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The elephant in the classroom: Why children need more male teachers

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Credit: Pixabay/CC0 Public Domain

Ahead of World Teachers' Day, education experts at the University of South Australia are calling for urgent action to counteract gender stereotypes and bring more men into early childhood education.

As Australia faces a critical teacher shortage, experts say we're ignoring the elephant in the room: , and stigma about their role with is keeping those numbers stubbornly low.

It's a dismal reality, yet despite increasing awareness that both men and women should take on caring roles, most early learning centers and preschools do not have a male educator or teacher.

With the rollout of three-year-old preschool in , UniSA's Dr. Martyn Mills-Bayne says it's time to fight for better gender diversity in the early childhood education workforce.

"For too long, have undermined early childhood education with entrenched perceptions of men not being built for, or good at, educating young children," Dr. Mills-Bayne says.

"But children, particularly boys, need to see positive male role models in early learning environments, because if there's a lack of men, this will shape the next generation's gender attitudes.

"An engaged, responsible male role model can make a profound difference in a child's life—improving their mental health, confidence, as well as cognitive and social development.

"But you can't be what you can't see—and if we don't normalize men in caring roles, we're doing our children, and society, a real disservice."

With , scrutiny on male educators is more acute than ever.

"We know that many men avoid early childhood careers because of fears and stereotypes about being judged in child safety contexts," Dr. Mills-Bayne says.

"Child safety is non-negotiable for every educator, so the real risk is letting outdated stereotypes block men from teaching young children.

"A more gender-diverse workforce will strengthen safety, because diverse perspectives improve workplace culture, vigilance, and accountability. And when male and female educators work together, they model respectful, safe interactions and reinforce best practice."

Dr. Mills-Bayne says that a radical change is needed to realize any significant increase in the number of men in the workforce.

"We must advocate and actively promote the positive impact of male educators," Dr. Mills-Bayne says.

"Governments should fund and support a targeted workforce campaign explicitly encouraging men to choose early childhood education and teaching as an exciting and rewarding career—both for boys beyond school, and men looking to change careers.

"This is critical to address teacher shortages and has long been the missing piece to building a thriving and gender-diverse workforce.

"Actively increasing male early childhood teachers and educators will help strengthen the cycle of positive male identities and significantly impact on the negative effects of the culture of toxic masculinity.

"If we don't start targeting men for teaching careers, male educators could disappear from the profession, and all children will miss out on the chance to learn from diverse role models."

Dr. Mills-Bayne says we all have a responsibility to champion male educators who are making a difference, and inspiring others to enter the field.

"This World Teacher's Day, we're asking everyone to step up and share their positive experiences of male teachers and how these incredible people have made a real difference in their or their children's lives," Dr. Mills-Bayne says.

"Teachers don't just shape children—they help shape families and communities. It's time we celebrated and supported the men making a difference in early education."

Citation: The elephant in the classroom: Why children need more male teachers (2025, October 1) retrieved 22 October 2025 from /news/2025-10-elephant-classroom-children-male-teachers.html
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