"Unfortunately, too many girls have yet to get that message" says Rachel Crowell.
In 2015 and 2016, a U.S. team won the high school Olympics of math. Yet something was missing from both six-member teams: girls.
This isn’t an unusual occurrence at the International Mathematical Olympiad (IMO). But it is a problem.
Girls
are under-represented at math competitions, generally. For instance,
108,137 middle-school students took part in the 2016 AMC 8. This
American Mathematics Competition (AMC) is for eighth-grade and younger
students. Girls represented fewer than half — only about 44 percent of
the contestants. And that number actually is pretty high for such
events. For instance, the American Invitation Mathematics Exam is
another AMC program. Participation in it is by invitation only. Qualifying
high-school students must have received a top score on the AMC 10 or
the AMC 12. Of the 3,223 students who took part on the main event date,
this year, just 443 were girls. That comes to roughly 14 in every 100
participants.
These numbers are striking because girls can be just
as good at math as boys are. But somehow, many girls pick up the idea
that math isn’t for them. And not only do they enter competitions less
often than boys do, but they also are less likely to pursue math-related
careers. In fact, just one in every four U.S. workers in math and
computer-science fields is a woman.
Outdated stereotypes may be part of the problem.
Stereotypes
are beliefs about entire groups of people that are based more on
feelings than facts. One persistent stereotype is that girls aren’t good
at math. Stereotypes can be very harmful. They can damage a person’s
self-image and also limit the opportunities they receive. This may occur
despite an individual’s abilities, skills and potential.
When it
comes to girls and women being under-represented in math, “the trouble
is a cultural one. It’s a perception thing,” says Randall Cone. He is a
mathematician and computer scientist at Salisbury University in
Maryland. This perception affects how many — or how few — women study
advanced math and find jobs in fields that rely on math skills.
But
the problem is more complex that just stereotypes. In 2009, two
researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Cambridge
investigated why fewer girls than boys rise to the top levels of math
competitions. They looked at data from AMC events. Hoping to better
understand this gender gap, they focused on high-achievers.
A
gender gap in math indeed exists around the world, they found. However,
they were not ready to say for sure why this might be. In fact, the
problem is likely due to many things. But peer pressure may play a role.
It might dissuade girls from joining math clubs or pursuing other
activities that could help them become math superstars.
Read more...
Source: Science News for Students