Share.

    16 commenti

    1. ResourceWorker on

      That’s a very wierd title given the content of the post.

    2. Murder_Bird_ on

      Personal anecdote – barely graduated HS. Had one of the highest SAT scores in my grade.

      I didn’t do well with the structure of school. I never considered it to be women’s fault.

    3. Because today’s worldwide education system bores male students to death. Female teachers, testesteron-less boring classess, compete-free activities, sitting all day long while your male body urge to move, run, compete physically… Compared to girls, males have more energy, more power, and much more drive rather than sitting on chair… you can’t just focus when your body wants to you do sth. Genders really need different schooling and activity program.

      Man, before everything else, must become physically elite. Most jobs which are majorly executed by males, excluding office jobs, require strength, physical performance, handcraftmanship. Women’s preferences are less likely physical. So men must become elite athletes, especially starting from very young age.

    4. NaCl_Sailor on

      because it is NOT equality, if you get extra programs that support one gender and not the other it is not equality. it is discrimination.

    5. bartoszfcb on

      I have nothing to do with Sweden, but I can tell you that girls were always getting better grades for less than boys back when I was in school.

    6. Archaon0815 on

      When I was in highschool 50% of our grade was just class participation. So a few girls ended up with better grades than me just because they asked a lot of questions because they didn’t understand a bunch of stuff. I barely participated in class because I was bored. It felt like I was being punished for understanding everything the first time the teacher explained it.

    7. TheDukeAmdusias on

      Presenting these graphs without proper context may lead to some misunderstanding of how the Swedish system functions. It is worth to note that when applying for university, you either apply with your grades or the score for the test, they are not combined. This results in that many students do not take the test, since they already have high enough grades to get in to their programme of choice.

      This leads to some interesting phenomena. Mainly that it is not uncommon for students to take the test early in high-school, get a good score and then more or less not try in high-school. It may also lead to students not taking their schooling seriously since they can rely on the test.

      The programmes in Sweden that generally require the highest grades/scores are medical doctor, psychology, law and certain engineering programmes. The three first programmes generally have slightly more women while engineering is generally male dominated.

      If anyone has any questions about the Swedish system, I am happy to respond.

    8. whelphereiam12 on

      Is this because only the successful male students bother to take the SAT? This skewing the results?

    9. BlackwingF91 on

      So… I thought this was r/europe rather than a right wing misogynist circlejerk. What the heck has been going on here recently? It’s like anyone talking about boys and or girls becomes the bat-signal for weirdos

    10. No_Conversation_9325 on

      Let’s not import US “gender wars” please.

    11. suiluhthrown78 on

      How big is that gap really? I can’t tell what the y axis represents

      I do remember hearing about something similar in another country though (US or Canada i think), interesting to see it replicated elsewhere

    12. Christian-Econ on

      Grades and SAT measure different things. Performance on assignments could simply measure effort, participation levels, etc.

    Leave A Reply