Gender stereotypes in the family
Gender stereotypes in the family
We study whether and why parents have gender-stereotyped beliefs when they assess their child's skills. Exploiting systematic differences in parental beliefs about a child's skills and blindly graded standardized test scores, we find that parents overestimate boys' skills more so than girls' in mathematics (a male-stereotyped subject), whereas there are no gender differences for reading. Consistent with an information friction hypothesis, we find that the parental gender bias disappears for parents who are interviewed after receiving information on their child's test scores. We further show that the parental gender bias in detriment of girls contributes to explain the widening of the gender gap in mathematical skills later in childhood, supporting the hypothesis that exposure to gender biases negatively influence girls' ability to achieve their full potential.
IZA - Institute of Labor Economics
Nicoletti, Cheti
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Sevilla, Almudena
29b75c95-3e2b-4891-97fb-f9e9c9e46ef3
Tonei, Valentina
0a1335c9-9eb9-433c-82c1-5dac13ce71f7
December 2022
Nicoletti, Cheti
2ba1d079-0799-45ec-9f37-6af8166e0056
Sevilla, Almudena
29b75c95-3e2b-4891-97fb-f9e9c9e46ef3
Tonei, Valentina
0a1335c9-9eb9-433c-82c1-5dac13ce71f7
Nicoletti, Cheti, Sevilla, Almudena and Tonei, Valentina
(2022)
Gender stereotypes in the family
(Discussion Paper Series, 15773)
IZA - Institute of Labor Economics
40pp.
Record type:
Monograph
(Working Paper)
Abstract
We study whether and why parents have gender-stereotyped beliefs when they assess their child's skills. Exploiting systematic differences in parental beliefs about a child's skills and blindly graded standardized test scores, we find that parents overestimate boys' skills more so than girls' in mathematics (a male-stereotyped subject), whereas there are no gender differences for reading. Consistent with an information friction hypothesis, we find that the parental gender bias disappears for parents who are interviewed after receiving information on their child's test scores. We further show that the parental gender bias in detriment of girls contributes to explain the widening of the gender gap in mathematical skills later in childhood, supporting the hypothesis that exposure to gender biases negatively influence girls' ability to achieve their full potential.
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dp15773
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Published date: December 2022
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 494159
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/494159
ISSN: 2365-9793
PURE UUID: f2664820-e929-4af4-80a2-030d78cf8483
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Date deposited: 25 Sep 2024 16:49
Last modified: 01 Oct 2024 02:01
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Contributors
Author:
Cheti Nicoletti
Author:
Almudena Sevilla
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