Lots of stuff in press today about boys and how they suffer more from stereotyping than girls. Like it's ok for girls to wear pink, blue, red, dresses and trousers etc but nobody would dress their son in pink or a dress without being worried about criticism (of themselves or their son). Girls can play with dolls but also with cars where some parents still won't let their son pick up a doll without being concerned about his sexualtiy.
I think this sort of stereotyping and parenting which adheres to it is a big reason why boys are doing less well at school than girls. Because the very qualities which parents encourage in boys (aggression, strenght, interest in gadgets and cars and speed and football) are not the ones valued in school whereas the communication, caring, listening etc we encourage in girls is.
Not necessarily saying this is conscious (there was that research where a male baby was dressed in pink and given to people to look after who assumed he was a girl and vice versa and their behaviour changed according to whether they throught baby was m or f so they handled boy baby more roughly had less eye contact etc).
I hear so many parents of boys say things like 'he's so much more physical than my dd' and I just wonder how much of this is 'natural' and how mcuh of it is that our perceptions of what it means to be female have changed beyond recognition but our perceptions of what it means to be male haven't changed at all. And now for the first time ever in this country parents aspirations fo their daughters have outstripped those of their sons. Incredible. Any thoughts?