Implicit Stereotypes: Evidence from Teachers’ Gender Bias*
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Abstract
Abstract I study whether exposure to teacher stereotypes, as measured by the Gender-Science Implicit Association Test, affects student achievement. I provide evidence that the gender gap in math performance, defined as the score of boys minus the score of girls in standardized tests, substantially increases when students are assigned to math teachers with stronger gender stereotypes. Teacher stereotypes induce girls to underperform in math and self-select into less demanding high schools, following the track recommendation of their teachers. These effects are at least partially driven by lower self-confidence on math ability of girls exposed to gender-biased teachers. Stereotypes impair the test performance of…
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440
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Authors
1Topics & keywords
Topics
Keywords
- Implicit-association test
- Psychology
- Gender gap
- Test (biology)
- Association (psychology)
- Gender bias
- Student achievement
- Developmental psychology
UN Sustainable Development Goals
- Quality Education
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