Why Girls are Bored with Math
It's long been known that more boys go into math-based careers than
do girls. But that doesn't mean girls have any problem with their plusses
and minuses.
By Anne Becker published May 1, 2003 - last reviewed on June 9, 2016
It's long been known that more boys go into math-based careers than
do girls. But that doesn't mean girls have any problem with their plusses
and minuses.
Girls shy away from careers in math not because they lack the
skills. They just don't see math as useful, according to research from
the University of Michigan.
The study, which is based on data collected over 17 years as part
of the Michigan Study of Adolescent Life Transitions (MSALT), found that
girls and boys with similarly gifted math skills ranked the utility of
math very differently. Girls placed a much lower value on math than
boys.
"Girls do tend to underestimate their math ability in high school,
even though their actual performance is just as good as that of the
boys," says Jacquelynne Eccles, a professor of psychology and women's
studies and a research scientist in the university's Institute for
Research on Women and Gender. "But that's not what pushes them away from
mathematically based majors. There are two key factors in that decision:
how much they believe in the ultimate utility of mathematics, and how
much they value working with, and for, people."
These findings might help explain why there are many more men than
women in math-based majors and careers, Eccles says.
For example, in 2002, women made up 43percent of the University of
Michigan's Medical School class, but only 14 percent of doctoral students
in the College of Engineering.
"Boys' beliefs and values are pulling them toward those areas while
girls' are pushing them in other directions,"says Eccles.
The MSALT study followed some 1,700 Michigan students from sixth
grade through college and beyond, and measured motivation, a wide variety
of interests and achievement-related self-concepts.