| Literature DB >> 35991353 |
Anne-Roos Verbree1, Lisette Hornstra2, Lientje Maas3, Leoniek Wijngaards-de Meij1.
Abstract
In recent decades, female students have been more successful in higher education than their male counterparts in the United States and other industrialized countries. A promising explanation for this gender gap are differences in personality, particularly higher levels of conscientiousness among women. Using Structural Equation Modeling on data from 4719 Dutch university students, this study examined to what extent conscientiousness can account for the gender gap in achievement. We also examined whether the role of conscientiousness in accounting for the gender gap differed for students with a non-dominant ethnic background compared to students with a dominant ethnic background. In line with our expectations, we found that conscientiousness fully mediated the gender gap in achievement, even when controlling for prior achievement in high school. This was the case among both groups of students. These findings provide insight into the mechanisms underlying the gender gap in achievement in postsecondary education settings. The current study suggests that the use of conscientiousness measures in university admission procedures may disadvantage male students. Instead, the use of such measures may be a fruitful way to identify those students who may benefit from interventions to improve their conscientiousness. Future research could examine how conscientiousness can be fostered among students who are low in conscientiousness.Entities:
Keywords: (non-dominant) Ethnic background; Academic achievement; Conscientiousness; Gender gap; Higher education; Personality
Year: 2022 PMID: 35991353 PMCID: PMC9379878 DOI: 10.1007/s11162-022-09716-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Res High Educ ISSN: 0361-0365
Fig. 1Conceptual model of conscientiousness mediating the gender-achievement relation
Mean (SD) conscientiousness, academic achievement, and high school performance
| Students with a dominant ethnic background | Students with a non-dominant ethnic background | Total | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Males | Females | Males | Females | Males | Females | |
| Conscientiousnessa | 3.58 (0.53) | 3.87 (0.52) | 3.64 (0.66) | 3.92 (0.50) | 3.58 (0.55) | 3.88 (0.52) |
| GPA | 6.87 (0.63) | 6.98 (0.61) | 6.78 (0.57) | 6.83 (0.57) | 6.85 (0.62) | 6.97 (0.60) |
| Credits | 49.16 (18.21) | 53.05 (15.53) | 47.22 (18.07) | 48.84 (17.98) | 48.79 (18.16) | 52.62 (15.99) |
| High school performance | 6.71 (0.56) | 6.83 (0.54) | 6.55 (0.49) | 6.69 (0.52) | 6.69 (0.55) | 6.81 (0.54) |
| Range of | 1455–1606 | 1766–1987 | 113–131 | 122–169 | 1720–1898 | 2173–2467 |
aConscientiousness indicates the mean of the eight conscientiousness items
bRange of n indicates per column the n on which the presented means and standard deviations are based, n varied due to missing data
Correlations between ethnic background, gender, conscientiousness, academic achievement, and high school performance
| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 Ethnic background | – | ||||
| 2 Gender (ref. = female) | − .01 | – | |||
| 3 Conscientiousness | .03 | − .30* | – | ||
| 4 Academic achievement | − .07* | − .13* | .29* | – | |
| 5 High school performance | − .07* | − .11* | .23* | .72* | – |
*p < .001
Fig. 2Standardized parameter estimates of the SEM of conscientiousness mediating the gender-achievement relation for all students, *p < .001
Fig. 3Standardized parameter estimates by ethnicity of the SEM of conscientiousness mediating the gender-achievement relation (left estimates of students with a dominant ethnic background, right estimates of students with a non-dominant ethnic background which differ due to differences in variances; the estimates of the indirect effect are not significantly different), *p < .001
| Students with a dominant ethnic background | Students with a non-dominant ethnic background | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Standardized factor loadings | Standardized factor loadings | |||
| 1. Does a thorough job | .53 | .29 | .60 | .37 |
| 2 Perseveres until the task is finished | .46 | .21 | .48 | .23 |
| 3 Tends to be disorganizedr | .65 | .42 | .69 | .47 |
| 4 Tends to be lazyr | .74 | .55 | .78 | .61 |
| 5 Is a reliable worker | .47 | .22 | .46 | .21 |
| 7 Makes plans and follows through with them | .54 | .29 | .54 | .29 |
| 8 Is easily distractedr | .57 | .33 | .61 | .37 |
| 9 Can be somewhat carelessr | .64 | .40 | .63 | .40 |
| 2 with 5 | .26 | |||
| 2 with 7 | .22 | |||
| 5 with 7 | .19 | |||
| GPA | .89 | .80 | .97 | .94 |
| Credits | .51 | .26 | .46 | .21 |
Conscientiousness item 6 “Does things efficiently” was removed due to a low corrected item-total correlation and an higher Cronbach’s alpha after removal. Items marked with ‘r’ are recoded.
All estimates are significant at p < .001.