| Literature DB >> 26863320 |
Daniel Z Grunspan1, Sarah L Eddy2, Sara E Brownell3, Benjamin L Wiggins4, Alison J Crowe4, Steven M Goodreau1.
Abstract
Women who start college in one of the natural or physical sciences leave in greater proportions than their male peers. The reasons for this difference are complex, and one possible contributing factor is the social environment women experience in the classroom. Using social network analysis, we explore how gender influences the confidence that college-level biology students have in each other's mastery of biology. Results reveal that males are more likely than females to be named by peers as being knowledgeable about the course content. This effect increases as the term progresses, and persists even after controlling for class performance and outspokenness. The bias in nominations is specifically due to males over-nominating their male peers relative to their performance. The over-nomination of male peers is commensurate with an overestimation of male grades by 0.57 points on a 4 point grade scale, indicating a strong male bias among males when assessing their classmates. Females, in contrast, nominated equitably based on student performance rather than gender, suggesting they lacked gender biases in filling out these surveys. These trends persist across eleven surveys taken in three different iterations of the same Biology course. In every class, the most renowned students are always male. This favoring of males by peers could influence student self-confidence, and thus persistence in this STEM discipline.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26863320 PMCID: PMC4749286 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0148405
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Student demographics from all three classes.
Classes are majority female in all three cases. Males performed slightly better than females in each class, and also tended to be more outspoken. Numerical counts are accompanied by total percentage in the class in parentheses. Means are accompanied by standard deviations in parentheses.
| Class A | Class B | Class C | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total students | 110 (56%) | 86 (44%) | 431 (55.4%) | 328 (44.6%) | 444 (58.4%) | 316 (41.6%) |
| Mean class grade (out of 4.0) | 2.68 (1.01) | 2.93 (0.82) | 2.74 (0.83) | 2.86 (0.84) | 2.75 (0.82) | 2.89 (0.76) |
| Number of students listed as outspoken | 16 (14.5%) | 16 (16.3%) | 64 (14.8%) | 52 (15.8%) | 98 (22.1%) | 95 (30.1%) |
| Mean number nominations at S1 | - | - | 1.14 (1.50) | 1.20 (1.73) | 1.19 (1.52) | 1.13 (1.52) |
| Mean number nominations at S2 | 1.05 (1.39) | 1.60 (2.81) | 0.98 (1.45) | 1.16 (2.25) | 1.01 (1.41) | 1.08 (1.58) |
| Mean number nominations at S3 | 1.06 (1.55) | 1.69 (2.95) | 1.22 (1.55) | 1.48 (2.44) | 1.02 (1.43) | 1.17 (1.78) |
| Mean number nominations at S4 | - | - | 1.12 (1.64) | 1.55 (3.63) | 1.23 (1.60) | 1.44 (1.92) |
| Mean number nominations at S5 | - | - | - | - | 1.21 (1.55) | 1.36 (1.87) |
Fig 1Unequal distribution of peer perception of mastery of content among genders grows over the term.
Sociographs at the beginning of course (S1) and after exam 3 (S4) in class B. Male students are represented by green circles and females by orange circles. The size of nodes correlates with how many nominations each student received. Arrows show direction from the nominator to the nominee.
Coefficients from exponential random graph models from all 11 networks across all three courses, demonstrating that female bias towards nominating other females is not significant in any survey, while male bias towards nominating males is significant in all 11 surveys.
Each column represents coefficients from a different survey (S): S1 surveys were taken the first week, S2 after the first exam, S3 after the second exam, and so on. Coefficients represent the influence on the log-odds of a nomination for each predictor; each is formally defined in the Methods section. Bolded coefficients indicate significance at α of 0.05. Positive coefficients indicate that ties are more likely to occur, while negative coefficients indicate that ties are less likely to occur. Values in parentheses represent 95% confidence intervals.
| Coefficient name | Course A | Course B | Course C | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| S2 | S3 | S1 | S2 | S3 | S4 | S1 | S2 | S3 | S4 | S5 | |
| Intercept | |||||||||||
| Mutuality | |||||||||||
| Grade of nominee | |||||||||||
| Outspokenness of nominee | 0.02 (-0.11, 0.15) | ||||||||||
| Homophily on lab section | |||||||||||
| 0-indegree | |||||||||||
| Female nominator | 0.16 (-0.05, 0.37) | ||||||||||
| Female-female bias | -0.04 (-0.33, 0.25) | -0.21 (-0.49, 0.07) | 0.08 (-0.06, 0.22) | 0.01 (-0.15, 0.18) | -0.04 (-0.20, 0.11) | -0.11 (-0.26, 0.03) | 0.14 (-0.04, 0.32) | 0.12 (-0.05, 0.29) | 0.09 (-0.07, 0.26) | 0.11 (-0.04, 0.26) | 0.15 (0.00, 0.31) |
| Male-male bias | |||||||||||
Cell entry = Point estimate (95% CI); S = survey number; Bold = significant (p < 0.05).
Note: for Course C Survey S5, the lower bound of the confidence interval is positive for female nominator and negative for female-female bias, although both round to 0 with only two decimal places.
Fig 2Males over-nominate males; females are closer to equitable in their nominations.
Model based predictions for a hypothetical class comprising 50% males and 50% females. To isolate the effect of gender bias this class was also modeled as having an equal grade distribution and level of outspokenness across genders. We plot the results from 100 simulations for each of the models; the main bars represent the mean, and the whiskers reflect the range in which the central 95% of the simulations fall. Even with equal performance and outspokenness in this hypothetical class across all three model predictions, the longitudinal increase in bias of male students to nominate males remains. Female students also demonstrate a pattern of moving from female to male nominations over the course of each class.
Fig 3The most renowned students in each class tend to be male.
Students with the five highest numbers of nominations are depicted for each class. The numbers above each student represent how many nominations that student received, while the numbers below each student represent their grade point average earned in the course out of 4 points. These data come from the last surveys administered in Classes A, B, and C, and represent our best estimate for the perceptions developed by the end of each class.