- While PISA reveals large gender differences in reading, in favour of 15-year-old girls, the gap is narrower when digital reading skills are tested. Indeed, the Survey of Adult Skills suggests that there are no significant gender differences in digital literacy proficiency among 16-29 year-olds.
- Boys are more likely to underachieve when they attend schools with a large proportion of socio‑economically disadvantaged students.
- Girls – even high-achieving girls – tend to underachieve compared to boys when they are asked to think like scientists, such as when they are asked to formulate situations mathematically or interpret phenomena scientifically.
- Parents are more likely to expect their sons, rather than their daughters, to work in a science, technology, engineering or mathematics field – even when their 15-year-old boys and girls perform at the same level in mathematics.
Share
Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Abstract
In the same series
-
24 February 20268 Pages
-
11 December 20258 Pages
-
20 October 20258 Pages
-
11 June 20257 Pages
-
13 November 202410 Pages
-
Policy paper
How have home learning environments changed since 2015?
24 September 20247 Pages -
Policy paper
The role of parents and socio‑economic backgrounds
27 June 20249 Pages -
18 June 20249 Pages
Related publications
-
Working paper
Emerging implications and a case study on writing
21 November 202549 Pages -
Working paper24 October 202532 Pages
-
Policy paper25 July 202571 Pages