Gendered choices of STEM subjects for matriculation are not driven by prior differences in mathematical achievement
Autor: | Moshe Justman, Susan J. Méndez |
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Rok vydání: | 2018 |
Předmět: |
Economics and Econometrics
Matriculation Earnings Inequality media_common.quotation_subject education 05 social sciences 050301 education Education Disadvantaged 0502 economics and business Cohort Mathematics education Mathematical ability 050207 economics 0503 education Disadvantage media_common Diversity (politics) |
Zdroj: | Economics of Education Review. 64:282-297 |
ISSN: | 0272-7757 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.econedurev.2018.02.002 |
Popis: | Women's under-representation in high-paying jobs in STEM fields (science, technology, engineering and mathematics) mirrors their earlier choices of matriculation electives: male students favour physics, information technology and advanced mathematics; female students favour life sciences. ‘Pipeline’ theories attribute these patterns to a male advantage in mathematics, but our longitudinal analysis, using administrative data on a full cohort of students in Victoria, Australia, shows that these patterns remain intact after conditioning on prior achievement. Female students require stronger prior signals of mathematical ability to choose male-dominated subjects, and when choosing these subjects earn higher average scores than males, suggesting a possible loss of efficiency. Previous research has shown that socio-economic disadvantage adversely affects boys more than girls, and indeed we find less of a male advantage in physics and advanced mathematics among socially disadvantaged students. We find that students with a language background other than English choose STEM fields with greater frequency than other students, reflecting their comparative advantage, while exhibiting more markedly gendered subject choices, indicating a role for cultural factors. Finally, we find significantly less gender streaming in STEM subjects among female students in all-girl schools than in co-educational schools, but no such difference for male students. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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