<p>'Matt Pinkett tackles some deeply uncomfortable issues relating to boys’ mental health. It’s searingly honest, written from the heart and with a whopping intent to open up some of this tricky terrain. It is one thing to name that terrain, it is quite another to expand on it in a way that really makes you think, and then quite another to provide some sensitive yet punchy potential solutions. It’s a cliché to say that certain books should be read by everyone working in schools. In the case of <i>Boys Do Cry</i>, it’s absolutely true.'</p><p><strong>Mary Myatt, </strong><em>Education Advisor, Writer, and Speaker</em></p><p>'For people who teach, this book reminds us why we do it. For people who don’t, it will give you a chance to look into boys’ lives and experiences and consider how we need to talk, support, and provide role models to give boys the happy and healthy adulthoods they deserve.'</p><p><strong>Dr Poppy Gibson, </strong><em>Senior Lecturer in Education at Anglia Ruskin University </em></p><p><em>'Boys Do Cry</em> offers multiple windows into the experiences of boys and young men. It is a compelling argument that everyone benefits when we prioritise male mental health and wellbeing.'</p><p><strong>Sanum Jawaid Khan</strong>, <em>Schools Week</em></p>
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Om bidragsyterne
Matt Pinkett is an English teacher in Surrey with a personal and professional interest in gender and masculinity in schools. He is co-author of the bestselling book Boys Don’t Try? Matt has also blogged and written for several publications, and delivers regular CPD sessions on the topic of teaching and masculinity.