<p/><br></br><p><b> About the Book </b></p></br></br><p>Caryl Rivers and Rosalind C. Barnett unravel the pseudoscientific rationales for the popular argument that the learning styles, brain development, motivations, cognitive and spatial abilities, and "natural" inclinations of girls and boys are fundamentally different. While they recognize that girls and boys encounter different stimuli and experiences, they also show that encouraging children to venture outside their comfort zones can help them realize more multifaceted characters. Educating parents, teachers, and general readers in the true nature of the gender game, Rivers and Barnett enable future generations to transform--if not transcend--the parameters of sexual difference.</p><p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br><p>Caryl Rivers and Rosalind C. Barnett are widely acclaimed for their analyses of women, men, and society. In </p><p><em>The Truth About Girls and Boys</em>, they tackle a new, troubling trend in the theorizing of gender: that the learning styles, brain development, motivation, cognitive and spatial abilities, and "natural" inclinations of girls and boys are so fundamentally different, they require unique styles of parenting and education. </p><p>Ignoring the science that challenges these claims, those who promote such theories make millions while frightening parents and educators into enforcing old stereotypes and reviving unhealthy attitudes in the classroom. Rivers and Barnett unmake the pseudoscientific rationale for this argument, stressing the individuality of each child and the specialness of his or her talents and desires. They recognize that in our culture, girls and boys encounter different stimuli and experiences, yet encouraging children to venture outside their comfort zones helps them realize a multifaceted character. Educating parents, teachers, and general readers in the true nature of the gender game, Rivers and Barnett enable future generations to transform if not transcend the parameters of sexual difference.</p><p/><br></br><p><b> Review Quotes </b></p></br></br><br>...simple, direct, and accessible prose.--Things Mean a Lot Blog<br><br>Buy It RIGHT NOW. Run to the bookstore. Knock over children and old ladies if you have to. Just get your hands on this book!--Bookshelf Bombshells<br><br>This is an excellent and important book, clearly written yet also packed with documentation.--Lis Carey's Blog<br><br>Thought-provoking.--PsycCritiques<br><br><i>The Truth About Girls and Boys</i> is a must read for anyone vouchsafed with the upbringing, care, teaching, or social policy that impacts our most precious legacy: our children--girls and boys. We must read this 'game changing' book, ponder its meaning, and not put it down until we move from our present position of empty-minded acceptance to open-minded and critical thinking. Rivers and Barnett throw out a sturdy life preserver to bring us back from the harm of mangled pseudoscience to the shores of thoughtful, gender equitable understanding.--William S. Pollack, author of <i>Real Boys: Rescuing Our Boys from the Myths of Boyhood</i><br><br><i>The Truth About Girls and Boys</i> is exactly that--the real story behind over-hyped claims of sex difference and their harming of girls and boys. Rivers and Barnett expose the sloppy journalism that has allowed pseudoscientific ideas to percolate into our collective beliefs about gender development. Parents, teachers, and policymakers will do well to read this book, to rescue today's girls and boys from false claims of 'hardwired' differences limiting their learning and stunting their futures.--Lise Eliot, author of <i>Pink Brain, Blue Brain: How Small Differences Grow Into Troublesome Gaps and What We Can Do About It</i><br><br>A bracing antidote to conventional wisdom. Like Malcolm Gladwell, Rivers and Barnett take readers into the world of research and emerge with surprising and unsettling conclusions. Teachers, educators, parents, journalists, and researchers would do well to read this book before hopping on the bandwagon about the 'differences' between girls and boys.--Jonathan Kaufman, Pulitzer-Prize-winning reporter and education editor at <i>Bloomberg News</i><br><br>Because of the topic and accessibility of the writing, parents and teachers should be encouraged to read this book.--Emily Keener "Psychology of Women Quarterly "<br><br>BRAVO! This is a much needed, informative, and engaging book. The authors, Rosalind C. Barnett (a highly respected research psychologist) and Caryl Rivers (a skilled journalist), take the reader on a critical and clarifying tour of claims about categorical, biologically-based sex differences used to justify the move towards more publicly funded single-sex schooling. This book is a significant contribution to an area of heated debate and policy struggle. Parents, teachers, and policy-makers can turn to it as a reliable guide through a thicket of hype and over-claiming. The authors do an excellent job of unpacking empirical assertions, exposing shabby "science," unfounded generalizations and jumps of logic.--Barrie Thorne, Professor of Sociology, and Gender and Women's Studies, University of California, Berkeley. Author of Gender Play: Girls and Boys in School.<br><br>Caryl Rivers and Rosalind C. Barnett's dissection of the ways tired stereotypes are being repackaged as 'science' is urgently important. It must be read immediately by parents, educators--anyone who believes children should develop their full intellectual and emotional potential.--Peggy Orenstein, author of <i>Cinderella Ate My Daughter: Dispatches from the Front Lines of the New Girlie-Girl Culture</i><br><br>Rivers and Barnett provide insightful examples to show how sex stereotypes ranging from aggression to sexualized body images are based on inaccurate and often harmful generalizations. They make a powerful case against a key rationale for sex-segregated education - that girls and boys learn differently, and therefore should be taught differently and in sex segregated classes. Instead, they conclude that heterogeneous groups and attention to individuals will do more to maximize opportunities and improve society.--Sue Klein, Ed.D, Education Equity DirectorFeminist Majority Foundation<br><br>Should be given to new parents, educations, coaches, and anyone with the ability to influence the path of young lives. It's packed with excellent advice.--Sheila Gibbons "Media Report to Women "<br><br>The gloves are off. Rivers and Barnett provide a convincing case that much of what parents, teachers, and the general public know about differences between girls and boys is based on highly publicized accounts of shoddy and misleading science. They provide readers with an understanding of the ways girls and boys are similar and different and how we can use that knowledge to raise happy, healthy, and successful children.--Diane F. Halpern, past-president, American Psychological Association, and author of <i>Sex Differences in Cognitive Abilities</i> (fourth edition)<br><p/><br></br><p><b> About the Author </b></p></br></br>Caryl Rivers is professor of journalism at the College of Communication at Boston University. A nationally known author and journalist, she was awarded the Helen Thomas Lifetime Achievement Award for distinguished work in journalism from the Society of Professional Journalists. Her articles have appeared in the <i>The New York Times Magazine</i>, <i>The Nation</i>, <i>Saturday Review</i>, <i>Ms.</i>, <i>Mother Jones</i>, <i>McCall's</i>, <i>Glamour</i>, <i>Redbook</i>, <i>Rolling Stone</i>, and <i>Ladies' Home Journal</i>. She writes for the <i>Washington Post</i>, <i>Los Angeles Times</i>, <i>Boston Globe</i>, and <i>Chicago Tribune</i> and is the author of <i>Selling Anxiety: How the News Media Scare Women</i>, among other works of fiction and nonfiction. <p/>Rosalind C. Barnett is a senior scientist at the Women's Studies Research Center at Brandeis University. Her pioneering research on workplace issues and family life in America has been sponsored by major federal grants, and she is often invited to lecture at major venues in the United States and abroad. Dr. Barnett has a private clinical practice and is the author of scholarly and popular books and articles appearing in <i>Self</i>, <i>Working Woman</i>, <i>McCall's</i>, <i>Ladies' Home Journal</i>, <i>The New York Times Magazine</i>, and <i>Working Woman</i>. She is the recipient of the Radcliffe College Graduate Society's Distinguished Achievement Medal, the Life Time Legacy Award from the Families and Work Institute, and the Anne Roe Award from the Harvard University Graduate School of Education for her contribution to women's professional growth and the field of education. Both Barnett and Rivers received an honorable mention in the 2011 Casey Medals for Meritorious Journalism for their work in this field.
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