Abstract

BackgroundA large body of research has found stronger math anxiety in females and suggests that inferior spatial abilities (or attributes towards spatial abilities) in females compared to males are the origin of sex differences in math anxiety. PurposeTo fully explore the complex relationship among math anxiety, spatial abilities, math performance and sex differences, the current study examined spatial skills, working memory skills, math anxiety, and self-efficacy as predictors of math performance. Basic proceduresParticipating in the study were 89 undergraduate Israeli students (44 males and 45 females). Main findingsThe result showed sex differences in a few domains: math anxiety was higher in females compared to males, males outperformed females in number line performance and spatial skills. The relationships among spatial abilities, math performance, and math anxiety were stronger in males than in females. By contrast, the relationship between math self-efficacy and performance was stronger in females compared to males. ConclusionsThis finding demonstrated fundamental differences between the sexes, even with similar performances in curriculum-based assessments.

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