Standing Committee on Employment, Education 
        and Workplace Relations 
      
      
      
Tasmanian teachers and education officials talk about boys' education 
      
      Boys are often blamed for disruptive behaviour or having a bad attitude. 
      Some have low self-esteem, difficulty communicating with others and display 
      problems at school. Some boys are experiencing learning difficulties and 
      the literacy gap between boys and girls is increasing. 
      
 So, what is the problem facing boys and what can be done to help?
      
 On Wednesday 25 July, the House of Representatives Education Committee 
        will conduct school visits and public hearings in Hobart. 
      
 The Committee will talk to school principals and teachers and people 
        from the Tasmanian Department of Education. Topics include the result 
        of trials in Tasmanian primary schools of the Spalding Method for teaching 
        early literacy, the nature and extent of boys' educational problems, how 
        boys' difficulties relate to broader social and economic change and which 
        boys are most affected.
      
 
      Wednesday 25/7/2001 - Public hearings:
      
        - 10:30 am - 11:15 am
          Herdsmans Cove Primary School
          Lamprill Circle, Gagebrook 
         - 2:00 pm - 4:00 pm 
          Commonwealth Parliamentary Offices
          Level 13, 188 Collins Street, Hobart 
      
       Background: The House Education Committee is currently 
        undertaking an inquiry into the education of boys, focussing on social, 
        cultural and educational factors.
      
 House Education Committee Chair, Mrs Kay Elson, says the Spalding trial 
        in Tasmanian primary schools is of great interest to the Committee in 
        the light of other evidence suggesting that boys respond well to highly 
        structured methods of teaching.
      
 "The Committee wants to know more about the results of the Spalding 
        Method trials in Tasmanian primary schools, particularly as part of whole-school 
        approaches to early literacy teaching," Mrs Elson said. 
      
 "The Committee has heard evidence that boys respond better to highly 
        structured literacy programs, such as Spalding, than they do to other 
        forms of instruction. We want to know if the Tasmanian experience with 
        Spalding supports this contention and if the schools involved have achieved 
        better literacy outcomes for boys and girls while narrowing the achievement 
        gap between them. We will also look at other factors in the trial schools, 
        such as the importance of school leadership and teacher training, which 
        may be keys to improving literacy achievement."
      
 For more details on the Hobart public hearings, as well as background 
        information on the inquiry, visit: www.aph.gov.au/house/committee/eewr
      
 For media comment contact Mrs Kay Elson, MP,  Chair of the House 
        Education Committee, on (02) 6277 4274
      
 For background information contact the Committee Secretariat on (02) 
        6277 4573. 
      
      
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