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Gender differences in attitudes towards science: comparison of middle school students in England, Singapore and USA using complete TIMSS 2011 data
Emily Oon,Pey Tee1; Subramaniam,R.2
2023-02-17
Source PublicationResearch in Science and Technological Education
ISSN0263-5143
Abstract

Background

There are relatively few studies in the literature on attitudes towards science that focus on cross-national comparisons and, more importantly, on gender differences in this regard.

Purpose

To explore attitudes towards science with respect to gender for three developed countries, each from a different continent – England, Singapore, and USA.

Sample

The entire TIMSS 2011 data set for England, Singapore and USA was used (N = 20,246)

Design and methods

The survey on attitudes towards science used in TIMSS 2011 formed the basis for this study. Rasch analysis was used to treat the survey data rather than classical test analysis,

Results

When data for the three countries are aggregated together, overall, males showed more favorable attitudes towards science as compared to females. There are gender differences for most of the items in the attitudes scale, not only between genders in a country but also across countries as well, and the differences are statistically significant for a number of items. Though Singapore topped in science achievement, their students’ confidence in science, irrespective of gender, is low compared to those in England and USA. Also, students from the USA, especially males, disagreed more on the value of studying science as compared to the other two countries.

Conclusion

Large-scale international assessment data provide not only robust sample sizes but also more representative data which can be meaningfully analyzed. This has shed some useful light on not only overall gender differences in the samples but also on a country-wide and cross-national basis. Even though the three counties selected for the study are economically developed, there are still gender differences on attitudes towards science. A few factors can possibly help to explain the differences on a cross-national basis – for example, educational ecosystem, relative levels of economic development and culture.

KeywordAttitudes Towards Science Gender Differences Timss 2011 Rasch Analysis
DOI10.1080/02635143.2023.2177267
URLView the original
Indexed BySSCI
Language英語English
WOS Research AreaEducation & Educational Research
WOS SubjectEducation & Educational Research
WOS IDWOS:000937815100001
Scopus ID2-s2.0-85148527011
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Citation statistics
Document TypeJournal article
CollectionFaculty of Education
Corresponding AuthorSubramaniam,R.
Affiliation1.Faculty of Education, University of Macau, Macao
2.National Institute of Education, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore
First Author AffilicationFaculty of Education
Recommended Citation
GB/T 7714
Emily Oon,Pey Tee,Subramaniam,R.. Gender differences in attitudes towards science: comparison of middle school students in England, Singapore and USA using complete TIMSS 2011 data[J]. Research in Science and Technological Education, 2023.
APA Emily Oon,Pey Tee., & Subramaniam,R. (2023). Gender differences in attitudes towards science: comparison of middle school students in England, Singapore and USA using complete TIMSS 2011 data. Research in Science and Technological Education.
MLA Emily Oon,Pey Tee,et al."Gender differences in attitudes towards science: comparison of middle school students in England, Singapore and USA using complete TIMSS 2011 data".Research in Science and Technological Education (2023).
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