A lucid guide to male and female brain differences.
New York Times
Until recently, there have been two groups of people: those who argue sex differences are innate and should be embraced and those who insist that they are learned and should be eliminated by changing the environment. Sax is one of the few in the middleconvinced that boys and girls are innately different and that we must change the environment so differences dont become limitations.
TIME
Convincingpsychologist and family physician Leonard Sax, using twenty years of published research, offers a guide to the growing mountain of evidence that girls and boys really are different.This extremely readable book also includes shrewd advice on discipline, and on helping youngsters avoid drugs and early sexual activity. Saxs findings, insights, and provocative point-of-view should be of interest and help to many parents.
New York Post
Using studies as well as anecdotes from his practice and visits to classrooms, [Sax] offers advice on such topics as preventing drug abuse and motivating students.The book is thought-provoking, and Sax explains well the science behind his assertions.[Why Gender Matters] is a worthy read for those who care about how best to prepare children for the challenges they face on the path to adulthood.
Scientific American
Why Gender Matters is an instructive handbook for parents and teachersto create ways to cope with the differences between boys and girls.
Boston Globe
Why Gender Matters pulls together wide-ranging findings on everything from how girls respond to stress, to how antidrug ads actually encourage teenage boys to use drugs, and how all of these differences are hardwired from birth.
National Post (Canada)
A potent new book[Dr. Sax] cites a cascade of research that shows the many ways boys and girls differ, from how their brains develop to how they handle stress.
Margaret Wente, Globe and Mail (Canada)
[Sax] challenges parents and teachers to acknowledge the latest evidence of lifelong gender differences or risk their childrens educational success and emotional health.
Joanne Good, Calgary Herald
Sax presents a reader-friendly, persuasive argument, challenging many basic assumptions by interspersing hard data with numerous case studies.
Mary Ward Menke, January Magazine
FascinatingThis book takes an outside the box position on gender. Paradoxically, Sax says, gender-neutral education favors the learning style of one sex or the other, and so only drives men and women into the usual stereotyped fields. The best way to raise your son to be a man who is caring and nurturing, says Sax, is to first of all let him be a boy. The best way to produce a female mathematician is to first of all let her be a girl.I think Sax is on to something. Mature men and women do draw on qualities that stereotypically belong to the opposite sex. But the easiest way to get them to that point is to first make them confident about being a man or a woman.Sax adds that children are less happy and confident nowadays because no one is teaching them how to be men and women. This is a powerful, even obvious insight, once you dare think it.
Stanley Kurtz, National Review Online
As the principal of an elementary school, I am constantly on the lookout for outstanding articles and books about gender-specific learning differences. Why Gender Matters is the best Ive read.
John Webster, Head of School, San Antonio Academy
Why Gender Matters is an outstanding work of scholarship. I am going to make it our faculty read this summer.
Paul Krieger, Headmaster, Christ School, Arden, North Carolina
Extremely interestingChallenged many of my basic assumptions and helped me to think about gender in a new way.
Joan Ogilvy Holden, Head of School, St. Stephens and St. Agnes School, Alexandria, Virginia
Why Gender Matters is a fabulous resource for teachers and parents. Dr. Sax combines his extensive knowledge of the research on gender issues with practical advice in cogent, highly readable prose. I am eager to have my colleagues at school read this book and discuss it!
Martha Cutts, Head of School, Agnes Irwin School, Rosemont, Pennsylvania
In this reader-friendly book, Dr. Sax combines his comprehensive knowledge of the scientific literature with numerous interesting case studies to argue for his thesis that single-sex education is advantageous.
Sandra Witelson, Ph.D., Albert Einstein Chair in Neuroscience, McMaster University
I simply will never be able to express how eye-opening this book has been for me. Yes, meeven though I thought I was a boy-raising specialist. After all, I have produced four healthy, smart athletes. I must know what Im doing. But many of my boy-raising days I thought I was going mad. Id come home from some sports event trembling because of the way the coach yelled at my kid. Id ask my husband and whichever son it happened to be that day how they could stand being yelled at like that. Almost every time husband and son would look at me and not have any recollection of being yelled at during the game. Now I understand!
Janet Phillips, mother, Potomac, Maryland
As the father of a four-year-old daughter and now new twin boys, this particular book looked intriguing. Well, I couldnt put it down. Not only is it well written, with engaging anecdotes, but it presents the latest scientific findings in gender research (with lots of footnotes so you can read the studies yourself if you are so inclined) and relates [them] to the job of parenting. It helps that the author is a family doctor who has seen his share of dysfunctional situations that in hindsight might easily have been prevented with a little knowledge. The book is more than just informative about gender differences in childrenhe relates this information to such parenting topics as disciplining your child, gender specific education strategies, dealing with problem children, kids and drugs (both the legal and nonlegal kind), and teenage sex.
Phillip Trubey, father, Rancho Santa Fe, California
As a high school administrator, I am leading a book study on Why Gender Matters with my faculty this fall. As an aunt to a newborn, this was the shower gift to my sister. As a mother of two boys and one girl, I hung on every word. There is simply no category of individuals who are in contact with children of any age who should not read this book. I cannot recommend it strongly enough.
Leone Langseth, Deer Park, Texas
Nonfiction by Leonard Sax, M.D., Ph.D.
Boys Adrift: The Five Factors Driving the Growing Epidemic of Unmotivated Boys and Underachieving Young Men
Girls on the Edge: The Four Factors Driving the New Crisis for GirlsSexual Identity, the Cyberbubble, Obsessions, Environmental Toxins
The Collapse of Parenting: How We Hurt Our Kids When We Treat Them Like Grown-ups
Copyright 2005, 2017 by Leonard Sax
All rights reserved.
Published in the United States by Harmony Books, an imprint of the Crown Publishing Group, a division of Penguin Random House LLC, New York.
crownpublishing.com
Harmony Books is a registered trademark, and the Circle colophon is a trademark of Penguin Random House LLC.
The first edition of this work was published in hardcover in the United States by Doubleday, an imprint of the Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group, a division of Penguin Random House LLC, in 2005; and subsequently published in paperback by Broadway Books, an imprint of the Crown Publishing Group, a division of Penguin Random House LLC, New York,in 2006.
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