Abstract

Despite the global importance of science, engineering, and math-related fields, women are consistently underrepresented in these areas. One source of this disparity is likely the prevalence of gender stereotypes that constrain girls’ and women’s math performance and interest. The current research explores the developmental roots of these effects by examining the impact of stereotypes on young girls’ intuitive number sense, a universal skill that predicts later math ability. Across four studies, 762 children ages 3–6 were presented with a task measuring their Approximate Number System accuracy. Instructions given before the task varied by condition. In the two control conditions, the task was described to children either as a game or a test of eyesight ability. In the experimental condition, the task was described as a test of math ability and that researchers were interested in whether boys or girls were better at math and counting. Separately, we measured children’s explicit beliefs about math and gender. Results conducted on the combined dataset indicated that while only a small number of girls in the sample had stereotypes associating math with boys, these girls performed significantly worse on a test of Approximate Number System accuracy when it was framed as a math test rather than a game or an eyesight test. These results provide novel evidence that for young girls who do endorse stereotypes about math and gender, contextual activation of these stereotypes may impair their intuitive number sense, potentially affecting their acquisition of formal mathematics concepts and developing interest in math-related fields.

Highlights

  • IntroductionAspx) and a Vanier Canada Graduate Scholarship to AMG (https://vanier.gc.ca/en/home-accueil.html)

  • The effect of gender stereotypes on young girls’ intuitive number sense differences in Approximate Number System (ANS) capabilities [32], we explore whether contextual activation of gender stereotypes might impair the ANS accuracy of girls who have internalized the belief that boys are inherently better at numbers and math

  • Whereas we found an association between gender stereotypes and girls’ intuitive number sense, we did not find this relationship among boys

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Summary

Introduction

Aspx) and a Vanier Canada Graduate Scholarship to AMG (https://vanier.gc.ca/en/home-accueil.html). The funders had no role in study design, data. Women continue to be highly underrepresented in mathematics, engineering, and related fields; a pattern that is associated with cultural stereotypes associating math more with men than women [1,2,3]. A large body of correlational and experimental work has linked these gender stereotypes to a gender gap in math performance and has suggested that subtle reminders of gender stereotypes can sometimes cause some women to underperform on tests of their math ability [4,5,6,7]. Because gender stereotypes can emerge in elementary school, research . Collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript

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