Men Are Falling Behind in Education

In 1972, the year Title IX was passed to promote gender equality in higher education. Men earned 56.4 percent of all bachelor’s degrees, while women earned 43.6 percent—a 13-point gap. By 2019, there was a 15-point difference in the other direction. Women were earning about 58 percent of all bachelor’s degrees. The pandemic accelerated the trend. From 2019 to 2020, male first-time college enrollment dropped by 5.1 percent, compared to less than 1 percent for women.

The Heart of American Economic Losses

To try to understand why, Furman examined the change in their employment rate during the last few decades. That’s when he realized it had been falling steadily since the 1950s.

The Aetna professor of the practice of economic policy . . . “I don’t know why I hadn’t been attuned to that issue before then, because it’s just incredibly striking and important.”

In 2016, 88 percent of prime-age men were either working or actively looking for work. The percentage is down from 91.5 percent in January 2007. It is also down from the peak of 98 percent in the 1950s. At first, some wondered whether this trend might be positive: perhaps as more women joined the workforce, men had more flexibility to stay home and perform unpaid labor like childcare or housework.

The data also told different story. Among men who’d dropped out of the workforce, fewer than a quarter had a working spouse. A declining numeric over the decades. Time-use surveys showed they did not do significantly more childcare or chores than working men. The trend spanned the prime-age range, suggesting it wasn’t driven by youth disaffection or early retirement. What seemed to unite the men was education: they were disproportionately non-college graduates.

Though the trend was decades old, Furman was among the first to identify and describe it. Such work is the first step toward making policy. He adds: “You want facts. You want explanations of those facts. And then you want solutions.”

In 2015, not even the first step toward addressing male joblessness had been completed.

The AIBM has an unofficial motto: “Keep it boring.” Reeves explains, “Too much of the discussion about gender just gets caught up in the froth of the culture war.” Think pieces about the Barbie movie or Mark Zuckerberg’s sartorial choices to understand better. When he founded the AIBM, “what was lacking wasn’t more opinion pieces or talking heads. What was lacking was good, solid research asking: what is actually going on? What do we know about what’s being done to try to address that? Have we evaluated those things, and are they replicable?”

The level of variation they uncovered was astonishing. In 2016, just 5 percent of men in Alexandria, Virginia (a wealthy suburb of Washington, D.C.), were not employed. In comparison, Flint, Michigan, 51 percent were not employed.

Glasser: The costs extend far beyond lost paychecks. “For men, the correlation between life satisfaction and not working is just enormous.” For those aged 25 to 54, not having a job strongly predicts unhappiness, suicide, divorce, and opioid use. This more than it does for unemployed women, or even men in low-wage jobs.

In 2015, Furman believed the main reason for male joblessness was simple: not enough jobs. Now, he’s not so sure.

When the pandemic began in 2020, women’s employment fell more than men’s, since they were over- represented in the hard-hit service industry and took on more childcare. But today, prime-age women’s employment rate has surpassed pre-pandemic levels. Prime-age men’s employment continues to lag, despite a “huge number of job openings” through 2021 and 2022 (Furman).

The Origins of Disadvantage

As an undergraduate studying public policy at the University of Chicago, Clare Suter, Ph.D. ’28, was studying navigating spaces where men dominate. Women made up just 25 percent of that university’s tenure-track faculty according to a 2010 report. Many of her classmates were headed for high-wage careers such as finance and law, where women struggle to make it to the top. From economics classes, she knew that men work more, earn more, and advance further in their careers. She assumed that was true across the income distribution.

“I realized that there was this whole discussion that wasn’t happening—that if you zoom out of the top of the income distribution, by a lot of metrics, the gender gap is totally reversed,” says Suter, now an economics graduate student at Harvard.

Suter: “Boys growing up are super sensitive to their environments. That may explain different outcomes in adulthood.”

What was driving the heighten sensitivity is unclear. Crime may play a role: boys are far more likely than girls to interact with the criminal justice system. Disadvantaged neighborhoods might heighten that risk. But research suggests that boys are more sensitive to their environments even in early childhood. Disadvantaged neighborhoods seeming to harm their kindergarten readiness more than girls’.

Suter: “There’s just not a lot of good evidence for what explains this trend.” Suter adds understanding the trend is key to designing early-childhood interventions to support boys.

The income gap between black and white boys remained even when they were raised in families with similar incomes, structures, education levels, and accumulated wealth. That suggests the cause is structural, not based on individual family characteristics. This is another area where further research could provide insight, Suter says, including on a hypothesis called the “role model effect.” In the few neighborhoods where poor black boys did well, many had fathers at home—and the presence of those fathers was a strong predictor of the neighborhood boys’ success regardless of whether their own fathers lived with them.

That means male role models might play a significant role in shaping boys’ trajectories. Whether the models be from fathers, teachers, coaches, or others. This spring, Suter was awarded a fellowship from the AIBM to research questions related to the well-being of boys and men. Among her planned projects is an analysis of male teachers’ influence on boys. She plans to examine immediate effects on factors like grades and attendance. However, she is especially interested in longer-term outcomes:

“Do boys who have a male teacher stay out of the criminal justice system in a way that other boys do not?”

The Impact on Women

Suter wasn’t surprised saying. “With the way that young men voted, I think people are coming to see that there’s something happening. If we continue ignoring it, it’s not likely to get any better,” It is important to address those challenges for their own sake. But the stakes also extend further as she explains: “Men struggling affects everyone—their spouses, their sisters, their children.”

Opportunity Insights research backs this up. Black and white girls from similar households earn comparable incomes as adults, according to the 2018 paper. The authors wrote, “black women continue to have substantially lower levels of household income than white women, both because they are less likely to be married and because black men earn less than white men.” The result is a self-perpetuating cycle of inequality, as black children continue to grow up in poorer households.

How did college-educated women’s marriage rates remain so stable, even as similarly educated men become scarcer? Since 1975, economic outcomes for men without college degrees have declined overall. But there was variation within that group: some have seen their real wages rise, while most have experienced a significant drop.

College-educated women tend to marry the former group. This leaves fewer economically stable partners for women without degrees. As a result, non-college-educated women are marrying less. But they are still having children, which can mean those children grow up in households with fewer resources.

The findings undercut the popular gender-war narrative, which often centers on high-income women freezing eggs and forgoing relationships. In fact, the data shows such. Working-class women face the steepest marriage challenges. Winkelmann . . .

“When we’re thinking about the broader research agenda of equality of opportunity and improving economic prospects for kids. This clearly suggests the focus on the economic outcomes of men can help us.” Part of the solution involves encouraging more men to attend college. Also he adds policymakers should also think more broadly about improving the lives of men who do not.

Hands-On Learning

That isn’t an outlier. Across the United States, numerous programs designed to boost academic achievement (including a mentoring initiative in New Hampshire, scholarships in Arkansas and Georgia, and “Project READS” in North Carolina) seem to help female students while having little to no impact on their male counterparts, Reeves writes. Furman says . . .

“It’s depressing that, over and over again, research finds that when you do blank. It helps girls but we’re not quite as sure how much it helps boys.”

Given that gap, he argues it is crucial to measure programs’ differential effects by gender and promote those programs benefiting boys and men, too.

“The skills development system is serving its purpose less and less effectively in the United States.” he adds. Even as college is touted as the key to economic mobility, many well-paying jobs don’t require a bachelor’s degree. However, quality training opportunities for those roles are scarce. The consequence is decreasing workforce participation: a “perilous” trend, Fuller says, that has hit men particularly hard.

The Project on Workforce has partnered with job training programs across the country to expand access to skills development, helping more people secure stable, well-paying jobs. ADTC accomplishes this by asking employers what skills they look for, then tailoring their education offerings to the responses. According to cofounder and CEO Timothy Spurlock, the program offers job-ready training in trades such as truck engine repair, truck body repair, and HVAC in just weeks—compared to the months or years it would take at a community college or technical school.

The program also shifts the cost and risk of education away from students. In some instances, a student’s employer covers the cost of their education if they stay for a set period—in Cato’s case, four years. And in a new model developed with Social Finance, students pay for their schooling only if they secure a job with a minimum income. “We’re trying to interrogate who pays, who benefits, who should bear the risk, and reallocate incentives,” Tracy Palandjian says.

Suter: “Very few labor market interventions could hope to achieve that,”

Expanding such opportunities is a promising strategy to address gender gaps in education.

“What Would My Life Look Like?”

Joseph Derrick Nelson was assigned a group of students labeled as “at risk.” Their kindergarten teachers had warned him: “This one can’t keep his hands to himself. This one talks constantly. This one can’t sit still.” His job was to enforce strict discipline—keep them quiet, seated, on task.

Early experiences like this shape the struggles men face later in life, argues Niobe Way, Ed.D. ’94, a developmental psychology professor at New York University. Her research shows that while boys form emotionally intimate friendships in childhood, those bonds weaken as they get older—not because they lose the need for close connections, but because they’re told masculinity means dominance, stoicism, and independence.

Stereotypes about masculinity also limit men’s educational and work opportunities, Way says. The expectation that men should be breadwinners, for example, may contribute to their reluctance to spend time in degree programs that require general education in addition to career training. And the belief that men belong in physical or technical fields—not professions centered on people—might explain their declining presence in what Reeves calls “HEAL” jobs: healthcare, education, administration, and literacy. From 1980 to 2019, the proportion of women in STEM (science, technology, engineering, and math) careers rose from 13 percent to 27 percent, Reeves writes in Of Boys and Men. For men in HEAL professions, it decreased from 35 percent to 26 percent.

That can happen at the college level, with scholarships and internships to attract men to HEAL professions. But it can also start earlier, Way says, by expanding boys’ understanding of who they can become. To that end, Way, Nelson, and colleagues have developed the Listening with Curiosity Project, a 26-lesson curriculum integrated into middle and high school classes. The program involves students interviewing classmates and family members, then presenting about those conversations. In a 2023 study, students who participated in the program reported improved listening skills, empathy, and social connection; both students and teachers reported better classroom climate and academic engagement. 

“You can foster curiosity in young people, and when you do, it’s linked to better mental health. It’s linked to better social health. It’s linked to academic engagement,” Way says. This process also helps boys realize they’re more than the stereotypes they encounter, adds Nelson, a professor of education and black studies at Swarthmore and a fellow with the Boys’ Club of New York. “When the world mirrors back at them something that isn’t who they are, they’re better positioned to resist and hold onto themselves,” he says. The impact extends beyond the economic benefits of getting more men into HEAL professions: it can also help boys and men reimagine their roles in society after an era of rapid change has displaced traditional scripts.

Nick Cato, the HVAC technician trained by ADTC, didn’t always dislike school. From an early age, he loved reading books and analyzing poems—work that helped him write his own music on the guitar. But those passions weren’t always nurtured in school, where he often had trouble concentrating. He especially struggled with math, which felt impossibly abstract. Once, in fifth grade, he tucked a novel into his math textbook so he could read during class. His teacher berated him and emptied his desk in front of the classroom to make sure he wasn’t hiding anything else.

Afterwards, he had a thought: “I would never do that when I’m a teacher.” It was a habit he’d had for as long as he could remember: whenever teachers did something he liked or disliked, he’d reflect on what he would do similarly or differently. “I always had this notion of ‘when I’m a teacher,’” he says. “But I thought it was just some stupid thought that would go away.” But lately, as he’s talked with friends and family, he’s considered what might have happened if he’d taken that thought more seriously. “Especially recently, I’ve thought about that and wondered, what—what would my life look like,” he says, “had I gone to college for something like that? You know?”