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Just Watching A Man Run A Study Group Makes Women Worse At Math

Nov 21, 2013, 23:12 IST

Flickr/tracy the astonishing

We've heard it a million times: Men outnumber women in science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM) fields.

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But even though women have made progress in the past few decades, they still make up less than one quarter of the STEM workforce in the U.S., according to the most recent U.S. Census Bureau report from 2011.

There are many reasons that women drop out of STEM studies, including everything from being called a nerd and not getting enough positive reinforcement, to other things like lack of childcare and the competitive nature of the field.

But a new study, conducted by Katie Van Loo and Robert Rydell from Indiana University, published Nov. 8 in the journal Social Psychological and Personality Science, provides additional evidence that stereotypes are holding women back.

The researchers showed that women in a math setting often experience something called stereotype threat - when aware of the existence of a negative gender stereotype, in this case "men are better at math than women," women worry that their performance will confirm the stereotype.

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When they worry about their performance, their actual performance drops.

The stereotype that men are better at math than women is so ingrained in our culture that women feel stereotype threat - and as a result, perform more poorly in math - just from watching a man take a dominant role in a math study group.

How the scientists figured this out.

The study included 133 women and 101 men in college. Each participant watched a short scripted video with actors who were forming a study group - either a general study group or a math specific study group. Each video either had a dominant man, a dominant woman, or the interaction was neutral with no member of the group taking on a dominant role.

In each video the dominant actor had a more relaxed posture, used more expressive gestures, and gave commands like "you need to ..." to establish their authority.

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After watching the video, the participants got 20 minutes to solve 30 GRE-level math problems. The women in the study who watched the male-dominant math video before answering the questions performed much worse than the women who watched the other videos (including the male-dominated general study group).

You can see the impact of the videos - either in a math-specific study group or a general study group - on the women's math performance in the graph below:

Social Psychological and Personality Science/ Van Loo, Rydell

The researchers didn't see a significant drop in performance in math after the women watched a general study group video (even when a man took control of that group). That means it wasn't the subject of the study group that threatened them, but specifically a man taking control of the math group.

The men's math scores did not show any significant difference based on which video they watched.

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After answering the math questions, the participants were asked how much they agreed with the statement: "I worry that my ability to perform well on math tests is affected by my gender."

Again, you can see how much impact the male-dominant video had on the answers to this question in the graph below. The threat-based concern measurement on the y-axis shows how much the female participants agreed that gender affects math performance.

Social Psychological and Personality Science/ Van Loo, Rydell

The researchers conclude that "encouraging equality between men and women in math settings should protect other women from stereotype threat." They hope that encouraging more equal interactions between men and women, both in and out of the classroom, will help more women successfully enter STEM fields.

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