Australia’s education system is failing a generation of boys due to what critics describe as a growing imbalance in classroom teaching and curriculum design, according to a leading academic. Dr. Kevin Donnelly, senior research fellow at the Australian Catholic University, warned in a recent interview that the system has become overly feminized, sidelining boys’ learning needs and contributing to widening academic underperformance nationwide.

His comments come as newly released 2025 NAPLAN results highlight a persistent gender gap in literacy and writing standards. In New South Wales, 44.5 percent of Year 9 boys failed to meet minimum benchmarks in grammar and punctuation, compared to 34.3 percent of girls. In writing, 42.1 percent of boys fell short of basic standards, while just 29.3 percent of girls did. Nationally, nearly half of Year 9 boys did not meet grammar expectations, reinforcing broader concerns about male disengagement in education.
Dr. Donnelly attributed the trend to declining male teacher representation, classroom environments geared more toward cooperative and emotional learning, and a national curriculum that lacks academic rigour. He said boys typically benefit from structure, competition and direct instruction, elements that are being overshadowed by progressive education models that cater more to girls’ learning preferences.
Gender gap in literacy raises alarm across Australian schools
Supporting this view, Catholic Schools NSW released a policy brief that reveals boys are twice as likely as girls to fall into the lowest literacy performance bands. The report also notes that boys are now equally likely to struggle in numeracy, an area where they once performed more strongly. The organization has called for the adoption of the content-rich New South Wales curriculum nationwide and greater investment in foundational literacy and numeracy programs.
Catholic education leaders are urging schools to implement targeted academic interventions, including structured initiatives like the Mastery in Mathematics program. They argue such evidence-based strategies are critical to reversing declining male academic performance and ensuring boys receive the support they need in early and secondary education.
Social and academic reform needed to close performance gap
Meanwhile, schools are also contending with a surge in behavioral issues linked to toxic masculinity and online influences. Programs such as Man Cave, Tomorrow Man, and the Foundation for Positive Masculinity have expanded to over 300 schools across Australia, targeting students as early as Year 5. These initiatives are designed to counter harmful stereotypes, improve emotional literacy, and promote respectful relationships.
Educators report that boys are increasingly exposed to misogynistic online content, including violent media and social media influencers who reinforce negative gender norms. This has contributed to classroom disruptions and troubling attitudes, with some students simultaneously expressing empathy while engaging in aggressive or sexist behavior.
As concerns deepen, experts are calling for a national response that combines curriculum reform, improved teacher training, parental engagement and digital literacy. Without meaningful change, analysts warn the system risks leaving behind a generation of boys, with long-term social and economic implications for Australia’s future. – By Content Syndication Services.
