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Girls Are Good At STEM: Opening Minds And Providing Evidence Reduce Boys' Stereotyping Of Girls' STEM Ability
Psychology Faculty Publications
  • Emily N. Cyr, University of Waterloo
  • Kathryn M. Kroeper, Sacred Heart University
  • Hilary B. Bergsieker
  • Tara C. Dennehy
  • Christine Logel, Renison University College
  • Jennifer R. Steele
  • Rita A. Knasel
  • W. Tyler Hartwig
  • Priscilla Shum
  • Stephanie L. Reeves
  • Odilia Dys-Steenbergen
  • Amrit Litt
  • Christopher Lok, University of Waterloo
  • Taylor Ballinger
  • Haemi Nam
  • Crystal Tse
  • Amanda L. Forest
  • Mark Zanna
  • Sheryl Staub-French
  • Mary Wells
  • Toni Schmader
  • Stephen C. Wright
  • Steven J. Spencer
Document Type
Peer-Reviewed Article
Publication Date
1-1-2023
Abstract

Girls and women face persistent negative stereotyping within STEM (science, technology, engineering, mathematics). This field intervention was designed to improve boys' perceptions of girls' STEM ability. Boys (N = 667; mostly White and East Asian) aged 9-15 years in Canadian STEM summer camps (2017-2019) had an intervention or control conversation with trained camp staff. The intervention was a multi-stage persuasive appeal: a values affirmation, an illustration of girls' ability in STEM, a personalized anecdote, and reflection. Control participants discussed general camp experiences. Boys who received the intervention (vs. control) had more positive perceptions of girls' STEM ability, d = 0.23, an effect stronger among younger boys. These findings highlight the importance of engaging elementary-school-aged boys to make STEM climates more inclusive.

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Online ahead of print, September 18, 2023.

This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial License.

DOI
10.1111/cdev.14007
Creative Commons License
Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International
Citation Information

Cyr, E. N., Kroeper, K. M., Bergsieker, H. B., Dennehy, T. C., Logel, C., Steele, J. R., Knasel, R. A., Hartwig, W. T., Shum, P., Reeves, S. L., Dys-Steenbergen, O., Litt, A., Lok, C. B., Ballinger, T., Nam, H., Tse, C., Forest, A. L., Zanna, M., Staub-French, S., Wells, M., Scmader, T., Wright, S.C., & Spencer, S. J. (2023). Girls are good at STEM: Opening minds and providing evidence reduce boys' stereotyping of girls' STEM ability. Child Development. Doi: 10.1111/cdev.14007