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What Are the Gender Differences in Achievement for the Content Areas?
Exhibit
3.5 displays average achievement in science content areas by gender
for the Benchmarking entities as well as for the comparison countries.
On average across all the TIMSS 1999 countries, boys outperformed
girls in earth science, physics, chemistry, and environmental and
resource issues. In the United States this gender difference was evident
only in earth science. There were no gender differences in any country
or Benchmarking participant in scientific inquiry and the nature of
science; in life science, only the First in the World Consortium had
a significant difference, in favor of boys. Among Benchmarking participants,
gender differences were relatively rare, and were found mostly in
physics, chemistry, and earth science. In physics, boys significantly
outperformed girls in Connecticut, Illinois, North Carolina, Oregon,
Texas, First in the World, Guilford County, Naperville, and the Southwest
Pennsylvania Math and Science Collaborative. In chemistry, boys performed
better in Indiana, Massachusetts, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Chicago, the
Delaware Science Coalition, Guilford County, and the Southwest Pennsylvania
Math and Science Collaborative. Boys scored better in earth science
in Idaho, Indiana, Maryland, Michigan, and the Southwest Pennsylvania
Math and Science Collaborative. Gender differences favoring boys in
environmental and resource issues were found in Connecticut, Massachusetts,
and Jersey City.
The patterns in the performance of girls and
boys found in TIMSS 1999 are consistent with previous IEA science
assessments. Girls tended to perform about the same as boys in life
science in both TIMSS 1995 and the Second International Science Study
(SISS),(1) while boys were markedly stronger in
earth science, physics, and chemistry.
| 1 |
Postlethwaite T.N. and Wiley,
D.E. (1992), The IEA Study of Science II: Science Achievement
in Twenty-Three Countries, New York, NY: Pergamon Press; Beaton,
A.E., Martin, M.O., Mullis, I.V.S., Gonzalez, E.J., Smith, T.A.,
and Kelly, D.L. (1996a), Science Achievement in the Middle School
Years: IEA's Third International Mathematics and Science Study (TIMSS),
Chestnut Hill, MA: Boston College. |
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