Math gender gap is history
See Snapshots archive.
Snapshot for August 20, 2008.
Math gender gap is history
by Joydeep Roy
According to conventional wisdom, girls fear mathematics and shy
away from it. However, a recent study from the U.S. Department of
Education shows that girls in high school have bridged the gender
gap that once existed, and in some respects are more advanced than
boys in math.
Every 10 years or so, the Department of Education conducts a study
of high school students, collecting detailed information on their
course-taking behavior from school transcripts. The last three
studies show that boys and girls, on average, now earn the same
number of credits in mathematics during high school (see
Chart).1 In 1982, boys earned a slightly higher number of
credits on average in math than girls (2.8 compared to 2.6), but
the difference had vanished by 1992. Both boys and girls earned the
same number of credits in math in 1992 (3.3) and in 2004 (3.6).
In another interesting development, the study found that girls are now slightly more likely than boys to take advanced math courses. In 1982, fewer than 10% of girls had completed pre-calculus or calculus, compared to about 12% of boys. By 2004, 34% of girls were completing pre-calculus or calculus, compared to 32% of boys.
Note:
1. These three studies are the High School and Beyond Longitudinal
Study of 1980 sophomores, the National Education Longitudinal Study
of the Class of 1992, and the Education Longitudinal Study of 2002
sophomores.
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