, beauty, and motherhood so only now does he freak out.

  • @vitaliym.300
    @vitaliym.300 Жыл бұрын

    Dude, most of my female teachers paid almost no attention to boys and favored girls. I often felt mild hostility from them. Somehow, as a ten-year old, I was at fault for something.

  • @121374j

    @121374j

    Жыл бұрын

    Extreme feminists what is doing this shit to put it nice

  • @quakefan8810

    @quakefan8810

    Жыл бұрын

    Exactly Vitaly V,. It starts there and gets worse in life

  • @Bean_ina_Beanbag

    @Bean_ina_Beanbag

    Жыл бұрын

    Had a bitch English teacher like this in HS

  • @Mikeoxlonggggggg

    @Mikeoxlonggggggg

    Жыл бұрын

    Had the same experience

  • @ch33zyburrito36

    @ch33zyburrito36

    Жыл бұрын

    I noticed it from a very young age too. The boys were always getting in trouble and the girls were always being applauded for being so good

  • @kevinkent3663
    @kevinkent3663 Жыл бұрын

    As a male highschool teacher I agree that PE is critical, and that boys don't get enough hands on classes where they can thrive and feel a real feel of accomplishment.

  • @stephenryder1995

    @stephenryder1995

    Жыл бұрын

    What about humiliation, embarrassment, rejection, alienation, and abject failure? Or do you think every boy excels at PE?

  • @LeukipposOfAbdera

    @LeukipposOfAbdera

    Жыл бұрын

    @@stephenryder1995 The only way to get better is by doing. Just because you or someone else didn’t thrive with more PE (being the exception to the rule) doesn’t mean the general rule isn’t true. Studies verify this. Further, not every boy is good at every activity. You can also have masculine-focused poetry classes, where some boys will excel more than others. It’s easier to pretend that all poetry is equal - that also needs to stop. It’s best to allow boys (and girls) to explore and find their talents, not merely learn the “right way” to do things. If security is more important to you than achievement or creativity, then we ought to continue with the soul-crushing garbage.

  • @theBear89451

    @theBear89451

    Жыл бұрын

    @@stephenryder1995 It's not about excelling in PE. It is about PE causing kids to excel in history.

  • @stephenryder1995

    @stephenryder1995

    Жыл бұрын

    @@theBear89451 Oh gee, thank you so much for pointing that out to me - after all, with my obvious cognitive dissonance such assistance is mandatory. Yes, you are entirely correct, and in my 40 years as an Ivy League history professor, my ursaline friend, I am therefore compelled to report the following: What absolute BULLSHIT. 'Fellowships' don't teach the difference between one's gluteus maximus and a hole-in-the wall, but they do paper that wall with lucre. In return they expect some publicizeable product to justify their existence. Hence the mandatory issuance of what is often nothing more than a literary confluence of random speculations puncuated by the occaisional unsupportable neo-factoid. This post-graduate survival technique is also known as Absurditas abundantia, and is never taken seriously by actual scholars.

  • @biondna7984

    @biondna7984

    Жыл бұрын

    I agree with Kevin Kent. Further, as a woman who had her (life-defining) ADHD diagnosed at AGE 47, I know that there are women like me who would've benefitted greatly by more physical, hands-on, and trade-related classes. I could take home-economics when I was in school, but they wouldn't let girls in wood shop or auto shop. Wood shop, I yearned for. Now I gather they don't even have those classes for anyone anymore. THAT'S insane.

  • @god563616
    @god563616 Жыл бұрын

    I'm a woman and its really disgusting to me for the clasp of women doing good in education yet pure silence as he describes how Men and boys are struggling. We need EACH OTHER! BOTH SEXES to thrive!

  • @brandy4530

    @brandy4530

    10 ай бұрын

    I guess hearing about how boys are struggling isn’t something to clap about.

  • @akimorita

    @akimorita

    8 ай бұрын

    why are you supposed to clap when he's talking about something sad? the right thing to do is keep silent, and that's what they've done. By the way I also found those clapping moments a little annoying tbh

  • @Dennis-nc3vw

    @Dennis-nc3vw

    5 ай бұрын

    What's disgusting is that Richard Reeves chalks the problem up to a "level playing field", when research shows there's a significant grading bias from teachers. If you give teachers an identical assignment, one with a female name and one with a male name, they will grade the male one 3 percentage points lower. That's the difference between a B- and C+. And I'm supposed to believe that with all the time Richard Reeves spent studying these issues, he never came across this data? The left has just switched from hateful misandry to patronizing misandry.

  • @Iamhere829

    @Iamhere829

    5 ай бұрын

    ​@@Dennis-nc3vw Listen, even in tests which are graded with anonymity of identity of the students.. women did better like Pisa.. It is due to the fact that boys are being helped educationally but the it not only because bias... it's also because men are educationally getting behind women...If you still kept going on with the delusion of "ohh pfft wAhMen iS sTupid" and that "it's all because of bias" you'll never be truly able to help men if you don't recognise that men do mature much slower than women..a 11 year old girl has more impulse control than a 25 year old man....And that's a fact.. That just makes girls better at education..

  • @Dennis-nc3vw

    @Dennis-nc3vw

    4 ай бұрын

    @@Iamhere829 This isn't true, boys do better at standardized tests, ie tests that have be graded impartially because there's an answer key.

  • @nickb3751
    @nickb3751 Жыл бұрын

    I was that kid in school, couldn’t pay attention, couldn’t sit still. I got into a union apprenticeship rather than going to college and it probably saved my life.

  • @danzwku

    @danzwku

    Жыл бұрын

    which trade?

  • @RJT80

    @RJT80

    Жыл бұрын

    7 million working age men have dropped out entirely. So much of the system has been rigged against them for 50 years now. One of the things this country absolutely must do is start a robust apprenticeship program for millions of men. Beyond the hopelessness issue we have a major problem with young men not following their father's into jobs that actually make the world go round. Trades, train drivers, farmers etc. Those jobs are enot being filled. And then what?Our service economy is filled with office jobs that could disappear tomorrow and nobody would notice. It's part of the reason Russia survived sanctions. When you subtract the app maker jobs and other worthless shit, Russia's economy is actually larger than Germany's. They make things and pull resources out of the ground and that still powers life whether people like it or not.

  • @theBear89451

    @theBear89451

    Жыл бұрын

    Did you need two sentences to say, "I am man"?

  • @stephenryder1995

    @stephenryder1995

    Жыл бұрын

    And that definitely was the right thing for you - there should always be such a path for boys like you were. Glad for you!

  • @wtcashel

    @wtcashel

    Жыл бұрын

    And??

  • @MNkno
    @MNkno Жыл бұрын

    We lived next to a Japanese elementary/jr high school.. and every day, in shifts all day, they had all the kids over 9yrs old running around the perimeter of the school campus, uphill and downhill. 5 times around the block, and everybody was ready to sit down quietly in class. It looked like a very good solution to the problem of not being able to sit still in class. (Their sports teams ran 10-20 times around the block after classes finished, around 4pm.)

  • @petesmitt

    @petesmitt

    Жыл бұрын

    When I went through Army recruit course, the first thing we did each morning was go for a 30 minute run, then the rest of the day was spent doing the various learning modules; makes sense in retrospect.

  • @Omni0404

    @Omni0404

    Жыл бұрын

    I don't know if it's still the case but students also take an active role in keeping their schools clean. More physical activity and it seems like it would build character.

  • @tres311

    @tres311

    Жыл бұрын

    WWJD. What would a Japanese do should be our national motto. Japanese do everything with excellence and common sense.

  • @aligensa

    @aligensa

    Жыл бұрын

    Combining education of the body and mind was already a principle in Greek philosophy, it was called healthy mind in a healthy body. That's why German high schools to this day are called "gymnasiums". The Chinese do Tai Chi, the Hindus Yoga.

  • @denellsullada7697

    @denellsullada7697

    Жыл бұрын

    My son in elementary school about 10 years ago had great teachers. After each subject the teacher would put music on and the kids danced their hearts out! The class of 30 was about 2/3 male :)

  • @lscandrick0531
    @lscandrick0531 Жыл бұрын

    He is speaking the true about how males are treated in school....my son elementary school treacher complained that he could not sit still or complete assignments....encouraged us to take him to his peds MD to be place on ADD meds... .my son peds MD said no to ADD meds and said your son is not being challenged at that school...he encouraged us to change school.. fast forward my son is a college grad and on his way to medical school

  • @joshuabarrick5468

    @joshuabarrick5468

    Жыл бұрын

    Congrats to your son! I’ve worked in nurseries and from the very beginning boys are far more likely to be kinaesthetic learners compared to girls, yet we still use a Victorian-style rigid classroom base teaching environment (ironically made for men) which doesn’t help boys at all.

  • @Emanon...

    @Emanon...

    Жыл бұрын

    I had the exact same problem. I'm an MD 😁

  • @endrawes0

    @endrawes0

    Жыл бұрын

    This is very much my story as well. I'm so glad my parents chose not to medicate me.

  • @endrawes0

    @endrawes0

    Жыл бұрын

    To add, my parents only chose not to medicate me because they couldn't afford it - not due to some insightful, better-knowing doctor.

  • @PlayNiceFolks

    @PlayNiceFolks

    Жыл бұрын

    Tried

  • @SeyhawksNow
    @SeyhawksNow Жыл бұрын

    I didn’t have a male teacher until I was in high school, and even then it was probably a ratio of 1 man for every 4 women that taught me. It concerned me because as a boy, the women teachers saw me as a burden more than a student, and I know I wasn't the only one treated that way

  • @hughjazzole2037

    @hughjazzole2037

    Жыл бұрын

    YEA!! I HAD 2 WOMEN TEACHERS THAT TAUGHT SCIENCE.tHE 1ST ONE SAID SAND CANT BEW BLOWN HIGHER THAN 3 FT.!! tHE 2ND BITCH AT tr HIGH SCHOOL NORTHERN WHEN I ASKED A QUESTION REFUSED TO ANSWER WHEN i DIDNBT I=UNDERSTAND,& IGNORED ME.

  • @juliejensen7370

    @juliejensen7370

    Жыл бұрын

    Too bad more men go for the money and not the caring professions.

  • @wildfire9280

    @wildfire9280

    Жыл бұрын

    “Women choose to go into lower paying professions.” I think this is relevant to a conservative here.

  • @bartimisfoul3459

    @bartimisfoul3459

    Жыл бұрын

    @@wildfire9280 higher paying jobs generally have more physical risk

  • @JohnCarterIsMyName

    @JohnCarterIsMyName

    8 ай бұрын

    Horse manure.

  • @kathyrama4570
    @kathyrama4570 Жыл бұрын

    The Education system from K thru 12 in America has been broken for decades.

  • @walterwhite5674

    @walterwhite5674

    Жыл бұрын

    Unions.

  • @mukkywater

    @mukkywater

    Жыл бұрын

    @@walterwhite5674 there are multiple faults from the amount of curriculums to the teachers seeking control. Personally I'm a big fan of big picture learning which has a big focus on personal interest projects.

  • @HexIsme

    @HexIsme

    Жыл бұрын

    Well it hasn't changed its material since kids were working in factories...

  • @cardenfoy

    @cardenfoy

    Жыл бұрын

    Women broke it. They break everything because its easier to bring others down than lift everyone up.

  • @christopherpederson1021

    @christopherpederson1021

    Жыл бұрын

    It never worked

  • @FredRedFrred
    @FredRedFrred Жыл бұрын

    One very bright Texas Phys-Ed teacher last year suggested they take the boys for a run before school to vent their ancy predispositions. Grades went up. Fights went down.

  • @teacherdavid--eatplaylearn5013
    @teacherdavid--eatplaylearn5013 Жыл бұрын

    Blessings from Taiwan 🇹🇼🧧🤗 Thank you, Richard Reeves, to point out this IMPORTANT ISSUE in the world, especially in the U.S.🧐 This is another REASON why I want to become a MALE TEACHER in the education field, especially in preschool and elementary, so I can HELP to RAISE these boys into MEN by building a GOOD FOUNDATION for them.💪🤩👍 Keep up your great work !👍👍👍 God bless you, your family, and your work 😇🧧🥰

  • @warsurplus
    @warsurplus Жыл бұрын

    Richard Reeves and Bill are on different wavelengths.

  • @willmercury

    @willmercury

    Жыл бұрын

    Yes, and Bill mansplains against his sex. Internalized misandry?

  • @warsurplus

    @warsurplus

    Жыл бұрын

    @@willmercury I disagree. I think Bill is tired of the coddling of american youth which I think he believes contributes to what Reeves' book is describing.

  • @TagSpamCop

    @TagSpamCop

    Жыл бұрын

    @@warsurplus The problem is that it's the _only_ thing he thinks contributes to it. Which is as bad as "systemic racism"/"systemic whatever." Univariate takes aren't any better when it comes men's issues. Richard seems to have better detail which we're not really getting into here, as Bill is fixating on his favorite hobbyhorse.

  • @warsurplus

    @warsurplus

    Жыл бұрын

    @@TagSpamCop I appreciate your points but why can't personal accountability ever be part of the solution alongside the "systematic whatever". I know not everyone has the same opportunities, but we're now at a point where the only cause is the "systematic whatever". Thanks the civil reply.

  • @HonkHonkler

    @HonkHonkler

    Жыл бұрын

    I hope society collapses. Why continue to sacrifice your well-being for a system (and people, women mainly) that hate you? Oh that's right because POOR WAHMEN. Nah, to any young man (or logical man reading this comment), don't be fooled by people like Richard Reeves. No one ACTUALLY cares about out issues, it's all about getting us back on the plantation (labor force/marriage) for the sake of WOMEN & SOCIETY. They need more logs to toss on to the pyre that is western society. Without is, things fall apart. Let them, this is the world that nurtured for so long. Let them reap their benefits lol. Let them figure it out on their own because I'm done being a slave.

  • @godadinc-jesse
    @godadinc-jesse Жыл бұрын

    Raising the truth requires a risk. I'm grateful Reeves didn't hesitate. It's easy to see how the scales have tipped, especially in education. I agree with Reeves that there is no reason why issues that affect both males and females can be kept before us. Men can't identify a sense of purpose or belief in themselves in several areas. This should matter to all of us so we can sustain a thriving being of life.

  • @Dennis-nc3vw

    @Dennis-nc3vw

    5 ай бұрын

    "The Democrats are playing you for chumps." - Malcolm X Richard Reeves chalks the underperformance of boys to a "level playing field" when studies show there's a grading bias against boys. Teachers will grade identical assignments 3% lower if they have a male name instead of a female one. That's the difference between a B+ and an A-. If find it VERY hard to believe Richard never came across this data studying this issue. 90% of Democrats don't care about boys and men, they want to commandeer these issues for selfish reasons, while doing as little to actually address societal misandry as possible.

  • @Mike-yi2gi
    @Mike-yi2gi Жыл бұрын

    School was a hellish experience of regularly getting the strap, suspensions and detention. I spent grade 5 at a desk in front of the principals office because they didn't know what to do with me. I went back to school when I was 24 and got a BA and a masters degree in subjects I was interested in.

  • @Cwgrlup

    @Cwgrlup

    Жыл бұрын

    This is a uniquely MALE thing?? Hardly. I was a female in trouble all the time in school. Arrested by the time I was 18 and doing drugs. Just stop with the victim mentality. What a bunch of whiny bitches. You have no idea what women go through-the sexist, vile shit we get put through growing up.

  • @norton750commando
    @norton750commando Жыл бұрын

    At my old high school, and most high schools in my city, the shop classes apparently disappeared a couple of decades ago. There used to be a full auto shop class, drafting, woodworking, electrical and sheet metal fabrication classes. That was the streaming location for the guys that didn't excel in the arts, literature or math fields. Nothing wrong with that, you have to give the young men what they may want to do with their lives. It's strange that they decided everyone must go to the higher levels of academia, even though a fair percentage would never pursue that direction. I had friends that went through the "shop" classes that turned out to have very interesting and lucrative careers. We are paying for it now with the high demand for the people that can do these skills.

  • @stephenryder1995

    @stephenryder1995

    Жыл бұрын

    I had a Norton Commando 'S' 750 CC in Candy apple red in 1971 - monster bike, but too often kicked back when you kick started it

  • @norton750commando

    @norton750commando

    Жыл бұрын

    @@stephenryder1995 Kick starting that son of a bitch was an art. Just getting the choke right took a few tries. Not a bike for a hasty getaway. Mine was a gold 72.

  • @stephenryder1995

    @stephenryder1995

    Жыл бұрын

    @@norton750commando Ahhh - back in the days when we were crazy, eh?

  • @norton750commando

    @norton750commando

    Жыл бұрын

    @@stephenryder1995 Far too long ago now. Haven't owned a bike since 78, when 3 friends in 2 years were seriously hurt riding through no fault of their own. Made me really think.

  • @stephenryder1995

    @stephenryder1995

    Жыл бұрын

    @@norton750commando My day job was Motor Officer - Big white FLH - A friend of mine in Motorcycle 1 (NYPD) was killed on his - in a sudden rain - I saw too many other guys maimed - gave it up after I dropped mine once, walked on a cane for 6 months - got away lucky....50 years ago now

  • @bobdroll6381
    @bobdroll6381 Жыл бұрын

    I liked him and what he had to say, hope to hear more from him in the future.

  • @dmr6390

    @dmr6390

    Жыл бұрын

    He has done a ton of good long form interviews on people’s podcasts: Andrew Yang’s podcast, Coleman Hughes’ podcast, breaking points, Reason Tv

  • @mattheww2797

    @mattheww2797

    Жыл бұрын

    His book is a good read too

  • @HonkHonkler

    @HonkHonkler

    Жыл бұрын

    I hope society collapses. Why continue to sacrifice your well-being for a system (and people, women mainly) that hate you? Oh that's right because POOR WAHMEN. Nah, to any young man (or logical man reading this comment), don't be fooled by people like Richard Reeves. No one ACTUALLY cares about out issues, it's all about getting us back on the plantation (labor force/marriage) for the sake of WOMEN & SOCIETY. They need more logs to toss on to the pyre that is western society. Without is, things fall apart. Let them, this is the world that nurtured for so long. Let them reap their benefits lol. Let them figure it out on their own because I'm done being a slave.

  • @Dennis-nc3vw

    @Dennis-nc3vw

    5 ай бұрын

    He attributes boys under performance in school to "girls are just better at school", even though studies show a severe grading bias against boys (ie teachers will grade identical assignments higher if they have female names). What are the odds he never came across that data doing all the research he did for this book? "The Democrats are playing you for chumps." - Malcolm X

  • @kipapula6838
    @kipapula6838 Жыл бұрын

    We need more men talking about men and boys issues like Mr.Reeves. The suggestions to helping boys in schools is right on.

  • @TagSpamCop

    @TagSpamCop

    Жыл бұрын

    "bUt WhAt AbOuT wOmEn?!?! pAtRiArChY wInS aGaIn!!!!" Feminists literally insist you must frame the concerns of men and boys through Feminist/Patriarchy Theory, because "fEmInIsM CaReS AbOuT ThIs!!!" They would insist that all of this is due to "pAtRiArChY hUrTs MeN tOo!!!" or that "tHiS Is tOxIc mAsCuLiNiTy rEaCtInG To fEmAlE SuCcEsS" or "bOyS ArE FiNaLlY GeTtInG A TaStE Of cOmInG In sEcOnD". Men are currently accustomed to putting women and their concerns first, and those who don't do that are dismissed as sexist dude-bros. When the whining from women about men really started to take off, men started to opt out and just said, fine, we'll do our own thing. One of the first cases of "your terms are acceptable." That in itself became feminist catnip, that men leaving keeping their distance from women - as feminists had always wanted - was suddenly misogyny too.

  • @MrXaphus

    @MrXaphus

    Жыл бұрын

    We do, and it helps, but its the same arguments that Warren Farrell has been making for years and it always ends up hitting the buffers because its a pro-male policy, and it goes against the prevailing agenda of the day to promote pro-male policies. What we need alongside the male movement is a basic acknowledgement from the feminist movement that its actually in their interest to be implementing the suggestions described by Richard Reeves and Warren Farrell and others, instead of meeting a wall of resistance from the outset because it "doesn't send the right message".

  • @HonkHonkler

    @HonkHonkler

    Жыл бұрын

    I hope society collapses. Why continue to sacrifice your well-being for a system (and people, women mainly) that hate you? Oh that's right because POOR WAHMEN. Nah, to any young man (or logical man reading this comment), don't be fooled by people like Richard Reeves. No one ACTUALLY cares about out issues, it's all about getting us back on the plantation (labor force/marriage) for the sake of WOMEN & SOCIETY. They need more logs to toss on to the pyre that is western society. Without is, things fall apart. Let them, this is the world that nurtured for so long. Let them reap their benefits lol. Let them figure it out on their own because I'm done being a slave.

  • @Dennis-nc3vw

    @Dennis-nc3vw

    5 ай бұрын

    Please, I'd rather the left go back to openly hating boys and men than this condescending garbage. Richard Reeves says the problem is a level playing? What a crock of horseshit. Studies show teachers have a grading bias against boys, and will grade an identical assignment 3 points lower if it has a male name than a female name. That's the difference between a B and a B+. And I'm supposed to believe that with all the research Richard Reeves put into this book, he never came across these studies?

  • @tylerpond1229
    @tylerpond1229 Жыл бұрын

    Why is the goal “college”? Let’s make it actual success. More than half of those in college made a bad decision by going.

  • @user-cg7wt3bx5y

    @user-cg7wt3bx5y

    Жыл бұрын

    He mentioned other options...

  • @svscared

    @svscared

    Жыл бұрын

    Not me. College was one of the best things to happen to me. All for success but college can and should be a huge stepping stone to that.

  • @scarpfish

    @scarpfish

    Жыл бұрын

    @@svscared College could be a stepping stone for more people if we'd give kids (and their parents) better transparency on the ROI before saddling them with enough student loan debt to pay for a luxury car. Very few people know what they want to be when they're 18 and for its price tag, academia does a poor job of helping kids sort that out.

  • @svscared

    @svscared

    Жыл бұрын

    @@scarpfish I'm all for getting rid of student loan debt which is why I support making college free via taxes like many other first world countries.

  • @hedgefundphil

    @hedgefundphil

    Жыл бұрын

    because that is the only organization allowed to matter

  • @ARichardP
    @ARichardP Жыл бұрын

    We had Ms. Smith in 6th Grade English. She was a gorgeous blonde in her early 20s who would sit on the front of her desk in short skirts while teaching. This was in 1971. She drove us all crazy. Unforgettable.

  • @r8chlletters

    @r8chlletters

    Жыл бұрын

    I’m sure you “paid attention”.

  • @abercrombieblovs2042

    @abercrombieblovs2042

    Жыл бұрын

    @@r8chlletters Hey, the education system says it itself, "it doesn't matter how you do it, I just want to see straight A+'s on your report card" :D

  • @Dennis-nc3vw

    @Dennis-nc3vw

    3 ай бұрын

    6th grade? Dude, Richard Reeves was right, that's early. There's a reason no society on Earth considered a boy a man at that age.

  • @dwaynecuster
    @dwaynecuster Жыл бұрын

    I went to a vocational high school for three years and learned everything about data processing and information systems at the cusp of the computer revolution and the dawn of the internet back in the late 80s. It prepared me to move into an occupation right out of high school. College would never have done that. Now, in my 50s, I'm working on my PhD because life experience has tempered the youthful rambunctiousness and energy I once had. When I was in my 20s I just wanted to get laid and party. It all worked out just the way it was supposed to.

  • @stephenryder1995

    @stephenryder1995

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeah, Dwayne - them ol' evil colleges - full'a commies an' perverts, right?

  • @mattmayo3539
    @mattmayo3539 Жыл бұрын

    When I taught first grade I always noticed the boys in my class would be the most likely to be diagnosed with a learning disability because they learned differently.

  • @rabbit251

    @rabbit251

    Жыл бұрын

    You didn't learn this in your mandatory developmental psychology class? Maybe our higher education is the problem?

  • @pbajnow

    @pbajnow

    Жыл бұрын

    Listen to folks and observe them. Generalizations help, but inevitably we are individuals. 23 students max. per teacher.

  • @mattmayo3539

    @mattmayo3539

    Жыл бұрын

    @@rabbit251 I did learn this. It’s seeing it unfold in real time that was hard to cope with.

  • @theBear89451

    @theBear89451

    Жыл бұрын

    That's part of it, but don't ignore almost all diseases effect boys more than girls. Learning disability is a disease.

  • @mnob1122

    @mnob1122

    Жыл бұрын

    I developed dyslexia in puberty. This was in the mid-60’s. Back then, no one knew what that was and I was just pushed through the system. I went from being an A-B student to a C-D student. I became very depressed and suicidal but managed to pull my self out of that state of mind. However, dyslexia and the lack of knowledge on how we learn differently ruined my life. I was unable to go to college or get a decent paying job. Oh, and I’m a woman.

  • @TromboneRockGod
    @TromboneRockGod Жыл бұрын

    The biggest change that needs to happen in childhood education is to teach children how to think, not what to think. That begins with methodological naturalism and the scientific method. There are no other mechanisms ever invented by mankind that can better demonstrate the objective truths of reality and the natural world, better than the scientific method.

  • @webx135

    @webx135

    Жыл бұрын

    YES. Also if we need to utilize self-directed learning where we can. Things like letting them choose a problem to solve and then providing them the resources as needed. Learning works best when it is actively chosen, and information is WAY better absorbed if the goal comes before the solution. SPeaking mostly about STEM classes here. In the case of a lot of math classes, they'll say "here's how you expand a polynomial" and "here's how you factor a polynomial". But then you don't use these things until way later. If you don't need the tool, there's no reason to keep it. If you start with a need before you get the tool, you know what tools to look for.

  • @TheMonolake
    @TheMonolake Жыл бұрын

    Right Right Right. ...thanks for this !

  • @TagSpamCop
    @TagSpamCop Жыл бұрын

    Consider reading Christina Hoff Sommers' book "The War Against Boys," which precedes this by 20 years but is even more relevant today.

  • @hmbourne
    @hmbourne Жыл бұрын

    They're also needs to be some kind of study done on the differences between urban and rural priorities. I tend to think that educational priorities in rural schools follow urban priorities.

  • @Pelletajuton1
    @Pelletajuton1 Жыл бұрын

    "If responsible people don't address real problems in a straight-forward way, irrisponsible people are going to exploit them" 👌 Can't physically put my thumbs high enough for this statement!! I remember when that one lunatic fringe dousche bag (i think it was hawley) talked about the problems of men, it really sent a nasty shiver down my spine.. there are a lot of us that feel left out of society, and feeling left out makes you especially vulnerable to be drawn into things that are orders of magnitude dumber than you are, just to feel useful, or needed, or feel like your existence matters. Problem is, i think men still feel like we are measured by standards that come from a time when women were oppressed into obeying men. And if someone can solve THAT equation, with nobody getting hurt, they have my utmost respect 😬

  • @84imreplica
    @84imreplica Жыл бұрын

    I'm a male and taught school for 35 years (retired in 2013). Even though I thoroughly enjoyed my years of teaching, I can say, with all honesty, I would not go into teaching today and would not recommend teaching as a career to any young man.

  • @RM-ed1if
    @RM-ed1if Жыл бұрын

    Most men don't want to teach K-12 because of the paltry salary and unpaid hours. Also, most men would rather leave child education to women because they find it boring, and bothersome, and they believe women have a kinder disposition and ability to handle kids. At least that's the case in U.S. However, boys do need more discipline at school than girls do, especially starting in the 7th grade when puberty starts to kick in. That lack of discipline in the classroom 7-12 leads to poor educational results, even negatively affecting those kids who were good to average students in elementary school.

  • @aeristone5941

    @aeristone5941

    Жыл бұрын

    I'm a male K-12 teacher, and I mostly agree with you, especially on why most men don't want to teach. I can't agree, however, with the concept that male teachers will inherently bring more discipline, which seems to be what you're implying. Perhaps I'm mistaken on what you were inferring there, but there is no REAL and beneficial discipline of any sort in U.S. schools, except for what is brought from home/already existing in the student. Having more male teachers won't change the students who really need discipline. That's akin to believing that your deadbolt is actually meant to keep out criminals/makes you safe.

  • @stephenryder1995

    @stephenryder1995

    Жыл бұрын

    @@aeristone5941 As a male 7-12 teacher I agree. But the lack of discipline in American schools is due to the administrators - the male teacher has no leeway - as you know. But I'll tell you this - there was iron discipline in my classroom because I didn't give a damn about the system. I was often in trouble with the Dean of Boys, but I told him he could fire me anytime he wanted to, but I will take no shit from any student. By the way, I was the most popular teacher in the school.

  • @Ryan88881

    @Ryan88881

    Жыл бұрын

    More discipline? Nice trolling.

  • @aeristone5941

    @aeristone5941

    Жыл бұрын

    @@stephenryder1995 Hahah yeah, I tried something similar, but it didn't pan out so well for me. It was 50-50 on "good days". More often than not though, it would just culminate in snotty parents coming in to complain that I was meaner to their "precious little angel" than the other kids...which of course would culminate in threats of me losing my job...like teach your precious angel shithead to not kick other kids, and I won't have to be so "mean" lol.

  • @aeristone5941

    @aeristone5941

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Ryan88881 LOL Touche'

  • @marrz8244
    @marrz8244 Жыл бұрын

    Hilarious and educational 👌

  • @matthewmagda4971
    @matthewmagda4971 Жыл бұрын

    1:06 this is just as good on the rewatch. This is evocative of the maxim that evil triumphs when good men do nothing.

  • @sergeati8225
    @sergeati8225 Жыл бұрын

    The last minute of this video... :) Bill is just so funny while telling the truth

  • @bruh_hahaha
    @bruh_hahaha Жыл бұрын

    True though. 20 years ago schools had more PE, variety sports, and extra curriculars a like woodshop (my high school even had a mechanic shop) that engaged male students. Those things have all been cut from most modern schools.

  • @AlexMoschopoulos
    @AlexMoschopoulos Жыл бұрын

    I have to agree a lot on the reform of education in bringing back physical education, recess, tech schools, and more to get many into vocational apprenticeships as opposed to just telling them they need to go to college. Give kids a choice, as opposed to telling them that being a trades person is somehow being a loser. Obviously, we also need to completely get rid of this standardized test BS that we do now. It's not helping the kids. You just can't standardize education. Everybody is different. However, I still feel like while many parents might worry about their boys, they are still not taking the steps they need to take. If I hear things like "boys will be boys" then there is the problem. There's a reason why the fathers of yesteryear pushed their boys to learn responsibility, take care of themselves, and grow up to be independent. Yes, they pushed boys back then to get married and have kids, but it was still all about being the right definition of a man. Not the misogynistic spread the seed definition, but simply the hardworking responsible independent adult definition. If boys are growing up, simply wanting to sit on porn sites, play video games, live in their parents basement, not go to school, not get a job, then you got to put some blame on the parents. Kick them out of the house. Yes, it might destroy their self-esteem, but you have to do something more than just coddling.

  • @Winterstick549
    @Winterstick549 Жыл бұрын

    I hate how trades are looked at as a pathway for those of lesser intelligence. Machinists, welders and electricians require far more math skills than the majority of university degrees.

  • @pete5691
    @pete5691 Жыл бұрын

    Watch an afternoon of children’s tv and take note of how many commercials encourage girls vs how many encourage boys. Pay attention to how men are portrayed vs women in commercials. Lastly if you watch any movies for children, look at how boy and girl protagonists are portrayed.

  • @interestingtimes6242

    @interestingtimes6242

    Жыл бұрын

    I agree. This doesn’t get any attention, but it’s a huge factor. I recently tried to find a good male hero movie. I gave up. Star Wars is now a girl’s movie, James Bond is a feminized version of himself, and replaced by a woman. This has been done to every boy’s hero. And the trope is, she’s better at it without even trying. The men used to go through a transformational hero’s journey, the women are born superior, they don’t need to struggle (called the Mary Jane trope, it’s so common it has a name). The men are non sexual support characters at best, or buffoons. No wonder boys are demoralized and give up.

  • @pete5691

    @pete5691

    Жыл бұрын

    @@interestingtimes6242 I try not to let my kids watch too much of it. A particularly egregious example is the movie Brave. There is just no part of that movie that represents any truth at all. The men are all buffoons and/or genetic rejects and she wants to just ride horses and shoot her bow and arrow.

  • @Brasilmagic79
    @Brasilmagic79 Жыл бұрын

    That is exactly my experience. Two successful daughters. Some friends with sons who are either living in the basement or on drugs or don’t want to study or work.

  • @PeopleHealthTru

    @PeopleHealthTru

    Жыл бұрын

    What incentive do young men have when you have te rrorist divorce judges who k idnap children . For profit and then make the fathers slav es to the government and mom while restricting access to their own children. Kids need EqualSharedParentingsite

  • @soniaalvarado5372
    @soniaalvarado5372 Жыл бұрын

    Re the comments on the lack of male teachers and the overall classroom experience. My understanding is that in the 1960’s, almost 70 percent of teachers were female and yet male students got educated etc.Kids are influenced by many things but first and foremost is their parents. Our parents are the first teachers in our lives. Our parents are the first and constant faces we see as children. The environment that we grow up with also plays a role in who we become. As always, I think it’s more complicated.

  • @pamelaadl9559

    @pamelaadl9559

    Жыл бұрын

    I agree! How did female teachers in the classroom suddenly become a problem? When Reeves said that, he lost all legitimacy.

  • @ibnewton8951
    @ibnewton8951 Жыл бұрын

    The older Bill and I both get, the more I agree with him. Sorry but that’s the way it is. I was born in the’50s.

  • @lorettanericcio-bohlman567
    @lorettanericcio-bohlman567 Жыл бұрын

    Unfortunately you tube cut this short, in the podcast Richard Reeves talks further on educating his 3 sons on how to accept rejection when asking a woman out. Priceless info today

  • @kashesan
    @kashesan Жыл бұрын

    Maybe there would be more male teachers if all teachers were paid a reasonable salary.

  • @dafinaglgrrrr8565
    @dafinaglgrrrr8565 Жыл бұрын

    I’ll agree to the point that determines it’s necessary to advance education just as well as everything in life changing and “upgrading “ with the times. Some facets are timeless but not every one.A balanced approach and careful evolution may provide a better result.

  • @marilynsmith3522
    @marilynsmith3522 Жыл бұрын

    Let’s give all students the option to stand instead of always sitting. I was a girl in school and sitting all day was difficult for me as well.

  • @ceofounder
    @ceofounder Жыл бұрын

    Excellent book! Very profound writing! Thought provoking! Magnificent writer! Bill Maher and Real Time awesomeness!

  • @xlDysenterylx

    @xlDysenterylx

    Жыл бұрын

    Sentence fragments! Why are we shouting?!?!

  • @ceofounder

    @ceofounder

    Жыл бұрын

    @@xlDysenterylx I am proverbially shouting for you to get your one way ticket to St. Elsewhere forever! Fake wannabe grammar corrector! Don't be bitter, be better! Good riddance!

  • @Cecilia-ky3uw

    @Cecilia-ky3uw

    Жыл бұрын

    @@xlDysenterylx I think it is a poem

  • @Dennis-nc3vw

    @Dennis-nc3vw

    5 ай бұрын

    He attributes boys under performance in school to "girls are just better at school", even though studies show a severe grading bias against boys (ie teachers will grade identical assignments higher if they have female names). What are the odds he never came across that data doing all the research he did for this book? Democrats have just switched from hateful misandry to patronizing misandry.

  • @ceofounder

    @ceofounder

    5 ай бұрын

    @@Dennis-nc3vw Instead of wasting your invaluable time, typing a KZread diatribe or essay to me; you should enjoy the Christmas and New Years!

  • @TheApeVine
    @TheApeVine Жыл бұрын

    I hear you Bill, in Grade 3 I fell in Love with My Female teacher ... and I very quickly became teachers Pet!

  • @Odin31b
    @Odin31b Жыл бұрын

    03:10 why are they clapping...?

  • @brother.teresa
    @brother.teresa Жыл бұрын

    Men struggle because of social media and dating apps. Dating was years so much better before both. You actually met women face to face through people in your social circle

  • @dmr6390

    @dmr6390

    Жыл бұрын

    You can easily still meet women that way. And men who are willing to do that are at a huge advantage bc most guys are scared to

  • @MrLBDude

    @MrLBDude

    Жыл бұрын

    Attractive young women are only interested in competing for about 15% of the men. That leaves 85% of men vulnerable to everything from losing their job to their reputation or freedom if they flirt with a woman face to face. At least with dating apps, women cannot accuse men of harassment simply because they were romantically solicited.

  • @christopherpederson1021

    @christopherpederson1021

    Жыл бұрын

    The problem is in United States the social circles are completely living in a bubble and are so tight knit and closed. Also, you have to drink to be a part of any of these things. Overall, their attitude is so closed minded and narrow they don’t accept any people that are different from their mindsets.

  • @NKA23

    @NKA23

    Жыл бұрын

    @@dmr6390 You gotta ask yourself, why so many younger men are so afraid to meet women face to face, though.

  • @AFuller2020

    @AFuller2020

    Жыл бұрын

    Don't waste your time on western women

  • @thedahkterizzin8831
    @thedahkterizzin8831 Жыл бұрын

    This guy falls in line with the late great Ken Robinson, amazing educator and reformer. Kudos! Why is sitting still such a great life skill?

  • @GreenMorningDragonProductions

    @GreenMorningDragonProductions

    Жыл бұрын

    Ken Robinson. Didn't know he'd died (RIP) but he did come across as a refreshing yet pragmatic voice in his field. No wonder most people haven't heard of him :(

  • @r8chlletters

    @r8chlletters

    Жыл бұрын

    When you are corralling 35+ kids at a time it’s the only thing you can “teach”…be quiet, sit still, et al.

  • @ameliaalastairmoon4145

    @ameliaalastairmoon4145

    Жыл бұрын

    It's more the ability to focus on a task and be organised and disciplined when approaching learning in and after class. Girls seem to have a general advantage over boys in school, but as a girl I never found it easy nor pleasant to be forced through long, boring classes. We all need to be challenged and inspired, to perform well.

  • @Khallnayakkk
    @Khallnayakkk Жыл бұрын

    Mark Gagnon has done a 2 hour long podcast with this dude. It's amazing. Do watch it.

  • @LulaLeeful
    @LulaLeeful Жыл бұрын

    Haven't read the book, does it address the different ways girls and boys are taught to behave before they are old enough to be in school?

  • @shwnshts9469

    @shwnshts9469

    Жыл бұрын

    go on...how are they taught to behave? are you talking about adults projecting gender roles and bias or a cultural shift in what counts as manners? or another thought entirely?

  • @r8chlletters

    @r8chlletters

    Жыл бұрын

    The older I get the more I realize how innately different males and females are however point taken and yes in the nature/nurture schema parents can help children learn a host of skills that help them flourish in a structured school environment. This assumes the parents are aware and mindful individuals which they may not be. Preschool also helps.

  • @thegodfatherofthesec1748
    @thegodfatherofthesec1748 Жыл бұрын

    Applause 👏

  • @MohamedAhmed-ms9eu
    @MohamedAhmed-ms9eu Жыл бұрын

    They literally changed everything about education system to make it suit girls better and when girls got better grades they hid their hand and just said they were better all along. A study was done in which teachers marked math papers with male and female names - females got higher grades. Teachers now had to remark them without names on the papers - boys got higher grades. When they researched further they found that teachers were giving girls higher grades because of how neat their handwriting was or because they talked less in class.

  • @llamalinguist3250
    @llamalinguist325029 күн бұрын

    Amen to more recess! I've worked in school systems where all grades of elementary school were given 30 min/day of recess for lunch AND play and they only had PE once or twice a week! And then they wondered why the boys were acting up. 🤦‍♀️

  • @juliesipes8007
    @juliesipes8007 Жыл бұрын

    It is a complex issue, but one factor I think is an overemphasis of sports. My husband and I observed that with our nephews. They both thought they could be football players, put so much time and attention on that over their academics. Of course, they didn’t make it to the NFL. I mean, how many do?

  • @matthewmagda4971
    @matthewmagda4971 Жыл бұрын

    More of this

  • @gerdhansma4184
    @gerdhansma4184 Жыл бұрын

    I believe the answer IS more physical activity intermingled with learning. This is something easier to facilitate in college...maybe gyms with bikes with book racks on them?

  • @BoydSmash
    @BoydSmash Жыл бұрын

    Really glad this is hitting a program like this. I retired from the workforce at 39, for multiple reasons, but also partly because I was in an industry that didn’t seem to value critical thinking and problem solving. My intention was to help people directly instead of staying with engineering, which was a huge mistake. I suspect you’ll see more guys bailing out early. Is it an actual problem though? Time will tell…

  • @mikedrown2721
    @mikedrown2721 Жыл бұрын

    👍👏😊❤️🇬🇧 Thanks!

  • @blantonric41
    @blantonric41 Жыл бұрын

    Most important thing he said was that education in America needs to focus more on technical skills and the trades which would greatly benefit young males in getting jobs and being successful.

  • @TagSpamCop

    @TagSpamCop

    Жыл бұрын

    And feminists will complain.

  • @luiscruz7343
    @luiscruz7343 Жыл бұрын

    I think it may have a lot to do about upbringing. I grew up in a big city. So office jobs are not something I love but since I grew up around it, it's not intimidating to me because I've worked them since a young age. Someone growing up in a rural place where people work with their hands everyday may have a different viewpoint of going to school and then to an office which is what we're programmed to do since childhood.

  • @creativereality4212
    @creativereality4212 Жыл бұрын

    From my perspective, going through school, there are more outlets to burn off the energy so that I could focus. My elementary school routine went like this: Every day, we have a few classes, go to gym class. Have another class, then lunch with a built-in recess. Then we would have another class or two, followed by a recess followed by a final class and then go home. With that kind of outlet to burn off the energy, I wasn’t sitting in a classroom any more than two hours. Today, my son has PE once a week for 45 minutes as opposed to every day. I think part of this is we’ve gotten so test focused that we’ve taken away these outlets. And frankly, this focus on testing is misplaced. The problems with our test scores compared to other countries wasn’t a problem in fairly affluent middle-class school systems. It’s the poor school systems that drag everybody else down. It’s not a testing problem, it’s an education problem, and how certain school systems have less resources than others.

  • @Emanon...
    @Emanon... Жыл бұрын

    Spot on. I'm a social democrat in Europe and I believe that boys and girls would benefit immensely from having certain school subjects (maths, language, science) completely split by gender until 5th grade.

  • @senister14

    @senister14

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeah, the Simpsons did it and it worked fine.

  • @aristocraticrebel

    @aristocraticrebel

    Жыл бұрын

    Social democracy is dying.

  • @stephenryder1995

    @stephenryder1995

    Жыл бұрын

    Permanently 'split' in my humble opinion

  • @curiouscat98
    @curiouscat98 Жыл бұрын

    School system in Canada and the USA is the worst. They should learn from the countries that actually have a good education system.

  • @criticaltheories5222
    @criticaltheories5222 Жыл бұрын

    I was constantly beaten at home for my problems in school. Fidgeting, talking pranks, etc.....all the while getting straight A's.

  • @civilengineer3349

    @civilengineer3349

    Жыл бұрын

    Same. Rough housing was considered "fighting" and thus "bad". It got me suspended and expelled at 8th grade and suspended and nearly expelled at 11th grade. All while I was the top grade student in my class for multiple years straight.

  • @GreenMorningDragonProductions

    @GreenMorningDragonProductions

    Жыл бұрын

    @@civilengineer3349 Can you flesh out what you just outlined though, and reassure us that you weren't actually just the class bully, who got all the nerds to do his homework for him, or else?

  • @civilengineer3349

    @civilengineer3349

    Жыл бұрын

    @@GreenMorningDragonProductions I wasn't a bully. The fact that you feminists can't distinguish between rough housing and bullying is the problem

  • @RoofStud

    @RoofStud

    Жыл бұрын

    I was the class clown. Got in trouble a few times, but it's because the curriculum was not challenging at all. I got straight A's and went to college completely unprepared for an actual challenge, and got put on academic suspension a couple of years in. Got my act together and graduated, then went on to be relatively successful in the workforce. I watched the full segment (this particular video was cut short), and while I agree that the educational system needs some work, I think the bigger problem with many men nowadays is that thru social engineering, "being a man" is slowly but surely being removed from what the current narrative is accepting. You can call whatever you want, and I'm not getting political about it, but there aren't many "men" who can be a man, but still be a gentleman and a respectable adult. It's either the quintessential alpha male who looks down on women and treats others with less money, credentials, etc like complete shit (narcissism falls into this category), or the incel gamer who refuses to take any responsibility for anything, lives with his parents, won't work a job, and manipulates his parents them to accept that behavior as normal. So basically you have narcissistic assholes who think they're the best thing since sliced bread, or freeloaders who think they're incredibly intelligent and sophisticated because they're good at video games and trolling ppl on Reddit, thus making them the best thing since sliced bread. The middle ground is vanishing, and it's pathetic. It's no wonder women are so frustrated with the current landscape of dating and relationships. Men are as well, but most of them are completely clueless on how to be a man without being a dick, and when you have the two genders that want each other but can't relate or connect, you get a lot of resentment on both sides. I don't know what the solution is. I don't even know where we can start. I certainly think social engineering needs to be modified in a way that promotes a healthy society for everyone, but that's not what benefits the corporate and political agendas, so that may be a pipe dream.

  • @lscandrick0531

    @lscandrick0531

    Жыл бұрын

    sorry

  • @billhdowne2382
    @billhdowne2382 Жыл бұрын

    May I suggest “Iron John” by the late Robert Bly.

  • @donh7909
    @donh7909 Жыл бұрын

    I did VoTech..! Worked out well..

  • @EmpireGuy91
    @EmpireGuy91 Жыл бұрын

    The sort of crowd who will actively cheer for men to fail or lose. Truly wild.

  • @timmyj2366

    @timmyj2366

    Жыл бұрын

    I thought that was alarming too. And that’s exactly part of the issue at hand. Women have been benefitting from gentler upbringings and constant pats on the back for the past 2-3 decades. Boys have been getting tough love and no encouragement. Women’s success is applauded even when it’s at the expense of boys. This is an uphill battle.

  • @soundandfury6557

    @soundandfury6557

    Жыл бұрын

    Aww cry me a river for dummy boys

  • @timmyj2366

    @timmyj2366

    Жыл бұрын

    @@soundandfury6557 And they say the sexism is on the political right? Nope, to many of us it’s clear where it is with comments like yours. Keep hiding behind your computer screen👍🏼

  • @aristocraticrebel

    @aristocraticrebel

    Жыл бұрын

    Why are men becoming increasingly right-wing? It's such a mystery.

  • @lauren23160

    @lauren23160

    Жыл бұрын

    @@timmyj2366 😂😂😂😂

  • @collectivesartori
    @collectivesartori Жыл бұрын

    “Thank you” 😂

  • @poppyorangeflower
    @poppyorangeflower Жыл бұрын

    The boys at my (middle, high) school hated phys-ed. Lol.

  • @jamescottone9882
    @jamescottone9882 Жыл бұрын

    Yet again, Bill is right.

  • @user-nmvrgqu
    @user-nmvrgqu Жыл бұрын

    wow bill maher is a cool guy

  • @whafrog
    @whafrog Жыл бұрын

    Can't agree more with this guy, more phys-ed is essential, as is restructuring the curriculum to be more inclusive

  • @charmingpeasant9834
    @charmingpeasant9834 Жыл бұрын

    Universities also discriminate against men by offering scholarships and exclusive programs to women simply because they're women.

  • @chillones9574
    @chillones9574 Жыл бұрын

    Just had parent teacher conferences for my twin boys. 4th grade. Teachers say they academically smart but can't sit still. The older sister a 4.0 college 3yr grad,now medical school. I tell the teachers to yell at them to sit still, tough love. make them run laps my sons not future teachers,journalist so instead of working on weakness lets work on the strengths. because FOR 4 years they were force ADHD pills by school and a new doctor my ex used,but finally a new counselor at school this year said to their mom lets try 4th grade no medication, FINALLY someone listening that my 9 year old boys just active like me.

  • @mikhanch1228
    @mikhanch1228 Жыл бұрын

    Nard dog started to cry when he said Cornell was terrible

  • @stephenryder1995

    @stephenryder1995

    Жыл бұрын

    it is a hard school with the highest suicide rate - the Gorge there is infamous for that

  • @joeyjojojuniorshabadoo8549
    @joeyjojojuniorshabadoo8549 Жыл бұрын

    We've accepted broken families, accepted absent fathers and just assumed boys will adjust. But where do they get their male guidance from? Not in education as most teachers are...female. Strong male role models give boys a sense of masculinity. As hard as women try, they can never model this effectively, even with all the pronouns we have flying around the place.

  • @shortminute

    @shortminute

    Жыл бұрын

    Long story short. I’m a teacher of 22 years. We were talking about this when I was a student teacher in the late 90s. Then you had to shut up about it. Then I had a son. Knowing what he was about to experience I did the opposite of my progressive instincts and raised him old school. Lots of sports, coaches both male and female, lots of arts music and poetry, hunting, fishing, fires, chopping wood, told him to be strong, helped him over come challenges by making him face fear head on, boxing, jujitsu, play fighting, rough and tumble play, old school movies, cut down the video games, gun safety training. You name it, if it was old school we did it. My friends thought I was red pilled, alt right, and worthy of ridicule. Can you guess the out come?

  • @magicmarker7047

    @magicmarker7047

    Жыл бұрын

    Here we go, males blaming women for their failures. Why don't you go out and fix the core of the problem and that is a lot of men for many decades have been "gone with the wind" and don't give a rat's ass about the children they spawn. Also, if there were more male teachers, by the same standard are you not concerned that girls would become more masculine?

  • @anneb889

    @anneb889

    Жыл бұрын

    I recall many years ago hearing Dr Phil say the most important parent to a child is the same sex parent. If he said that today…..he would probably get canceled. Very sad how we have torn down the family….the children are the ones that suffer.

  • @joeyjojojuniorshabadoo8549

    @joeyjojojuniorshabadoo8549

    Жыл бұрын

    @@magicmarker7047 a predictably emotive response from someone who hasn't read the comment properly. Go back to the beginning and start again.

  • @magicmarker7047

    @magicmarker7047

    Жыл бұрын

    @@joeyjojojuniorshabadoo8549 Oh, really! A predictable response from an overly sensitive male.

  • @margo5919
    @margo5919 Жыл бұрын

    Both thoughts yes…bring back recess and vocational school too!

  • @Omni0404
    @Omni0404 Жыл бұрын

    Bill Maher with his hot take of "just try harder."

  • @UToobin75

    @UToobin75

    Жыл бұрын

    Maher's constant criticism of younger generations is not only wildly off base, it's intellectually LAZY.

  • @84paratize

    @84paratize

    Жыл бұрын

    Then it turned into "just get harder" at the end lol

  • @Omni0404

    @Omni0404

    Жыл бұрын

    @@UToobin75 He picks strange battles. He hates muslims, trans people, and anybody with a BMI above 25

  • @protosniper-
    @protosniper-11 ай бұрын

    biggest problem imo is anxiety and depression. it is absolutely rampant in north american youth and it holds them back severely. it is an epidemic that no one talks about.

  • @scottipippen6554
    @scottipippen6554 Жыл бұрын

    "Thank you.."lmao.

  • @pisces031372aj
    @pisces031372aj Жыл бұрын

    All these things are true but let's not forget that children need discipline. And we don't do that nearly enough anymore. Parents are negotiating with or rewarding little kids to get them to do what no mother got done with just a look at us.

  • @mydogdeli
    @mydogdeli Жыл бұрын

    This was excellent, but it’s nothing new. I wrote a graduate level paper on this very topic 20 years ago, that’s almost a generation ago. To add to what Reeve said in his interview, increasingly, boys are the ones who need help. Nowadays, boys get disciplined more, fail more, drop out more, Have more learning disabilities, emotional disabilities, and behavioral issues than girls do. As Reeves said, throughout grade school, college, university, and grad school there are more girls and they get significantly better grades than boys and men do. Mentioning this and writing a book on it, should not be controversial and should not lead to suspicion or critiques of the author. None of this should take away from any of the excellent work we have been doing to help and encourage girls in education. Much progress has been made for girls over the past 40 years, and that work should continue. But, as I said in my paper 20 years ago, the next generation of women will not want to be surrounded by men who are under educated, under employed, and lacking in a healthy self image. Doing this work will benefit everyone boys and girls, as well as men and women alike.

  • @stephaniethomas2223
    @stephaniethomas2223 Жыл бұрын

    RIGHT THE SYSTEM DOES NEED REFORMED AND DIAGNOSE BETTER!!!!

  • @ethanz3837
    @ethanz3837 Жыл бұрын

    “Sitting is the new smoking.” …Says the NYTimes. But kids should wake up at 7am to do it for 6 hours for 12 years of their life.

  • @paulppchristman5827
    @paulppchristman5827 Жыл бұрын

    Another thing that has hindered boys' academic success in America for many generations is that boys are primarily expected to excel at sports and athletics , and not nearly as much pressure is put on boys to get good grades. Time and time again, the question a boy will be asked by, for instance, a colleague of either of his parents upon being introduced to them will be 'What sports team(s) are you on at school ?", not "What's your favorite subject ?"

  • @the_village_elder

    @the_village_elder

    Жыл бұрын

    I used to get asked “how many girlfriends do you have” lol

  • @publius9350

    @publius9350

    Жыл бұрын

    Grades are bullshit. Why are you expecting boys to be good in either of these? Ask boys about the things they did outside of school. Or just generally, encourage them not to do either of these sad monkey dances.

  • @Cecilia-ky3uw

    @Cecilia-ky3uw

    Жыл бұрын

    I definitely agree with this, I think we should push boys to be intellectuals or at least resourceful thinkers, make them actually think that thinking is a cool thing, explain to them when they get into all the cool stuff(you know the fighting shite) that playing it smart works too and combining it with mechanical skill is just as important, make them well resourceful. If any of you indeed struggle to see how resourcefulness can be used in school, think again, I got through the first parts of physics through realising I could just "cheat" using the units which literally told me what to do, for chemistry I literally simplified it to "outside everyone wants 8 shells or zero shells except for hydrogen" and everything sort of came together and the rules just got into my head slowly. And the best part was maths when I realised what the equal sign meant and that was a fucking miracle as it removed all need for memorisation, instead putting me to think about the logic on the spot, I also eventually understood my quadratic equations, (can't do completing the square mind you) but the graphs makes sense, and the logic of factorising made sense too(though that wasn't so much resourcefulness as finding a eureka with the logic, you just have to procrastinate til you connect the dots), the graphs in particular was very fun logic, as I managed to connect a few dots with the graphs and the factorising method by associating points where y=0 to the values of x in factorising, that on the spot logic saved my maths tests.

  • @Dennis-nc3vw

    @Dennis-nc3vw

    5 ай бұрын

    What hinders boys academic success is simple grading bias. Studies show teachers have a grading bias against boys, and will grade an identical assignment 3 points lower if it has a male name than a female name. That's the difference between a B and a B+. And I'm supposed to believe that with all the research Richard Reeves put into this book, he never came across these studies? As Malcolm X said "The Democrats are playing you for chumps." They just switched from hateful misandry to condescending misandry. It makes me sick to see people gobbling this excrement up.

  • @DadBodsAreForQuitters
    @DadBodsAreForQuitters4 ай бұрын

    Scott Galloway spoke of a 1 year later start for boys. And I think changing schools to suit boys a bit better would help.

  • @user-nmvrgqu
    @user-nmvrgqu Жыл бұрын

    bill maher should make a podcast with richard reeves and dawkins

  • @mbern4530
    @mbern4530 Жыл бұрын

    It has already been proven that men and women learn differently. The reason there were more men in post secondary education in the past is that the educational system was catered to them and many girls were dropping out. Due to this the system was changed and it worked to help the girls, but now we are seeing the same situation with the boys dropping out. You'll never have true educational equality for this reason, but we went from one extreme to another.

  • @webx135

    @webx135

    Жыл бұрын

    Yes. But also, a well-designed system of progress would help all parties. So for instance, if girls are struggling on tests compared to boys, they can either make an ill-designed system which makes the tests more suited to girls at the EXPENSE of boys, or what they did by varying the question types, where it improved scores for both girls AND boys, just that girls saw more relative improvement because they were behind. Basically, we need to focus on policies like the latter rather than the former. So in the case of more hands-on learning and more self-directed learning, both girls and boys would benefit. We should just see more relative improvement in boys as things go more towards parity. I think about policies like "man taxes" or "switching to a female focus" or other zero-sum methods and it just makes me cringe. You don't stop a pendulum by pulling it the other way. That speeds up the pendulum. You stop a pendulum by pulling it straight down to the middle.

  • @mbern4530

    @mbern4530

    Жыл бұрын

    @@webx135 I agree completely, but as usual the government took the easy way out so they had something to show for it quickly. Making an educational system for boys and girls would have required actual thinking and planning from government.

  • @blindfaith8777
    @blindfaith8777 Жыл бұрын

    Men thrive on competition. One thing that seems to missing from these conversations is how competition is often seen as toxic these days as it creates losers. If competitive elements, such as posting test scores on the wall, have been removed from schools, that may be a major reason as to why men are falling behind.

  • @ditiromonaiwa8913
    @ditiromonaiwa8913 Жыл бұрын

    What an interesting conversation this was. Gives a lot to think about. Parents have a hell of a job to do raising children.

  • @anaibarangan4908

    @anaibarangan4908

    Жыл бұрын

    Even as a woman, I thought it was interesting, very on point and well thought out and thought through. He's very eloquent and gifted in how he presents it all. It's as if old world knowledge that boys can be easier lead astray, but if it's a girl, can be just as bad or worse, and it's usually more painful as a failure to parents, that's because of how much more harm can receive from others, especially men. Women on the streets versus men, comparison, says it all. Everything.

  • @aristocraticrebel
    @aristocraticrebel Жыл бұрын

    It's too late to solve this problem. At this point I would rather watch this misandrist society burn to the ground.

  • @natinasingh4771
    @natinasingh4771 Жыл бұрын

    I am happy we are talking about this. I often worry about my boys in the world 20 years from now.Girl rights should not take away from Boys rights. I am worried about the flip.

  • @soundandfury6557

    @soundandfury6557

    Жыл бұрын

    Boys are just dumber

  • @ameliaalastairmoon4145

    @ameliaalastairmoon4145

    Жыл бұрын

    Well, it's not like boys are losing rights, exactly. As they said in this interview, the playing field now has been (mostly) levelled, and girls simply outperform their male counterparts. The teaching system hasn't really changed, but women's access to education has. And girls are better students. It's that simple. Don't get me wrong, we should absolutely find new ways of teaching that are more stimulating for everyone, and bring back more vocational training. But we're far from a reversal of roles, with women telling men not to "overheat" "their little brains" and forcing them out of jobs and education. If anything, women succeeding are still perceived as unfair competition. There's a very real fragility that comes with the loss of privilege that men are experiencing in the West. If we're all equal, they're not automatically special anymore. I'm afraid that to a certain extent this phase of uncertainty is inevitable, when big societal change is afoot. I'm sure your boys will do just fine! Hopefully they'll grow up in a more balanced world, and they'll be allowed to excel in their true passions and talents, whatever they'll be.

  • @hedgefundphil

    @hedgefundphil

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ameliaalastairmoon4145 there are organizations that promote women's interests but not men's that is not levelled the playing field.

  • @heatherdeer00074

    @heatherdeer00074

    Жыл бұрын

    I don't think boys are losing right we don't understand why they are falling behind

  • @theBear89451

    @theBear89451

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ameliaalastairmoon4145 "not like boys are losing rights" - sees all the universities that no longer use test scores as an admission criteria because tests favor boys.

  • @TesserId
    @TesserId Жыл бұрын

    1:06 "...if responsible people don't address real problems in a straight forward way, irresponsible people are going to exploit them."

  • @hipoint40cal39
    @hipoint40cal3911 ай бұрын

    Im 52 and I never thought my life would turn out so poorly; im always broke, in debt, alone, depressed. etc.

  • @edna.c.s

    @edna.c.s

    10 ай бұрын

    I'm sorry to hear that

  • @voodoosurvivor148
    @voodoosurvivor148 Жыл бұрын

    Long ago, when I was in school we had LBJ’s Presidential Physical Fitness award program that he set up to keep kids in shape. I believe some form of the program still exists but given how many kids are overweight, they must be handing out participation trophies rather than awards.

  • @elitechief01
    @elitechief01 Жыл бұрын

    Hilarious! Ms. Hill sounds like a babe!

  • @sideshowbob
    @sideshowbob Жыл бұрын

    As a Guy, born 1960, figured out I'm High Functioning Autistic with ADHD, OCD "issues" in 2005 at Age 44, my perspective: - I wholeheartedly agree w/the need for more "Vocational" / "Hands-On" education. Luckily for me, my Dad was a masonry contractor, so I spent a Huge amount of time outside of school "learning the trades", & that had a great Contribution to my success in life, despite all the problems I had in a traditional classroom setting. - I would say the existing "structure" of classroom instruction is not conducive to anyone with "developmental disabilities" such as I had. Many of my issues got much better when I entered "Junior High" ("Middle School") in 7th grade, where we changed classes every hour & had different teachers for each subject. In Elementary School, you sat there all day (except for lunch & 2 recesses) listening to the same teacher. Even if the teacher was good, which was a lottery system at best, it became pretty easy to become bored & fidgety. Breaking up the monotony of the daily Elementary School classroom grind is probably not a bad idea. - "Just Sit Still" - Yeah, they tried that out on me as a kid. Nope, no, not happening. & they still had corporal punishment back then. Multiple Catholic schools kicked me out after only a few weeks, one said I was possessed by demons & needed an exorcist. Public school not much better - I was an "Unrepentant Sociopath", well on a path to habitual criminal, no moral compass, biker gang member, US Senator lmfao.

  • @TagSpamCop

    @TagSpamCop

    Жыл бұрын

    _Actually_ diagnosed, or self-"diagnosed" (i.e. opinion)?

  • @sideshowbob

    @sideshowbob

    Жыл бұрын

    @@TagSpamCop I've learned to use the term "Self Identified" vs "Self Diagnosed" with respect to all in the Autistic community. Also not supposed to really use the term "High Functioning" & especially not "Asperger's". All I had to do was read an article about "Asperger's Syndrome" in 2005 at age 44 & was absolutely Gobsmacked "Wow this explains my whole life!!!!" If anyone had to live thru the Nightmare of my childhood they'd Know. All of it: Subjects of special interests I'd drone on about, obsessing over them instead of doing school work, gifted at math/ remembering arcane stuff, social dysfunction on an epic scale, not coping well with classroom setting, communication difficulties, triggers & meltdowns, sensitivity to noise / light / smell overstimulation, you name it. So yeah, I don't need a "Shrink" to Certify my "way of being", regardless of what Society says. Believe me, I've looked into getting an official diagnosis (staved it off for years after the Newtown shooting when "they" wanted to take guns away from anyone with "Asperger's Syndrome", & that's one of my "subjects of special interest"), but most of the places I talked to said "we only work with children", & the few that said they might talk to me said it was only if I had a "compelling reason", ie, needing "special accommodation" at my job. But no, since I learned to adapt / "mask" effectively over a long lifetime / career, I am adjusted enough to live in the real world. I am a civil engineer so am basically surrounded with others "on the spectrum", many less well adjusted than me, many "in denial" they might be "on the spectrum" (opposite of me "self identifying). Oh yeah, from reading other's accounts of seeking an official diagnosis, many therapists will say I am "normal" because I don't superficially come across as "developmentally challenged", since I've learned to mask well. They also say I have "learned" to answer all the questions on the screening tests "appropriately", as I already have read a lot about my "condition", in other words, I have "confirmation bias". So, then, it's a matter of "shopping around" to find a therapist willing to give a positive diagnosis. How is that any better than me knowing myself well? I know this is controversial, but it is what it is. I can attest, "the struggle is Real". I am experiencing relationship difficulties right now, 2nd failed marriage, this one she was aware of my "condition" the day we met, it still has caused "issues". Mainly, based on reading about relationships with Autistic partners, I've discovered I have "executive function dysfunction" - ie, my verbal communication skills are not great, I don't convey what I mean to say, I don't hear what's being told to me - there is some dysfunction in my brain interface. Especially in the course of heated arguments, which she has taken to lately because of stressors in her life (taking care of elderly demented very demanding mother). I'm going to try ONCE AGAIN to seek therapy, at her prodding, I am asking her to do same (her issue: "Generalized Anxiety Disorder"). I've read we are supposed to communicate in writing, which I've realized I've always been really good at, in my engineering / project management job, I never liked phone conversations, because it always seemed people would say I said something I didn't think I said, or they claimed they told me something I didn't remember hearing. So the Executive Dysfunction thing has a history. But there you go, my life's history. Again, tell me it's only an "opinion"

  • @trusarmor4957
    @trusarmor4957 Жыл бұрын

    3:11 People Applauding are the People not getting the point.

  • @ThePressurizer
    @ThePressurizer Жыл бұрын

    Very interesting points. But what always makes me doubt is the fact that in Asia classrooms tend to be far stricter, fas more structured, far more disciplined (as they used to be in the West). And they seem to be quite successful, with girls AND boys. Now I'm not advocating reintroducing harsh discipline, punishment etc., but the argument that boys simply aren't made for quiet, disciplined learning seems a bit lacking.

  • @CC3GROUNDZERO
    @CC3GROUNDZERO Жыл бұрын

    Why is the video so dark?

  • @nHautamaki
    @nHautamaki Жыл бұрын

    To the point of why schools favor girls over boys, I taught in China for 12 years, and yeah, more often than not the most disruptive, least self-controlled student in a given class would be a boy, but on average the boys did just as well. Usually the most brilliant, hardest working student would also be a boy. Girls were just more likely to be average, for better or worse. Why do Chinese (and other Asian countries are the same) boys do better than North American boys? It's not just strictness and toughness from the teachers, it's competitiveness. The reason boys don't give a fuck about school in North America is not because the teachers are too nice and afraid to discipline them. It's because treating academic success as a competitive endeavor with winners and losers and real consequences is utterly anathema to our cultural understanding of what education should be. And that's why boys are so much more into sports than girls, on average, or, if they aren't too good at sports, get addicted to video games. It's because those are the two arenas where boys can exercise their urge to be competitive. You bring competition back into classrooms, you tell boys that they have to win at school by studying harder and getting the best scores, and lots of them will. You tell boys to just 'do your best, there are no winners and losers, it doesn't matter who got the high score and we'll never tell anyone who that is anyway' and they will struggle mightily to give a fuck and put all their passion and energy into something where they can try to win and it matters. And yeah, there will be losers, and it sucks to be the loser. But there are losers now; and it's a rather worrying large percentage of the boys. We just don't tell them that until it's way too late and they're already getting rejected from decent colleges/university or they're failing it or they never cared to apply in the first place. Boys wake up in their mid twenties having never won at anything that actually matters, because they weren't really made aware that life is indeed a competition, and all they're good at is the one thing where they were allowed to compete, either some sport that doesn't matter after high school unless you're one of the 0.0000001% who gets to go pro at it, or more likely some video game that isn't even popular anymore. And so most of the boys are actually losers. Because they were protected from competition by their well meaning education system, and now they're grown up, having been protected their whole lives, and girls won't look at them twice, employers don't want to hire them, and society at large considers them toxic if they ever dare to outwardly express any anger or frustration at this system.

  • @DuderMcDudenstein

    @DuderMcDudenstein

    Жыл бұрын

    spot fucking on

  • @r8chlletters

    @r8chlletters

    Жыл бұрын

    This is a glaring advertisement for why girls and boys should be educated separately. Girls don’t function in a winner/loser paradigm. Cooperation is how they thrive. Boys eat up what little energy teachers have while acting out in a mixed class. 51% of the room is paying attention and deserves an education. I say give boys what they need and give girls what they need. Tailored and separate education. Worked great for me!

  • @nHautamaki

    @nHautamaki

    Жыл бұрын

    @@r8chlletters meh girls do great in Asian style classrooms too. It's not like there's this slider where more competition helps boys but hurts girls. More competition seems to have less positive benefits for girls compared to boys, but it doesn't have any net negative effects either. What hurt girls in the past was misogyny, not competition. Take away the misogyny but keep the competition and you get the best of both worlds for boys and girls.

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