Is agreeing with a gender stereotype correlated with the performance of female students in introductory physics?
Alexandru Maries, Nafis I. Karim, and Chandralekha Singh

TL;DR
This study investigates how gender stereotypes influence female students' performance in introductory physics, finding that believing in gender stereotypes correlates with lower performance among women, especially in calculus-based courses.
Contribution
It provides empirical evidence linking stereotype endorsement to female students' physics performance and explores the impact of stereotype activation interventions.
Findings
No performance difference when asking gender before the test.
Stereotype agreement negatively correlates with female performance.
Stereotype threat may partly explain performance disparities.
Abstract
Several prior studies in introductory physics have found a gender gap on conceptual assessments such as the Force Concept Inventory (FCI) and the Conceptual Survey of Electricity and Magnetism (CSEM) with male students performing better than female students. Moreover, prior studies in the context of mathematics have also found that activation of a negative stereotype about a group can lead to deteriorated performance of the stereotyped group. Here, we describe two studies in which we investigated the impact of interventions on the gender gap on the FCI and CSEM in large introductory physics courses at a large research university. In the first study, we investigated whether asking introductory physics students to indicate their gender immediately before taking the CSEM increased the gender gap compared to students who were not asked for this information. We found no difference in…
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Taxonomy
TopicsScience Education and Pedagogy · Career Development and Diversity · Educational Strategies and Epistemologies
