The
2010 report entitled, Why
So Few? Women in Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics, by the
American Association of University Women (AAUW),
describes how girls’ and women’s
performance and participation in STEM fields have changed over time. Women have
made tremendous progress in education and the workplace during the past 50
years, including progress in scientific and engineering fields.
Although, historically, boys outperformed
girls in math and science, the gender gap has narrowed over time, and today
girls are doing as well as boys in math in school by most measures. For
example, in high school, girls’ average performance and participation in math
and science has improved over time and, in some cases, has surpassed that of
boys.
The graph above shows the average number of
high school credits earned in math and science combined, by gender, between
1990 and 2005 (the most recent year for which data were available). Girls are
in green and boys are in purple. Over time all students, both boys and girls,
are taking more math and science credits - both lines are going up - and girls
now earn more credits in math and science than boys do.
What math and science courses are high school
students taking? The graph above shows the percentage of high school graduates
who took selected math and science courses, by gender, in 2005. High school
girls are more likely to take biology, chemistry, and pre-calculus compared with
boys; however, girls are less likely to take physics compared with boys. Although
girls are also slightly less likely to take calculus and engineering courses in
high school compared with boys, the gender difference is most likely not
statistically significant.
Note: much of this text is from the AAUW ppt describing highlights of the Why So Few? report.
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