2003
DOI: 10.1080/0963928032000091765
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Gender differences in accounting education: an undergraduate exploration

Abstract: There is increasing evidence that females are outperforming males in secondary education across a range of subjects. The data in higher education, however, is not so clear-cut. Several studies have been undertaken examining the impact of gender on undergraduate accounting performance, ranging from early year performance to that of later years, with conflicting results. Some of the literature suggests that gender differences are dependent on the type of assessment utilized, reporting that females tend to perfor… Show more

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Cited by 61 publications
(58 citation statements)
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References 15 publications
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“…Koh and Koh (1999) found that males performed significantly better than females throughout an accountancy degree programme. Gammie, Paver, Gammie and Duncan (2003) however, found that females outperformed their male counterparts in the first year accounting subject but no gender differences were found thereafter. Other studies reported that after controlling for "academic ability" there was no evidence of gender differences in examination performance (Buckless, Lipe and Ravenscroft, 1991;Keef and Roush, 1997 …”
Section: Gendermentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Koh and Koh (1999) found that males performed significantly better than females throughout an accountancy degree programme. Gammie, Paver, Gammie and Duncan (2003) however, found that females outperformed their male counterparts in the first year accounting subject but no gender differences were found thereafter. Other studies reported that after controlling for "academic ability" there was no evidence of gender differences in examination performance (Buckless, Lipe and Ravenscroft, 1991;Keef and Roush, 1997 …”
Section: Gendermentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Albrecht and Sack (2001) have also commented on finance as an attractive alternative to accounting. Gammie et al (2003) examined gender differences across several performance measures both prior to and after entering into accounting and finance higher education studies. No gender differences were found in any of the final year modules, and this was also evident in the coursework and examination performance analysis.…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Los conocimientos previos en materia contable están relacionados con los resultados académicos futuros en esta misma disciplina (Auyeung y Sands, 1994;Koh y Koh, 1999;Gammie et al, 2003;Gracia y Jenkins, 2003;Tickell y Smyrnios, 2005;Potter y Johnston, 2006). Por su parte, Gammie et al (2003) y Tickell y Smyrnios (2005) señalan que el rendimiento más reciente es el mejor predictor del rendimiento en el curso actual. En nuestro caso y debido a la distribución de las materias en el grado de ADE hemos considerado la nota previa de la materia "Introducción a la contabilidad", que es la primera materia contable a la que el estudiantado se enfrenta en la carrera.…”
Section: Conocimientos Previosunclassified
“…Algunos estudios sugieren la relación entre el género y el rendimiento en materias de contabilidad, señalando que las mujeres superaban a los varones (Hanks y Shivaswamy, 1985;Carpenter et al, 1993;Gammie et al, 2003;Gracia y Jenkins, 2003). Esto puede ser debido a una mayor aptitud de las mujeres para cursos cuantitativos y por su motivación intrínseca (Tyson, 1989).…”
Section: Génerounclassified