A lot of people think that girls just don’t “do” math. In fact, many of these same people believe that this is related to girls just being better at different things than boys. This might be true in some areas, but recent studies have shown that, when it comes to math, girls just might be as good if not better!
You might be surprised to learn that not all of these studies are
recent. Janet Hyde, a psychologist at the University of Wisconsin,
found that girls tested in math just as well as boys before high
school. That was in the late eighties/early nineties. Now, nearly
twenty years later, researchers took another look at standardized test
scores in a report published recently in Science. They found that there is actually no difference in mathematical ability in high school, either.
Now, that’s not to say that girls and boys both approach math in the
same way. For instance, Hyde noted that she thought “the boys tend to
be a little more idiosyncratic in solving problems, the girls more
conservative in following what they’ve been taught.” But, of course, we
know that approaching a problem in a different way doesn’t necessarily
lead to being more or less good at solving it.
So it kind of makes you wonder: why does the perception exist that
girls aren’t as good at math, and why aren’t more giving it a try in
high school and universities?
To drive home this point, researchers looked at the correlation between
the social structure of many countries and how well the girls from
each performed in math. For example, they “found that improved social
conditions for women were related to improved math performance by
girls.”
Interestingly, this sort of finding doesn’t rule out biological
differences between men and women when it comes to ability in a certain
subject: “the between gender differences in a single discipline - reading or math - certainly appear to be influenced by social features, but the within
gender differences between reading and math, and between arithmetic
and geometry, appear to be much more stable across environments,
suggesting possible biological roots.
Let’s recap. Many people think or have thought that girls just weren’t
as good at math as boys are. Studies are showing that this apparent
gap in ability is closing, or is non-existent in some countries. While
environmental factors seem to contribute to the gap where it exists,
there’s no denying that there could be some biological differences
between male and female brains that make certain problems easier for one
or the other.
Since many of us live in areas where this gap still exists, at least in
perception, we can ask ourselves what we can do about it.
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