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      Developing and validating a conceptual survey to assess introductory physics students’ understanding of magnetism

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      European Journal of Physics
      IOP Publishing

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          Force concept inventory

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            Gender differences in mathematics performance: a meta-analysis.

            Reviewers have consistently concluded that males perform better on mathematics tests than females do. To make a refined assessment of the magnitude of gender differences in mathematics performance, we performed a meta-analysis of 100 studies. They yielded 254 independent effect sizes, representing the testing of 3,175,188 Ss. Averaged over all effect sizes based on samples of the general population, d was -0.05, indicating that females outperformed males by only a negligible amount. For computation, d was -0.14 (the negative value indicating superior performance by females). For understanding of mathematical concepts, d was -0.03; for complex problem solving, d was 0.08. An examination of age trends indicated that girls showed a slight superiority in computation in elementary school and middle school. There were no gender differences in problem solving in elementary or middle school; differences favoring men emerged in high school (d = 0.29) and in college (d = 0.32). Gender differences were smallest and actually favored females in samples of the general population, grew larger with increasingly selective samples, and were largest for highly selected samples and samples of highly precocious persons. The magnitude of the gender difference has declined over the years; for studies published in 1973 or earlier d was 0.31, whereas it was 0.14 for studies published in 1974 or later. We conclude that gender differences in mathematics performance are small. Nonetheless, the lower performance of women in problem solving that is evident in high school requires attention.
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              Reducing the gender gap in the physics classroom

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                European Journal of Physics
                Eur. J. Phys.
                IOP Publishing
                0143-0807
                1361-6404
                March 01 2017
                March 01 2017
                December 29 2016
                : 38
                : 2
                : 025702
                Article
                10.1088/1361-6404/38/2/025702
                54d9c0d2-b436-4614-8646-ca8c8bf935f7
                © 2016

                http://iopscience.iop.org/info/page/text-and-data-mining

                http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/

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