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Parenting & Family Quote by Warren Farrell

"One can make a case that says that since 85% of children being brought up in single family homes are being brought up by women that about 85% of elementary school teachers should be males to balance out the feminization that the boys and girls receive"

About this Quote

Farrell’s line tries to smuggle a culture-war diagnosis into the language of “balance” and percentages. By tethering two unrelated arenas - single-parent households and elementary teaching - to the same 85% figure, he creates the impression of mathematical inevitability: if boys are “overexposed” to women at home, the state should intervene with men at school. The move is rhetorically clever because it turns a contested claim (“feminization”) into a technocratic problem with a neat staffing solution.

The subtext is that masculinity is something boys primarily receive from male bodies in authority, and that women-dominated care automatically produces a deficit. That assumption flattens the actual drivers of boys’ outcomes - poverty, instability, class size, community violence, healthcare, and the sheer variability of parenting quality - into a single culprit: too many women. It also positions women as the default environment and men as the corrective, a framing that can read less like concern for children and more like an argument for restoring male institutional presence.

Context matters: Farrell emerged from a strand of second-wave-era “men’s issues” writing that often recasts gender equality as having gone too far, especially in education and family courts. The quote taps a familiar anxiety that schools reward compliance and verbal skills, supposedly disadvantaging boys, and it proposes a symbolic fix that feels actionable without confronting harder questions like teacher pay, training pipelines, or why men avoid elementary classrooms in the first place.

Even on its own terms, the prescription is telling: it asks public schools to compensate for family structure rather than support families materially. “Balance” sounds neutral; it’s doing ideological work.

Quote Details

TopicTeaching
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Farrell, Warren. (2026, January 15). One can make a case that says that since 85% of children being brought up in single family homes are being brought up by women that about 85% of elementary school teachers should be males to balance out the feminization that the boys and girls receive. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/one-can-make-a-case-that-says-that-since-85-of-156242/

Chicago Style
Farrell, Warren. "One can make a case that says that since 85% of children being brought up in single family homes are being brought up by women that about 85% of elementary school teachers should be males to balance out the feminization that the boys and girls receive." FixQuotes. January 15, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/one-can-make-a-case-that-says-that-since-85-of-156242/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"One can make a case that says that since 85% of children being brought up in single family homes are being brought up by women that about 85% of elementary school teachers should be males to balance out the feminization that the boys and girls receive." FixQuotes, 15 Jan. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/one-can-make-a-case-that-says-that-since-85-of-156242/. Accessed 12 Feb. 2026.

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About the Author

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Warren Farrell (born June 26, 1943) is a Writer from USA.

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