1987
DOI: 10.1177/0272431687071006
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Gender Differences in Attributions for Success and Failure

Abstract: The study examined gender differences in attributions for success and failure in math/science and language arts. Developmental patterns were also examined through a cross sectional design of 731 boys and 680 girls in grades four through eleven. Girls were found to have fewer adaptive attributional patterns in math/science than in language arts. While boys had more adaptive patterns in math/science than had girls, they also had more adaptive patterns for language arts patterns than for math/science. It was conc… Show more

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Cited by 33 publications
(21 citation statements)
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“…Alternatively, an emphasis on the Team Success norm would lead to increased internal team pressure towards specialization and therefore discourage students from adopting roles they believe to be atypical of their gender. Particularly, in STEM fields, girls have been shown to be less likely than males to attribute success to their abilities, but more likely to attribute failure to their abilities (Ryckman & Peckham 1987). Therefore, win or lose, robotics competitions that emphasize team success over equitable participation may differentially affect the interest and involvement of girls relative to their male counterparts.…”
Section: Practical Considerationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Alternatively, an emphasis on the Team Success norm would lead to increased internal team pressure towards specialization and therefore discourage students from adopting roles they believe to be atypical of their gender. Particularly, in STEM fields, girls have been shown to be less likely than males to attribute success to their abilities, but more likely to attribute failure to their abilities (Ryckman & Peckham 1987). Therefore, win or lose, robotics competitions that emphasize team success over equitable participation may differentially affect the interest and involvement of girls relative to their male counterparts.…”
Section: Practical Considerationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Men tend to attribute success to internal factors (such as talent) and failure to external factors (such as effort or lack thereof) while women tend to do the opposite (Dweck et al, 1978). This is especially true for mathematical tasks (Ryckman and Peckham, 1987). As a consequence, women are more likely to exhibit impaired performance after failure (Dweck and Gilliard, 1975).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…While gender differences in confidence, belief updating, and performance changes can therefore not explain why more women than men drop out of competition following a loss, the psychology literature on gender differences in the reaction to success and failure gives some hints for potential psychological mechanisms. According to this literature, men tend to attribute success to internal factors (such as talent) and failure to external factors (such as effort or lack thereof) while women tend to do the opposite (Dweck et al, 1978;Ryckman and Peckham, 1987).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%