Leonard Sax

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Leonard Sax is an American psychologist and family physician. He is the author of Why Gender Matters (Doubleday, 2005) and of Boys Adrift: the five factors driving the growing epidemic of unmotivated boys and underachieving young men (Basic Books, 2007). He is founder and executive director of the National Association for Single Sex Public Education (www.singlesexschools.org).

Contents

[edit] Biography

Sax graduated Phi Beta Kappa from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) in 1980 with a bachelor's degree in biology. He completed the combined M.D.-Ph.D. program at the University of Pennsylvania in 1986. His Ph.D. was in psychology. He completed the 3-year residency in family practice at Lancaster General Hospital (Lancaster, PA) in 1989. In 1990, he founded Poolesville Family Practice, a primary care practice in Montgomery County, Maryland. He has worked there as a family physician ever since. Sax has continued to publish scholarly papers since starting his practice. Because he is both a family physician and a Ph.D. psychologist, he has attracted many families with "problem children" to his practice. [Text adapted in part from Why Genders Matters official site.]

[edit] National media

Dr. Sax was a guest on the TODAY show July 31 2007. Matt Lauer interviewed Dr. Sax about the controversy surrounding boys' achievement, which was the topic of the cover story in TIME Magazine that week. [Streaming video of that segment is available at the Boys Adrift web site.]

Dr. Sax was first a guest on the TODAY show February 15 2005. Al Roker interviewed Dr. Sax about his book Why Gender Matters. [Streaming video of that segment is available via the Why Gender Matters web site.]

[edit] Popular press

In his op-ed for the Washington Post March 31 2006, Dr. Sax called attention to the growing phenomenon of the "Failure to Launch" boy/man: a young man in his 20's, or even his 30's, who is still living at home with his parents -- and who doesn't see what the problem is. The Washington Post invited Dr. Sax to host a one-hour on-line chat, which broke all previous records for the Washington Post: they shut the system down after receiving 395 posts. Dr. Sax himself says that the transcript of the chat session is more interesting than his own op-ed was. It's certainly a lot longer. You can read the transcript of the online chat session here.

[edit] Scholarly articles

  • 'Six Degrees of Separation: what teachers need to know about the emerging science of sex differences.' Educational Horizons, Spring 2006, pp. 190-200.
  • 'The Diagnosis and Treatment of ADHD in Women'. The Female Patient 29 (2004): 29-34.
  • 'Dietary Phosphorus Is Toxic for Girls But Not for Boys'. In Victor Preedy (ed.). Annual Reviews in Food & Nutrition London, UK: Taylor & Francis Publishers, 2003, pp. 158-168.
  • 'Who First Suggests the Diagnosis of Attention-Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder? A survey of primary-care pediatricians, family physicians, and child psychiatrists'. Annals of Family Medicine 1 (2003): 171-174. [With Kathleen J. Kautz]
  • 'What Was the Cause of Nietzsche's Dementia?' Journal of Medical Biography 11 (2003): 47-54.
  • 'How Common Is Intersex?' Journal of Sex Research 39 (2002): 174-178.
  • 'Maybe Men and Women Are Different.' American Psychologist July (2002): 444-445.
  • 'The Institute of Medicine's "Dietary Reference Intake" for Phosphorus: a critical perspective'. Journal of the American College of Nutrition 20 (2001): 271-278.
  • 'Reclaiming Kindergarten: making kindergarten less harmful to boys'. Psychology of Men and Masculinity 2 (2001): 3-12.
  • 'Characteristics of spatiotemporal integration in the priming and rewarding effects of medial forebrain bundle stimulation'. Behavioral Neuroscience 105 (1991): 884-900. [With C. R. Gallistel]
  • 'Temporal integration in self-stimulation: a paradox'. Behavioral Neuroscience 98 (1984): 467-468.

[edit] Criticism

[edit] External links