clovenhooves The Personal Is Political Women's Rights Article 12th grade girls are less likely than boys to say they want to get married someday

Article 12th grade girls are less likely than boys to say they want to get married someday

Article 12th grade girls are less likely than boys to say they want to get married someday

 
124
Nov 16 2025, 9:43 AM
#1
https://www.pewresearch.org/short-reads/2025/11/14/12th-grade-girls-are-less-likely-than-boys-to-say-they-want-to-get-married-someday/

Quote:The drop in the share of 12th graders who say they want to get married reflects shifting views among girls. Boys are more likely than girls to say they want to get married someday (74% vs. 61%), but this wasn’t always the case. In 1993, a larger share of girls (83%) than boys (76%) said they wanted to get married.

The share of boys saying this is virtually unchanged over the 30-year period. But the share among girls dropped by 22 percentage points.

[Image: SR_25.11.14_MarriageAndFamily_3.png?resize=260,521]
Magpie
Nov 16 2025, 9:43 AM #1

https://www.pewresearch.org/short-reads/2025/11/14/12th-grade-girls-are-less-likely-than-boys-to-say-they-want-to-get-married-someday/

Quote:The drop in the share of 12th graders who say they want to get married reflects shifting views among girls. Boys are more likely than girls to say they want to get married someday (74% vs. 61%), but this wasn’t always the case. In 1993, a larger share of girls (83%) than boys (76%) said they wanted to get married.

The share of boys saying this is virtually unchanged over the 30-year period. But the share among girls dropped by 22 percentage points.

[Image: SR_25.11.14_MarriageAndFamily_3.png?resize=260,521]

Persephone
Trapped in the land of the dead 🪷
23
Nov 16 2025, 12:43 PM
#2
we're healing!
Persephone
Trapped in the land of the dead 🪷
Nov 16 2025, 12:43 PM #2

we're healing!

Clover
Kozlik's regular account 🍀🐐
1,264
Nov 18 2025, 9:15 PM
#3
Woah. That's fascinating. Amazing news. Girls are waking up. Fuck the heteronormative patriarchal nuclear family model. Marriage for women is signing up for legal stress of being tied to a man with little to no rewards. I wish r/FemaleDatingStrategy was still a thing, invaluable resource for young women. 

What's funny is I found a reddit post sharing this as well, and the comments were pretty much on par for reddit. The top one was basically dismissing these girls' opinion as "aSk tHeM aGaiN wHeN tHeY'Re oLdEr" and what was funny is I guess there was enough pushback to the moids that the other half of the top comments were "you all are the reason for this statistic" lmao. Yes. :meowqueen: (Also lmao at "asking them when they're older" as if that would somehow change shit, when even more older women now are increasingly giving up on dating loser-ass misogynistic men and instead are preferring to stay single and nourish their human socialization needs by spending time with female friends. 4B let's gooo.)

One thing I was surprised about was how many 12th grade boys actually want to get married. I suppose by grade 12, boys will have observed enough of their mothers being Mommy McBangmaids for their fathers, and Mommy Maids for their sons, that they're like "yeah sure, why not, I'll take a Mommy McBandmaid." The deal is pretty sweet for men. Ala men's "I want a wife" surface-level thinking.

Girls being higher than boys in 1993 was unsurprising for me; United States girls of that time were subjected to pro-marriage propaganda ala Disney princess movies. You find a prince charming and you will live happily ever after. 🥰 I am curious how much the dramatic drop has been due to Disney switching gears to promote less nuclear family propaganda and more "liberal feminist" princess movies. Tangled in 2010 was somewhat of a start, though I think the main character stil fell in love with the dude (I forgor), but it really got kicked into high gear with Frozen (2013) and Moana (2016). These were just the big names, but these movies, especially Frozen, heavily defined a lot of young girls years. The girls who initially watched these films when they were first released would be past grade 12, but the younger ones, who would be the ones answering this survey, would have had the ability to have Frozen and Moana on repeat through the Disney+ streaming. Going along those lines, with the next hit movie for young kids/girls being K-Pop Demon Hunters (2025) and the trend of women characters focusing on themselves, their family, and their friends continuing in popular children's movies, I am curious how much stronger this trend will grow. 

Children's movies aside, the social media these teens would have been exposed to now vastly differs between sexes due to customized social media algorithms, likely fueling the divide. Teen boys using social media and the internet to access manosphere content and violent pornography, and teen girls possibly being exposed to how depraved men are and how miserable many women are in their relationships with men. It's easy to look at all the misogyny and prejudice strewn all over the internet and just sigh and think "the internet was a mistake", but I also sometimes wonder about how everyone getting on these social media platforms has possibly encouraged some "rising tide" in terms of female class conciousness. (Perhaps this is too naive and hopeium-ish; I think about also the rise in ROGD in teen girls thanks to the internet/social media, eating disorder communities, and the weird-ass promotion of "tradwive" going on right now... I do worry about how much The Algorithm™ might be funneling young women into furthering internalized misogyny... :meowdisappointed:)

Anyway, this is good news! Way to go, ladies. :meowqueen:

Kozlik's regular member account. 🍀🐐
Clover
Kozlik's regular account 🍀🐐
Nov 18 2025, 9:15 PM #3

Woah. That's fascinating. Amazing news. Girls are waking up. Fuck the heteronormative patriarchal nuclear family model. Marriage for women is signing up for legal stress of being tied to a man with little to no rewards. I wish r/FemaleDatingStrategy was still a thing, invaluable resource for young women. 

What's funny is I found a reddit post sharing this as well, and the comments were pretty much on par for reddit. The top one was basically dismissing these girls' opinion as "aSk tHeM aGaiN wHeN tHeY'Re oLdEr" and what was funny is I guess there was enough pushback to the moids that the other half of the top comments were "you all are the reason for this statistic" lmao. Yes. :meowqueen: (Also lmao at "asking them when they're older" as if that would somehow change shit, when even more older women now are increasingly giving up on dating loser-ass misogynistic men and instead are preferring to stay single and nourish their human socialization needs by spending time with female friends. 4B let's gooo.)

One thing I was surprised about was how many 12th grade boys actually want to get married. I suppose by grade 12, boys will have observed enough of their mothers being Mommy McBangmaids for their fathers, and Mommy Maids for their sons, that they're like "yeah sure, why not, I'll take a Mommy McBandmaid." The deal is pretty sweet for men. Ala men's "I want a wife" surface-level thinking.

Girls being higher than boys in 1993 was unsurprising for me; United States girls of that time were subjected to pro-marriage propaganda ala Disney princess movies. You find a prince charming and you will live happily ever after. 🥰 I am curious how much the dramatic drop has been due to Disney switching gears to promote less nuclear family propaganda and more "liberal feminist" princess movies. Tangled in 2010 was somewhat of a start, though I think the main character stil fell in love with the dude (I forgor), but it really got kicked into high gear with Frozen (2013) and Moana (2016). These were just the big names, but these movies, especially Frozen, heavily defined a lot of young girls years. The girls who initially watched these films when they were first released would be past grade 12, but the younger ones, who would be the ones answering this survey, would have had the ability to have Frozen and Moana on repeat through the Disney+ streaming. Going along those lines, with the next hit movie for young kids/girls being K-Pop Demon Hunters (2025) and the trend of women characters focusing on themselves, their family, and their friends continuing in popular children's movies, I am curious how much stronger this trend will grow. 

Children's movies aside, the social media these teens would have been exposed to now vastly differs between sexes due to customized social media algorithms, likely fueling the divide. Teen boys using social media and the internet to access manosphere content and violent pornography, and teen girls possibly being exposed to how depraved men are and how miserable many women are in their relationships with men. It's easy to look at all the misogyny and prejudice strewn all over the internet and just sigh and think "the internet was a mistake", but I also sometimes wonder about how everyone getting on these social media platforms has possibly encouraged some "rising tide" in terms of female class conciousness. (Perhaps this is too naive and hopeium-ish; I think about also the rise in ROGD in teen girls thanks to the internet/social media, eating disorder communities, and the weird-ass promotion of "tradwive" going on right now... I do worry about how much The Algorithm™ might be funneling young women into furthering internalized misogyny... :meowdisappointed:)

Anyway, this is good news! Way to go, ladies. :meowqueen:


Kozlik's regular member account. 🍀🐐

124
Nov 19 2025, 3:40 PM
#4
(Nov 18 2025, 9:15 PM)Clover What's funny is I found a reddit post sharing this as well, and the comments were pretty much on par for reddit. The top one was basically dismissing these girls' opinion as "aSk tHeM aGaiN wHeN tHeY'Re oLdEr" and what was funny is I guess there was enough pushback to the moids that the other half of the top comments were "you all are the reason for this statistic" lmao. Yes. :meowqueen:

That's the thread I got the article from! I did appreciate that thread for showing how full of shit men are about marriage. It's all complaining about how bad of a deal it is for men and making "wife bad" jokes until more girls and women decide they don't want to marry and suddenly civilisation is about to end 🙄

(Nov 18 2025, 9:15 PM)Clover Tangled in 2010 was somewhat of a start, though I think the main character stil fell in love with the dude (I forgor)

They do end up with each other. The MC had also just turned 18 while the dude was 25 or 26 so yeah 😬 (I kind of hate that I know this. I promise I'm not a Disney adult.)

(Nov 18 2025, 9:15 PM)Clover Children's movies aside, the social media these teens would have been exposed to now vastly differs between sexes due to customized social media algorithms, likely fueling the divide. Teen boys using social media and the internet to access manosphere content and violent pornography, and teen girls possibly being exposed to how depraved men are and how miserable many women are in their relationships with men. It's easy to look at all the misogyny and prejudice strewn all over the internet and just sigh and think "the internet was a mistake", but I also sometimes wonder about how everyone getting on these social media platforms has possibly encouraged some "rising tide" in terms of female class conciousness. (Perhaps this is too naive and hopeium-ish; I think about also the rise in ROGD in teen girls thanks to the internet/social media, eating disorder communities, and the weird-ass promotion of "tradwive" going on right now... I do worry about how much The Algorithm™ might be funneling young women into furthering internalized misogyny... :meowdisappointed:)

I was thinking about this recently and I get the impression the internet/social media has made women more... polarised, if that makes sense. Like you mentioned, there's more of the positive (female class consciousness/solidarity) but also more women getting fully into harmful communities. Maybe it's just my perception but there seem to be less women that fall somewhere in the middle than there used to be. Meanwhile boys and men end up in pipelines that are overall more alike than different.

I also wonder if books are a factor too. People in general have been reading less but girls and women still read significantly more than boys and men do. Books don't require the same sort of resources big movie productions do, so there's more opportunity for female authors to come in and write narratives that differ from the traditional ones (especially if you go indie). So girls would have a bigger chance of finding a wider variety of perspectives.
Magpie
Nov 19 2025, 3:40 PM #4

(Nov 18 2025, 9:15 PM)Clover What's funny is I found a reddit post sharing this as well, and the comments were pretty much on par for reddit. The top one was basically dismissing these girls' opinion as "aSk tHeM aGaiN wHeN tHeY'Re oLdEr" and what was funny is I guess there was enough pushback to the moids that the other half of the top comments were "you all are the reason for this statistic" lmao. Yes. :meowqueen:

That's the thread I got the article from! I did appreciate that thread for showing how full of shit men are about marriage. It's all complaining about how bad of a deal it is for men and making "wife bad" jokes until more girls and women decide they don't want to marry and suddenly civilisation is about to end 🙄

(Nov 18 2025, 9:15 PM)Clover Tangled in 2010 was somewhat of a start, though I think the main character stil fell in love with the dude (I forgor)

They do end up with each other. The MC had also just turned 18 while the dude was 25 or 26 so yeah 😬 (I kind of hate that I know this. I promise I'm not a Disney adult.)

(Nov 18 2025, 9:15 PM)Clover Children's movies aside, the social media these teens would have been exposed to now vastly differs between sexes due to customized social media algorithms, likely fueling the divide. Teen boys using social media and the internet to access manosphere content and violent pornography, and teen girls possibly being exposed to how depraved men are and how miserable many women are in their relationships with men. It's easy to look at all the misogyny and prejudice strewn all over the internet and just sigh and think "the internet was a mistake", but I also sometimes wonder about how everyone getting on these social media platforms has possibly encouraged some "rising tide" in terms of female class conciousness. (Perhaps this is too naive and hopeium-ish; I think about also the rise in ROGD in teen girls thanks to the internet/social media, eating disorder communities, and the weird-ass promotion of "tradwive" going on right now... I do worry about how much The Algorithm™ might be funneling young women into furthering internalized misogyny... :meowdisappointed:)

I was thinking about this recently and I get the impression the internet/social media has made women more... polarised, if that makes sense. Like you mentioned, there's more of the positive (female class consciousness/solidarity) but also more women getting fully into harmful communities. Maybe it's just my perception but there seem to be less women that fall somewhere in the middle than there used to be. Meanwhile boys and men end up in pipelines that are overall more alike than different.

I also wonder if books are a factor too. People in general have been reading less but girls and women still read significantly more than boys and men do. Books don't require the same sort of resources big movie productions do, so there's more opportunity for female authors to come in and write narratives that differ from the traditional ones (especially if you go indie). So girls would have a bigger chance of finding a wider variety of perspectives.

Yesterday, 5:43 AM
#5
Quote:What's funny is I found a reddit post sharing this as well, and the comments were pretty much on par for reddit. The top one was basically dismissing these girls' opinion as "aSk tHeM aGaiN wHeN tHeY'Re oLdEr"

Ah yes, just like how all those women saying the same thing about not wanting children all ended up popping out babies left and right. Not sure why everyone's going on about birth rates, then.
Edited Yesterday, 5:45 AM by YesYourNigel.
YesYourNigel
Yesterday, 5:43 AM #5

Quote:What's funny is I found a reddit post sharing this as well, and the comments were pretty much on par for reddit. The top one was basically dismissing these girls' opinion as "aSk tHeM aGaiN wHeN tHeY'Re oLdEr"

Ah yes, just like how all those women saying the same thing about not wanting children all ended up popping out babies left and right. Not sure why everyone's going on about birth rates, then.

Impress Polly
The kind they warned you about.
96
9 hours ago
#6
The queen is back from jury duty now. You may now rejoice!

My thoughts? Y'know, there's just nothing more appealing to the ladies than grown men who can't even manage to put their dirty clothes in the hamper or microwave their own Dino Nuggets and have erectile dysfunction at age 25 from their porn addiction going around complaining endlessly on the internet with MAGA hats on that women are too picky these days. There's nothing more appealing than that. No?

As to this whole debate about girls' media from the '90s vs. the modern era, yeah, I think it's fair to say that there was definitely a more conservative attitude about the importance of marriage and kids that got pounded into your brain from a young age. Most of the toys for girls were baby dolls, all that sorta thing. That was the atmosphere I grew up in. And I didn't want to get married. (Full disclosure: I eventually got married, but to a woman.) I mean I just think that somewhere along the way, a generation of girls grew up and figured out that Titanic ain't for real and actually your dating pool looks much more like what I have just described above and frankly they'd rather go extinct than marry that! Today's young women are stressed by economic precarity as things are and don't want to have to raise a husband and teach him that women are human beings. I would say the reality is that our media climate has changed in response to that. Now the popular movies for girls and young women rarely center on finding a guy because fact is that the market for romance (heterosexual in particular) has diminished. What they used to call "chick flicks" don't sell too well with chicks anymore. The demand today in fact is for more narrative emphasis on platonic relationships, like friendships. It's K-Pop Demon Hunters for today's girls, not Twilight.

NOW: Being a winner myself, I know my cartoons and Tangled was very much the opposite of a feminist movie. I mean it was supposed to be about navigating an abusive parent-child relationship, but the gender dynamics are exactly what you'd expect from old Disney: our protagonist Rapunzel escapes the grip of a narcissistic, controlling mother by finding a man, the end. The problem is a woman, the solution is a man. It was notably followed up the next year by what I'd characterize as one of the most blatantly misogynistic pictures Disney has ever released: Mars Needs Moms, which is about a human boy who helps male Martians rise up and overthrow an oppressive, technology-driven matriarchy that doesn't do natural childbirth or have use for their males, teaching these aliens the importance of mothering. I'd rank it up there with 101 Dalmations in degrees of explicit contempt for the female sex. Fortunately, Mars Needs Moms tanked hard at the box office and the thematic experiment was accordingly not repeated. 

I tend to locate the beginning of the modern era in girls' media as beginning with the popularity of The Hunger Games, particularly after the first novel was released as a theatrical motion picture in early 2012. Protagonist Katniss Everdeen survives a futuristic, gladiator-style game show and shows up its game-makers by pretending to be in love with a boy simply because the audience likes the performance. The film's box office success always struck me as the beginning of the change. The next year you had Frozen, which made it a central plot point that Princess Anna must prioritize her love for her sister over and above that for her man. Sisters before misters. In stark contrast to Mars Needs Moms, Frozen became the Disney animated hit of the decade! But to point out something perhaps even more significant about that moment, the generally more popular of the two princess sisters in that film furthermore was Elsa, who never develops a love interest. Young girls specifically wanted to be Elsa more than Anna. Sisters without misters. The theme generally kept rolling from there (including in what has become my favorite movie of all time, 2015's Mad Max: Fury Road; don't let the title of which fool you, it's really Furiosa's movie.). Perhaps that just reflected the mindset of prepubescent girls though, you might think. Naturally girls wouldn't be interested in romance before hitting puberty after all. And yet a full decade later, this same generation had graduated not to romances, but to the Barbie movie, making it the biggest blockbuster of the year. So much for that theory of the case.

ANYWAY, I also also gotta say that I agree with Magpie's thoughts above just in general, including about modern social media having a polarizing affect on women. There's definitely both more class consciousness among today's young women, yet also, at the same time, a whole pickmesphere that's emerged adjacent the "manosphere". You get a mixture of both of those elements.
Edited 9 hours ago by Impress Polly.
Impress Polly
The kind they warned you about.
9 hours ago #6

The queen is back from jury duty now. You may now rejoice!

My thoughts? Y'know, there's just nothing more appealing to the ladies than grown men who can't even manage to put their dirty clothes in the hamper or microwave their own Dino Nuggets and have erectile dysfunction at age 25 from their porn addiction going around complaining endlessly on the internet with MAGA hats on that women are too picky these days. There's nothing more appealing than that. No?

As to this whole debate about girls' media from the '90s vs. the modern era, yeah, I think it's fair to say that there was definitely a more conservative attitude about the importance of marriage and kids that got pounded into your brain from a young age. Most of the toys for girls were baby dolls, all that sorta thing. That was the atmosphere I grew up in. And I didn't want to get married. (Full disclosure: I eventually got married, but to a woman.) I mean I just think that somewhere along the way, a generation of girls grew up and figured out that Titanic ain't for real and actually your dating pool looks much more like what I have just described above and frankly they'd rather go extinct than marry that! Today's young women are stressed by economic precarity as things are and don't want to have to raise a husband and teach him that women are human beings. I would say the reality is that our media climate has changed in response to that. Now the popular movies for girls and young women rarely center on finding a guy because fact is that the market for romance (heterosexual in particular) has diminished. What they used to call "chick flicks" don't sell too well with chicks anymore. The demand today in fact is for more narrative emphasis on platonic relationships, like friendships. It's K-Pop Demon Hunters for today's girls, not Twilight.

NOW: Being a winner myself, I know my cartoons and Tangled was very much the opposite of a feminist movie. I mean it was supposed to be about navigating an abusive parent-child relationship, but the gender dynamics are exactly what you'd expect from old Disney: our protagonist Rapunzel escapes the grip of a narcissistic, controlling mother by finding a man, the end. The problem is a woman, the solution is a man. It was notably followed up the next year by what I'd characterize as one of the most blatantly misogynistic pictures Disney has ever released: Mars Needs Moms, which is about a human boy who helps male Martians rise up and overthrow an oppressive, technology-driven matriarchy that doesn't do natural childbirth or have use for their males, teaching these aliens the importance of mothering. I'd rank it up there with 101 Dalmations in degrees of explicit contempt for the female sex. Fortunately, Mars Needs Moms tanked hard at the box office and the thematic experiment was accordingly not repeated. 

I tend to locate the beginning of the modern era in girls' media as beginning with the popularity of The Hunger Games, particularly after the first novel was released as a theatrical motion picture in early 2012. Protagonist Katniss Everdeen survives a futuristic, gladiator-style game show and shows up its game-makers by pretending to be in love with a boy simply because the audience likes the performance. The film's box office success always struck me as the beginning of the change. The next year you had Frozen, which made it a central plot point that Princess Anna must prioritize her love for her sister over and above that for her man. Sisters before misters. In stark contrast to Mars Needs Moms, Frozen became the Disney animated hit of the decade! But to point out something perhaps even more significant about that moment, the generally more popular of the two princess sisters in that film furthermore was Elsa, who never develops a love interest. Young girls specifically wanted to be Elsa more than Anna. Sisters without misters. The theme generally kept rolling from there (including in what has become my favorite movie of all time, 2015's Mad Max: Fury Road; don't let the title of which fool you, it's really Furiosa's movie.). Perhaps that just reflected the mindset of prepubescent girls though, you might think. Naturally girls wouldn't be interested in romance before hitting puberty after all. And yet a full decade later, this same generation had graduated not to romances, but to the Barbie movie, making it the biggest blockbuster of the year. So much for that theory of the case.

ANYWAY, I also also gotta say that I agree with Magpie's thoughts above just in general, including about modern social media having a polarizing affect on women. There's definitely both more class consciousness among today's young women, yet also, at the same time, a whole pickmesphere that's emerged adjacent the "manosphere". You get a mixture of both of those elements.

Recently Browsing
 1 Guest(s)
Recently Browsing
 1 Guest(s)