National differences in gender–science stereotypes predict national sex differences in science and math achievement

University of Virginia · San Diego State University · +14 more institutions

PubMed
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Abstract

About 70% of more than half a million Implicit Association Tests completed by citizens of 34 countries revealed expected implicit stereotypes associating science with males more than with females. We discovered that nation-level implicit stereotypes predicted nation-level sex differences in 8th-grade science and mathematics achievement. Self-reported stereotypes did not provide additional predictive validity of the achievement gap. We suggest that implicit stereotypes and sex differences in science participation and performance are mutually reinforcing, contributing to the persistent gender gap in science engagement.

Citation impact

1,031
total citations
FWCI
68.25
Percentile
100%
References
54
Citations per year

Authors

25

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Gender gap
  • Psychology
  • Social psychology
  • Implicit-association test
  • Association (psychology)
  • Demographic economics
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Quality Education
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