Abstract

Research on gender gaps in school tends to focus on average gender differences in academic outcomes, such as motivation, engagement, and achievement. The current study moved beyond a binary perspective to unpack the variations within gender. It identified distinct groups of adolescents based on their patterns of conformity to different gender norms and compared group differences in motivation, engagement, and achievement. Data were collected from 597 English students (aged 14–16 years, 49% girls) on their conformity to traditional masculine and feminine norms, growth mindset, perseverance, self-handicapping, and their English and mathematics performance at the end of secondary school. Latent profile analysis identified seven groups of adolescents (resister boys, cool guys, tough guys, relational girls, modern girls, tomboys, wild girls) and revealed the prevalence of each profile. Within-gender variations show that two thirds of the boys were motivated, engaged, and performed well in school. In contrast, half of the girls showed maladaptive patterns of motivation, engagement, and achievement, and could be considered academically at risk. By shifting the focus from “boys versus girls” to “which boys and which girls”, this study reveals the invisibility of well-performing boys and underachieving girls in educational gender gap research.

Highlights

  • Boys lag behind girls in school across many Western industrialized countries (OECD 2015)

  • The current study aimed to identify subgroups of adolescent boys and girls based on their emergent patterns of gender role conformity, and compare group differences in motivation, engagement, and achievement in English and mathematics

  • The average level of student achievement was diverse across schools: the proportion of students obtaining a pass grade in General Certificate of Secondary Education (GCSE) English and mathematics ranged from 42-74% in each school

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Summary

Introduction

Boys lag behind girls in school across many Western industrialized countries (OECD 2015). Do boys report poorer quality motivation (Butler 2014), they tend to be less engaged (Lam et al 2012) and perform worse than girls in secondary school (Voyer and Voyer 2014). Research on binary gender differences risks treating boys and girls as two homogenous groups, masking considerable variations in motivation, engagement, and achievement within each gender.

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