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The development of children's gender stereotypes about STEM and verbal abilities: A preregistered meta-analytic review of 98 studies. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The meta-analysis examined how gender stereotypes about abilities in STEM (science, technology, engineering, and mathematics) affect girls' participation and boys' performance in reading and writing, using data from 98 studies with over 145,000 children globally.
  • Contrary to some beliefs, the analysis found that while stereotypes favoring male math ability were minimal, stronger stereotypes existed favoring males in fields like computer science and engineering from an early age.
  • Findings also highlighted that girls began to adopt pro-male STEM stereotypes as they aged, while pro-female verbal stereotypes became more prevalent, influencing children's confidence and interests in these areas over time.

Article Abstract

This meta-analysis studied the development of ability stereotypes that could limit girls' and women's participation in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) fields, as well as contribute to boys' underachievement in reading and writing. We integrated findings from 98 studies measuring children's gender stereotypes about STEM and verbal abilities. The data comprised 145,204 children (ages 4-17) from 33 nations across more than 40 years (1977-2020). Preregistered analyses showed why prior researchers have reached diverging conclusions about the onset, change, and extent of these stereotypes in childhood and adolescence. Contrary to some prior conclusions, math stereotypes favoring male ability were minimal on average (0.11 SDs from gender neutrality). Stereotypes were instead far stronger for computer science, engineering, and physics (0.51 SDs), which favored male ability by age 6. Girls increasingly endorsed pro-male STEM stereotypes with age. Pro-female verbal ability stereotypes were also substantial (0.46 SDs), emerging by age 8 and becoming more female-biased with age. Additionally, STEM stereotypes were weaker for Black than White U.S. participants, as predicted. Unexpectedly, however, boys' STEM stereotypes declined before age 13 but increased thereafter, revealing an asymmetric development across STEM versus verbal domains. We integrated developmental intergroup theory and social role theory to explain this asymmetry, considering both cognitive and sociocultural processes. The early emergence of verbal stereotypes and certain STEM stereotypes (e.g., engineering) means that they have ample time to affect later downstream outcomes such as domain-specific confidence and interests. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/bul0000456DOI Listing

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