I have around 100 hours in 150/152/172 aircraft including some T-41 time, and I performed over a hundred stalls and not one of them threatened to spin. In fact, one of my instructors had a stability demonstration he had me perform where we did a gentle power off stall and held the controls full aft, and as the plane settled into the full stall, gently nudged rudder left and right. The nose of the plane would rotate a bit left and right along with the direction of the rudder application. At no point did the plane attempt to enter a spin and the recovery was as simple as relaxing the aft controls and adding power.
In the T-41, we did turning stalls, recovered both at the entry and at the full stall, and none of those developed into a spin either.
I'm not sure where you got "high wing aircraft spin easily" but in 17 years of flying experience I have never heard that. The high wing cessnas are very stable and forgiving in the stall, and if a spin is somehow entered they recover very easily.
The ONLY stability problem I ever heard of was in early high wing cessnas with the older tail without the longish strake, a 40 degree flap setting could potentially blank out the vertical tail if the aircraft was aggressively slipped with the flaps full down. This is why flap travel is limited on some models of the 150/152/172.