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New Study Concludes Math Gender Gap Is Cultural, Not Biological

New submitter germansausage writes "A new study was published today in Notices of the American Mathematical Society, looking at data from 86 countries, to test the 'greater male variability hypothesis' as the primary reason for the scarcity of outstanding women mathematicians. It concludes that cultural and not biological factors are the chief causes (PDF) of the gap in math skills between men and women."

51 of 472 comments (clear)

  1. Just ask a Scotsman... by SJHillman · · Score: 5, Funny

    Wearing skirts is also cultural, not biological

    1. Re:Just ask a Scotsman... by oPless · · Score: 4, Informative

      Ask any Scot.

      A Kilt is NOT a skirt.

      The best explanation I've found online is the marked answer here:
      http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20111013145703AAO6AEd

      A kilt is a made to measure garment that is specifically designed to fit a man's anatomy, and as such it is usually very unflattering to a woman's figure.

      A kilt has eight yards of material, most of which is taken up in the pleats, there are very few women who would want to carry so much weight in a skirt.

      A kilt fastens on the right hand side, whereas a woman's skirt usually closes on the left.

      Traditionally kilts may only be worn by men and boys, but nowadays many women like to wear tartan skirts, which are sometimes called kilted skirts.

      The only women I know of who wear traditional kilts, are those who play in a pipe band, they also wear the kilt so as to keep the entire band uniform.

      Many Scots especially the traditionalists, will take great offense if you call their kilt a skirt, as they see the kilt as their national dress, as indeed it is, and they are rightly very proud of it.

    2. Re:Just ask a Scotsman... by _0xd0ad · · Score: 5, Funny

      A Kilt is No True Skirt

      FTFY.

    3. Re:Just ask a Scotsman... by Anne_Nonymous · · Score: 5, Funny

      So the sheep won't hear the zipper.

    4. Re:Just ask a Scotsman... by SJHillman · · Score: 5, Funny

      Scots can wear their national dress, but I'll stick to my national pants and national shirt

    5. Re:Just ask a Scotsman... by Libertarian001 · · Score: 5, Funny

      So, my friend Adam and I are standing in line at the check-out counter. Adam likes to wear kilts. The little girl in front of us points at him and says to her mother, "Look, Mommy! That man is wearing a dress!" The lady responded to her daughter, "No, Sweetie, he's wearing a kilt."

      "Mommy...What's a kilt?"

      "It's a dress for men."

    6. Re:Just ask a Scotsman... by Belial6 · · Score: 5, Funny

      All you have done is described the kind of skirt that a kilt is.

    7. Re:Just ask a Scotsman... by jandrese · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I don't know. Saying it isn't a skirt because it has 8+ yards of material seems pretty weak to me. Are hoop skirts not skirts?

      Also saying that it's not a skirt because women don't wear them, except when they do...

      From what I can tell they're not "skirts" because the Scots don't want them to be called skirts.

      --

      I read the internet for the articles.
    8. Re:Just ask a Scotsman... by Rogerborg · · Score: 4, Funny

      Ask any Scot.

      Hello.

      Many Scots [...] will take great offense

      Many short men with a deeply ingrained inferiority complex will take great offence at a lot of things, but the way to deal with that is to pat them on the head and say "Calm down, little fellow, it's a perfectly fetching skirt and very flattering with your figure" not to take their angry rantings seriously. It just encourages them.

      --
      If you were blocking sigs, you wouldn't have to read this.
    9. Re:Just ask a Scotsman... by Aighearach · · Score: 5, Interesting

      While it is true that many Scots take offense when a kilt is called a skirt, it is not due to a belief that a kilt is not actually a skirt. Clearly as a technical matter a kilt is a type of skirt.

      The reason it is offensive is that usually anybody calling a kilt a skirt is not in a technical discussion about types of garment, and is instead intending to be insulting. And if you intend to be insulting to a Scot, he may or may not decide to offer your nose a grand insult.

      And I am somewhat of a traditionalist, I did grow up in a highland dance band.

      Also "traditionally" a kilt was a single piece garment that covered the whole body, and went further down the leg than the modern "short kilt" which was introduced in the 1700s. If you wore a modern kilt 500 years ago, they probably would also have called it a skirt. ;)

    10. Re:Just ask a Scotsman... by Anne_Nonymous · · Score: 5, Funny

      >> "Mommy...What's a kilt?"

      It's what you'll be if you keep making fun of his dress.

    11. Re:Just ask a Scotsman... by Libertarian001 · · Score: 4, Funny

      Yeah, yeah, don't respond to my own...

      So we lived in Reno at the time. Nice, gambling town. Lots of casinos. They all have, I don't know what they're called, hot air vents/grating in front of the doors, blowing upwards. So Adam and I walking into the casino (about an hour after the check-out-encounter), and he's still wearing his kilt, and he decides that *now* is the time to do his Marilyn Monroe impression. He's standing there, with hair longer than that of most women, and a beard, as the vents blow his kilt up.

      Everyone thought it was pretty funny and the security lady decided to get in on the act. She walks up and asks, "Sir, do you know what real men wear under their kilts?" And Adam says, "Nothing, but I'm wearing *this*!" and pulls up his kilt to show off his tie-dye boxers.

    12. Re:Just ask a Scotsman... by xaxa · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Actually, I'm a reasonable approximation of a Scotsman by heritage, although 3rd generation in Canada.

      Do any North Americans claim to be English? Some Americans are very quick to tell me where their great-great-great grandfather was born, if it was Scotland, Ireland, Norway, Germany, ... but no one has ever told me they're "English by heritage".

      I'm curious, as I am English (though I usually describe myself as British).

      I also find the whole "heritage" thing weird -- are you not Canadian? I assume your Scottish ancestor(s) left Scotland to find a better life.

    13. Re:Just ask a Scotsman... by khallow · · Score: 3, Funny

      From what I can tell they're not "skirts" because the Scots don't want them to be called skirts.

      This is all context dependent. If the Scot is also carrying something pretty dangerous, say a claymore or bagpipes, then the kilt is NOT a skirt. If the Scot is carrying only harmless things such as cell phones or twinkies, then it's a skirt.

  2. Still readying the artical but... by alexander_686 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I have seen an interesting counter argument to this.

    It states that females are biologically equal to males in maths abilities, but superior to men in language ability. It this is true, men would tend to crowd into math heavy fields (Since they have a natural advantage there) while females would be more widely spread out.

    Which is not exactly true. In rich worlds 80% of woman pile into 10 of the 120 job categories (Medicine, teaching, public service) while men are more evenly spread out.

    1. Re:Still readying the artical but... by spidercoz · · Score: 4, Insightful

      In rich worlds 80% of woman pile into 10 of the 120 job categories (Medicine, teaching, public service) while men are more evenly spread out.

      Which is also cultural.

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - Evelyn Beatrice Hall, re Voltaire
    2. Re:Still readying the artical but... by cptnapalm · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I remember seeing a comparison between regular and home schooling with regards to boys and girls reading ability. The regular schooling had the reading gap, but the home schooled kids did not have a gap. This was a few years ago and I don't remember particulars, unfortunately.

    3. Re:Still readying the artical but... by mdarksbane · · Score: 5, Interesting

      I find it interesting how many people are apparently completely willing to accept that women's superiority in language ability is biological.

    4. Re:Still readying the artical but... by Jah-Wren+Ryel · · Score: 5, Funny

      I find it interesting how many people are apparently completely willing to accept that women's superiority in language ability is biological.

      Nah. It's only better because they get lots more practice.

      --
      When information is power, privacy is freedom.
    5. Re:Still readying the artical but... by ackthpt · · Score: 5, Insightful

      In rich worlds 80% of woman pile into 10 of the 120 job categories (Medicine, teaching, public service) while men are more evenly spread out.

      Which is also cultural.

      Traditional roles take a while to break down. About 100 years ago it was scandalous to even consider a woman going through medical school or writing a scientific thesis. Even in the 1950's the prevailing view among Sci-Fi audience was women were incapable of writing Science Fiction, so we had writers like "James Tiptree, Jr." Women were directed towards nurturing roles, so they could be good mothers when they married and retired from their profession.

      Not quite the same today. I've worked with DBAs, Business Analysts and coders who are female. Highly competent professionals for the most part. Glad they didn't settle for less.

      --

      A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
    6. Re:Still readying the artical but... by AmiMoJo · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I find it interesting how many people are apparently completely willing to accept that women's superiority in language ability is biological.

      Men and women are not biologically the same, obviously. There is far more too it than what is between your legs though. Men produce more hormones that encourage competitiveness, women produce more that encourage nurturing. This is not unsurprising since natural selection favours men who have as many partners as possible and can protect them from harm, and women who are able to form strong relationships with strong men and their offspring.

      A lot of people seem to think that feminism is arguing that men and women are the same, but that is wrong. Feminism merely argues that men and women are of equal worth, that they both have equally valuable roles on society. The fact that historically the role of women and home makers and mothers has been seen as less important that earning a wage is the cultural bias, not the idea that men and women are different which is a simple fact.

      To give an example there was a programme on the radio about female surgeons finding it hard to get into the field. One of the major problems was that they were expected to be just like the male surgeons, available at all hours and largely free of other commitments. Since it takes a long time to become a surgeon and reproduction becomes increasingly difficult as women age they were finding that having a family life and a lack of day-care facilities as hospitals was a problem. We should value female surgeons equally and make an effort to support their needs which are different to male surgeon's, rather than expect them to be just like men.

      Of course gender is not a clear cut thing and there are men who excel in things that women have some natural tendency to be better at and vice versa, but I don't think maths is one of them.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    7. Re:Still readying the artical but... by nine-times · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Wait a couple of years. There will be another study suggesting that it's biological again. Of course, some of the problem here lies in us starting with the assumption that these things are either nature *or* nurture, instead of entertaining the possibility that it's a complex mix of various factors that are both biological and cultural.

    8. Re:Still readying the artical but... by Rary · · Score: 4, Informative

      Support their needs by allowing them to not work as many hours and be available as much? Sure, but they will get paid less, which is also another equality complaint of women. Expecting women surgeons to get paid the same, have the same employment success, but not work as much is completely unfair.

      And entirely a strawman. The wage disparity exists between men and women doing the same work, and that is where the complaint exists.

      --

      "You cannot simultaneously prevent and prepare for war." -- Albert Einstein

    9. Re:Still readying the artical but... by realityimpaired · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Unfortunately, it's not really possible to say categorically what feminism is about, without considering the different generations of feminism.... consider:

      First gen: suffragettes. These were the women (and men) fighting to have women recognized as people under the law, and having all of the rights/privileges as men (land ownership, the vote, etc.)
      Second gen: bra burners. These were the women (and men) fighting to have equal opportunities in the work place. To escape the oppression imposed by the status quo which said "women don't go into sciences", or which said that it was perfectly acceptable to pay a woman half as much to do the same job, because she would have a husband who could support her.
      Third gen: femi-nazis. The old boys' club (status quo) fought back against the Second Gen feminists in the 70's and early 80's, which gave rise to the Third Gen feminists. These are the women who are convinced that if you have a Y chromosome you're defective by definition. Men suck, and women rule. And I described it as "if you have a Y chromosome" on purpose, because these women are usually the ones who refuse to accept transsexuals as their identified gender. These are also the ones who started spelling it "womyn" so that it doesn't have the word "man" in it, and the ones who think that a man who holds a door for a woman is a misogynist, rather than just being polite.
      Fourth gen: current/modern feminism. This is all about saying that yes, women are capable of doing everything that men are (socially, not biologically for obvious reasons), yes men, can do everything that women can. But she doesn't *have* to if she doesn't want to. The current generation is all about having the choice to do whatever you want in life.

      Those would be the major generations of feminism in the 20th century. As always, there's crossover, and no clear definition of when they begin/end. I'm sure we all know somebody who fits into the third gen today, and I'm sure we all know somebody who was more fourth gen in their thinking even in the 60's.

      And yes, I am female. I am also a feminist. I think that there's an awful lot of people at Slashdot who are feminists even if they don't realize it, or attach the name to it. And in case it wasn't obvious, I consider myself in the fourth generation of feminism, in that I am hugely appreciative of the work that those before me have done, and I feel that it's extremely important to keep that fight up, but I also believe it's extremely important to recognize that it's about having the choice, and that if another woman chooses to leave the workforce, become a housewife, and raise a family, that is her choice to make, and she is not part of the problem, she's exercising exactly the right that I fight for, also my mother and my grandmother before me. And if a guy holds a door for me, I thank him. And if it's a double door, I'll hold the next one for him. :)

  3. Math Study by AshtangiMan · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I worked on a grant looking at math skills and correlating with language, gender, age, and other factors amongst three population groups (white, hispanic, and navaho). We followed a group of third graders through the fifth grade, and a group of sixth graders through the eighth grade. Very interesting stuff, and at least in my corner of the US it was very obvious that as students moved on in school they liked math less, felt it had less value, and also performed worse on the tests. In the third grade group almost everyone believed that math was important, that they would use it in their jobs, and stated that they liked math. By the eighth grade only a few still felt this way, and of those almost all were boys. I was the programmer, created the test instruments, database for the results, etc, so I never saw the entire set of results, but heard that the young cohort pretty much proved that there was very little gender or cultural bias against math aside from poverty (which interestingly seemed to indicate a dislike of it).

  4. Re:Math is hard by The+Archon+V2.0 · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Boy's toys: Square jaws and guns.

    Girl's toys: Plastic tits and the phrase "Math class is tough!"

    I still haven't figured out whether dysfunctional society caused the toys or dysfunctional toys caused the society, though.

  5. While... by ackthpt · · Score: 3, Funny

    Men may multiply...

    Women divide into two, or more.

    --

    A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
  6. Trust the Study by geoffrobinson · · Score: 5, Funny

    It was done by a man and involves lots of math.

    --
    Except for ending slavery, the Nazis, communism, & securing American independence, war has never solved anything.
    1. Re:Trust the Study by NoSleepDemon · · Score: 4, Funny

      Yes credit where credit's due - she probably cooked him some delicious meals!

  7. And what might influence culture? by r00t · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Biology influences culture. DNA makes our brains, with well-proven gender differences, and our brains lead to our culture. Our culture is created directly by our brains, and also by the interaction with other people (brains).

    1. Re:And what might influence culture? by sonicmerlin · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Pretty much. Jewish people started out with massive poverty and discrimination, but worked their way to the top of the finance chain. Other minorities just become mired in a "self-defeating culture" that they create for themselves.

      Also this study contradicts every other study that's ever been done on this topic. It will need to be peer reviewed.

    2. Re:And what might influence culture? by phantomfive · · Score: 3, Informative

      Do you really think the scientist involved in the study didn't think of that? (hint: read number 43 on their citation list). Come on.

      Briefly, biology is what comes from your genetics. It's a product of your mother and father.
      Culture is a worldview that you pick up from the people you hang around.

      In 16th century France, brutal monarchy was perfectly acceptable. In 21st century France, democracy is the worldview, and no one would accept an absolute king. The genetics didn't change much but the culture changed.

      More to the point, they have two reasons to believe that culture is what is making the difference. First, as culture has changed in the US, more women are being drawn towards mathematics. Second, in some places that are culturally different than the US, women even do better than men at math and science.

      Please read the study next time, you'll be informed which will keep you from making idiotic comments.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
  8. Lets do some math in my room by vivek7006 · · Score: 5, Funny

    What do you say we go back to my room and do some math: add you and me, subtract our clothes, divide your legs, and multiply.

  9. Re:Duh by ackthpt · · Score: 3, Insightful

    You would have thought insight just from trans-people's experiences would have been enough to make this blatantly obvious.
    I guess they're just too weird to consider.

    Let's consider this .. the culture of acquiescence. Someone says, "Math is hard." Others who are struggling with math hear that statement and accept the reason they struggle is because math is hard, therefore failure (or accepting less than the best one can do) is allowable. So people sell themselves short, buying into the cultural belief that math is hard and only super intelligent beings (or geeks) get it, and since they are neither they focus their energies elsewhere.

    Math isn't hard. It's easy. It's amazingly easy. What's hard is breaking through from simply memorising tons of details (which is rather difficult) to comprehension. Once you comprehend and begin thinking in a mathematical view, it's another language and a rather simple one at that (try learning French, with all those blasted dialects!)

    --

    A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
  10. One day... by spidercoz · · Score: 3, Insightful

    When I have kids of my own, I'm raising them to be math and science nerds like the old man, especially any daughters.

    --
    "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - Evelyn Beatrice Hall, re Voltaire
    1. Re:One day... by vlm · · Score: 4, Insightful

      When I have kids of my own, I'm raising them to be math and science nerds like the old man, especially any daughters.

      My experience with this is you can control which opportunities they get, but they decide what they actually like. Don't turn in the math equivalent of the screaming sports parent.

      --
      "Science flies us to the moon. Religion flies us into buildings." - Victor Stenger
  11. Re: The way things are supposed to be. by cosm · · Score: 5, Funny

    My Christian Comrades,

    The Lord tells us that wives should submit to their husbands, and He granted men their greater ability to do math and science to help enforce this view. All of the neo-Nazi bra-burning feminists who wish to bridge this so-called "gap" are merely trying to undermine the Christian values of our nation. This is the way things are supposed to be, so there is no "gap."

    Sincerely, Jake

    My Fellow Mathematicians,

    The Calculus tells us that The Numbers should submit to their domains, and It granted mathematicians their greater ability to do math and science to help enforce this view. All of the neo-Nazi math-burning Luddites who wish to bridge this so-called "gap" are merely trying to undermine the Mathematical values of our scientific establishment. This is the way things are supposed to be, so there is no "gap.", other than the gaps between prime numbers.

    Sincerely, The Troll Feeder

    PS: I was going to find something witty about the bible calling pi = 3, but then I learned something new today :) http://www.purplemath.com/modules/bibleval.htm (cool stuff for math history geeks!)

    --
    'We are trying to prove ourselves wrong as quickly as possible, because only in that way can we find progress.' RPF
  12. The Foundations of this argument are absurd anyway by Xanny · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I mean, there is this big cultural panic that women don't go into STEM and everyone wonders why. They point out that they are force fed dolls, and shows about mothering, princesses and other assorted crud, where boys are fed high strength stuff like GI Joe and Bob the Builder.

    But that isnt the cause of the divide. The culture inside public schools is almost as immobile as governments, because the younger children adopt the values of the older ones to try to fit in, be cool, and seem more mature. The effect of peers on kids growing up has more profound effects than any specific media they are consuming - it is more a product of their behavior around one another than it is from what they watch on tv

    I dont have any sources off the top of my head, but from other discussions on this topic, the general consensus is a home schooled boy and girl completely cut off from peer influence have absolutely no real discernible preference away from math, that statistically if you introduce math in interesting and purposeful ways, both of them can like it, and develop interests in it. There is no genetic or hormonal effect prohibiting either from developing a fascination with any particular field. So of course it is cultural, but I believe it is in the in-culture of public schooling, must less the culture of society as a whole, that keeps this problem from being dealt with.

  13. Re:There are 10 kind of people by Dogbertius · · Score: 4, Informative

    2 != 3, so your statement is false. You should have said there are 11 kinds of people.

    You failed to understand the joke. Assuming the number X uses the lexical base of Y, with Y being represented in base "ten", then (X)_Y (ie: "X" in base "Y"), then, (X)_Y = (10)_3 = "three to the first power". Therefore, gmuslera's joke means "there are three kind of people, those that understand ternary .... ". You either thought he/she meant "binary", or you don't understand ternary. Your joke "there are 11 kinds of people" would technically be correct, if the original joke referred to binary rather than ternary.

  14. Re:Math is hard by chill · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The phrase you are looking for is â feedback loopâ.

    --
    Learning HOW to think is more important than learning WHAT to think.
  15. Coming from a woman, I say no shit, Sherlock by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This doesn't surprise me in the slightest. I've gone to many conferences for women in advanced mathematics and computer sciences and the number one thing I notice is how international they all are... even when they are supposedly for US women. I've said for years that the proof that there is no gender gap can be seen by looking at the mathematicians coming out of the former Soviet republics. Plenty of those mathematicians are women and they don't understand why so few American women enter the field.

    By contrast, growing up in the US, I remember the "advanced" math groups in elementary school being pretty evenly split across genders. The disparity started increasing in junior high and was readily apparent in high school... and it wasn't because the math got harder. Many of the girls who picked up algebra quicker than most of the boys in fifth grade were opting not to take AP Calculus because "it wasn't really necessary." By contrast, a lot of the guys in the calculus classes hadn't been in advanced math before, but were taking calculus because it was "required to get in to a good school." That's not a biological difference... it's cultural. We have to stop teaching our girls that it's okay to be bad at this stuff.

  16. Variance, Risk, Interest, Hours by aretae · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Background: 1. I'm a math wunderkind (college classes in elementary school). 2. I spent ~20 years teaching math and programming to all levels of students. I read most of the study, and as far as I've been able to tell... A. They don't seem to reject the null hypothesis (Male IQ stdev ~= 16.5, Female IQ stdev ~= 13)... B. They don't seem to address my major analysis, which is differing attitudes towards risk. The best female students in the class are always the ones who do EXACTLY what you tell them to, perfectly. The best male students in a class are the ones who don't do what you tell them to, but try other things, and succeed brilliantly. C. Option 3 for reasons for variance is interest. Anyone who's ever had a boy and a girl, tried to be gender neutral with them, and watched the boy chase trucks and guns, and the girl chase dolls...there are questions of focus. D. On average, 1 of 100 guys is willing to spend 100 hour weeks trying to win. Girls have higher sanity scores. 100 hour weeks attempting to do a single thing is nuts...40-50 hour weeks is more sane, especially if you care about other things (like kids, friends, etc). however, Hours spent on a topic is roughly equal to skill. And so the insane people are the best.

    1. Re:Variance, Risk, Interest, Hours by Ameryll · · Score: 3, Interesting
      "C. Option 3 for reasons for variance is interest. Anyone who's ever had a boy and a girl, tried to be gender neutral with them, and watched the boy chase trucks and guns, and the girl chase dolls...there are questions of focus."

      As a woman who worked in 3rd grade class rooms trying to teach children to program lego robots, the big fault with your statement is "ever had a boy *and* a girl." For some reason, that I don't entirely understand, put a box of legos in front of girls and boys and the boys will grab all the trucks and the girls will grab all the little people. Put the box in front of a group of *only* girls and their initial grab will still be for the little people, and then they will start to explore the rest.

      In my experience, girls will play with boy toys when there are no boys around, but they will not do so if there are boys around because the boys will get the boy toys first and the girls will get the girl toys first.

      *disclaimer: I grew up in a household of 3 girls where we had barbies and legos. And we played with the legos just as much as the barbies.

  17. Amazing, what statements you can get out of data by bradley13 · · Score: 5, Informative

    Just amazing, what statements you can make about such clear data. Many, many studies to date have shown that male and female abilities in mathematics are roughly the same. Nearly as many have shown support for a higher variance amongst males, meaning there are more stupid and more brilliant men. This has been (and is) used as the explanation for the predominance of men at the very top levels of STEM fields.

    So...this paper claims "greater male variability...[is] largely [an] artifact of a complex variety of sociocultural factors".

    Look at Figure 1.B. in the paper and read their discussion of it. With three only three exceptions - two of which are outliers for other reasons, all of their data supports the variability hypothesis. The same can be seen in Figure 1.C - with the same three exceptions, all of the variance ratios are above 1, with an average around 1.16.

    In the end, their data plainly supports the same conclusions drawn by all of the other studies. The sincere desire to reach a PC conclusion apparently blinds the authors to the plain meaning of their own data.

    --
    Enjoy life! This is not a dress rehearsal.
  18. "gap due to inequity" vs "gender-stratified" ? by bcrowell · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The article lists five hypotheses:

    • 1 greater male variability
    • 2 gender-stratified
    • 3 gap due to inequity
    • 4 Muslim culture
    • 5 single-gender classroom

    They claim that all but #2 are ruled out by their data. What I can't figure out is the distinction between 2 and 3. 3 is that the gap is "due to differences in opportunities available to males versus females." 2 is defined in their reference [2] http://www.jstor.org/pss/2112795 as being about access to jobs and higher education. I don't understand the distinction.

    I got interested in this stuff recently because I teach physics, and our statistics showed that women had a lower success rate in our classes than men. This was kind of worrisome, since women generally do better than men in college, and women do better than men at our school in math, and in the other sciences besides physics. Turned out that if we controlled for what class they were taking, the effect vanished. Lots of women were taking the physics class for biology majors, which has a low success rate. Almost no women take the physics class fo engineering majors, which has a higher success rate. In the class for biology majors, women actually did better than men. It impressed me with how subtle this kind of thing can be.

  19. Re: The way things are supposed to be. by Bucky24 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Oh please tell me you aren't serious. That sexist "wives should submit to their husbands" is a bullshit view fostered during a time when a male-dominated society was prevalent. Christianity needs to grow up (and yes I say that as a Christian myself) and learn to live in this century. These views that so many of the faith hold from centuries ago are the main reason that we are so hated now in the world. Do you want that? I don't.

    --
    All the world's a CPU, and all the men and women merely AI agents
  20. Re:The Foundations of this argument are absurd any by cptdondo · · Score: 5, Insightful

    There's some of that, and then there's the gross stereotyping on TV. The best thing that parents can do is keep their kids away from kids' shows (or any shows) on TV. Think about it - dads are always portrayed as bumbling nincompoops, attractive girls are either bitchy or bubbleheads, smart kids are always pencil necked geeks, and the cool people are the stupid rebels without a clue.

    No wonder our kids adopt those attitudes. You want to be attractive to boys? Be a bubblehead. Want to be cool? Ditch school. GAH!

  21. Amazing, how you can cite figures and ignore text by Theaetetus · · Score: 3, Informative

    Just amazing, what statements you can make about such clear data. Many, many studies to date have shown that male and female abilities in mathematics are roughly the same. Nearly as many have shown support for a higher variance amongst males, meaning there are more stupid and more brilliant men. This has been (and is) used as the explanation for the predominance of men at the very top levels of STEM fields.

    So...this paper claims "greater male variability...[is] largely [an] artifact of a complex variety of sociocultural factors".

    Look at Figure 1.B. in the paper and read their discussion of it. With three only three exceptions - two of which are outliers for other reasons, all of their data supports the variability hypothesis. The same can be seen in Figure 1.C - with the same three exceptions, all of the variance ratios are above 1, with an average around 1.16.

    In the end, their data plainly supports the same conclusions drawn by all of the other studies. The sincere desire to reach a PC conclusion apparently blinds the authors to the plain meaning of their own data.

    If you bothered reading the text rather than just looking at the pretty pictures, you'd find that they were not disputing that variance exists, but that it's innate. Read the second sentence of that section:

    If true, the variance ratios (VRs) for all countries should be greater than unity and similar in value.

    But they're not:

    In fact, the VRs calculated using the 2007 TIMSS eighth-grade data set studied in detail here varied widely among countries, ranging all the way from 0.91 to 1.52 (Figure 1A).

    Variances for girls and boys also varied widely throughout a threefold range (Figure 1B). Countries with small variances typically had VRs within 0.2 of unity. Most of the countries with large VRs were ones that also had unusually large boys’ variances.

    And you know what that means?

    Therefore, we conclude that both variance and VR in mathematics performance vary greatly among countries.

    And since the Y chromosome isn't different in each country, that indicates that it's not the Y chromosome causing those variances.

    In the end, your sincere desire to slam the article for disagreeing with your beliefs apparently blinds you to the plain meaning of the study.

  22. Re: The way things are supposed to be. by flyingsquid · · Score: 3, Insightful
    Think of all the recent examples of governments collapsing or suffering major revolts. The collapse of the dictatorship in Tunisia, the collapse of the Egyptian government, the Libyan uprising, the ongoing revolt in Syria, the ouster of Saddam Hussein, the Taliban government of Afghanistan, the collapse of the Soviet Union and the various Soviet satellite states. In every single case I can think of, the government was headed by men. And there are currently about 20 different countries with female heads of state- Ireland, Finland, Germany, Argentina, Brazil, Thailand, Liberia, India... hell, Iceland is run by a lesbian.

    In other words, it seems pretty clear that having a female head of state makes your country far less likely to undergo a revolution or to invite the invasion of a foreign power. Of course, this is one of those correlation does not equal causation things. It could be that women are less likely to do things like get involved in wars with other countries, or to run repressive regimes. It could also be that free, open, egalitarian societies are more stable, and more likely to elect women. I suspect it's probably a combination of the two. Personally, I happen to believe that there are profound biological differences in men and women that tend to be reflected in how they govern... but if there really is a difference in the sexes, there's a strong case to be made that the women should be the ones in power.

  23. But what about Tunisia? by turing_m · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The goal of this study, AFAICT, is to prove Summers wrong in the name of PC. The fact that they mention the Summers controversy in the first paragraph kind of gives that away. Summers was talking about why 'women may have been underrepresented "in tenured positions in science and engineering at top universities and research institutions"'.

    It's telling that the authors of this study chose to include data from 86 countries in order to prove their point. In fact, they choose to focus on countries like Tunisia and Bahrain to make their point. Why not the USA, where most of the people in the tenured positions are coming from? Because when they do, the best that they can come up with is a statement like this: "For example, Hyde and collaborators ([20], [25]) reported that girls have now reached parity with boys in mean mathematics performance in the United States, even in high school, where a significant gap in mean performance existed in the 1970s. Likewise, both Brody and Mills ([3]) and Wai et al. ([51]) noted a drop in nonrandom samples of students under thirteen years of age, from 13:1 in the 1970s down to approximately 3:1 by the 1990s in the ratio of U.S. boys to girls scoring above 700 on the quantitative section of the college-entrance SAT examination."

    3 to 1 is still huge, and they are trying to make the case that this result might keep going until it is 1:1 like the mean result already nearly is. In fact, that the result of boys:girls in SAT score above 700 (a measure of variance) is still 3 to 1 while there is gender equality in the mean result is an indication that probably 3 to 1 is the most female favorable result that they are going to get. Because the SAT is a proxy IQ test, this is basically saying that while the mean is equal there are 3 times as many men as women in the IQ stratum from which the people who are gifted enough to enter tenured positions in science and engineering at top universities and research institutions can be drawn from.

    But let's ignore that and focus on Tunisia and Bahrain, shall we?

    --
    If I have seen further it is by stealing the Intellectual Property of giants.
  24. Re:Math is hard by stevelinton · · Score: 5, Informative

    As for biological factors, It seems to me the distribution curve for men is flatter than for women in most things. You get more insane/evil/retarded men than women. You also get more "ultra genius" men than women.

    This is one of the hypotheses explored in the study. They find no support for it.