Bioscience Students in Physics Courses With Higher Test Anxiety Have Lower Grades on High-Stakes Assessments, and Women Report More Test Anxiety Than Men
Alysa Malespina, Fargol Seifollahi, Chandralekha Singh

TL;DR
This study reveals that bioscience women in physics courses experience higher test anxiety and lower self-efficacy, which negatively impacts their high-stakes assessment performance, highlighting gender disparities in STEM education.
Contribution
It demonstrates gender differences in test anxiety and self-efficacy among bioscience students in physics, and shows these factors predict high-stakes performance, extending prior research to this population.
Findings
Women report higher test anxiety than men.
Test anxiety and self-efficacy predict high-stakes assessment outcomes.
Gender disparities exist in physics courses for bioscience students.
Abstract
Test anxiety is beginning to be recognized as a significant factor affecting student performance in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) courses, potentially contributing to gender inequity within these fields. Additionally, the management of test anxiety can improve self-efficacy, which is a construct that has been well studied in the physics context. In this study, we investigated the relationship between self-efficacy, test anxiety, and gender differences in performance in a two-semester-long introductory physics course sequence for bioscience students in which women outnumber men. Using validated survey data and grade information from students in a two-semester introductory physics course sequence, we compared the predictive power of self-efficacy and test anxiety on female and male students' performance on both low- and high-stakes assessments. We found that…
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