Do single-sex schools help Australians major in STEMM at university?
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Date
Authors
Law, Helen
Sikora, Joanna
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Publisher
Taylor & Francis
Abstract
Single-sex schooling is believed to benefit students’ academic
achievement and girls’ engagement in science, technology,
engineering, mathematics, and medicine (STEMM). The latter is
assumed because single-sex environments are meant to neutralise
gender stereotypes. Little is known, however, about longer term
effects of such schooling. Therefore, we consider whether
graduating from a single-sex school increases the uptake of
university majors in physical or life sciences. Using data from the
2003 cohort of the Longitudinal Survey of Australian Youth and
multinomial logistic regressions, we find that girls who graduated
from single-sex schools did not major in physical sciences at
university at rates higher than their peers from coeducational
schools. Likewise, there are no differences in the take up of life
science majors, irrespective of gender or type of school. By
contrast, fewer boys who graduated from single-sex schools went
on to study physical sciences at university. We discuss the
implications of these findings.
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School Effectiveness and School Improvement
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Open Access
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Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives License
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