Mark Sherman is a professor emeritus of psychology at the State University of New York at New Paltz. After receiving his Ph.D. in psychology, he taught for 25 years at SUNY New Paltz, soon specializing in gender issues. By the early 1990s, his principal interest was -- and remains -- the crises facing boys and men (especially young men). He is a member of the multi-partisan coalition for the establishment of a White House Council on Boys and Men, and writes regularly for Psychology Today, principally on issues facing males -- especially those under the age of 30. His strong interest in this comes not only from his academic background and his social concerns, but are quite personal as well: Sherman is the father of three sons and the grandfather of five grandsons.
Why Can't Boys Be Boys?
Boys Are in Trouble
Intersectionality and the Tragedy of the Black Male
Left Wing Intolerance on Campus Is Meeting Its Match
Loving Pale Males
You Don't Hit Girls
Solving the Pronoun Problem
Attention Must Be Paid: Warren Farrell and the Boy Crisis
Feminizing Boys as We Masculinize Girls
Does Concern for Boys Put You In the Alt-Right?