Effects of Stereotype Threat on Females in Math and Science Fields: An Investigation of Possible Mediators and Moderators of the Threat-Performance Relationship

A mediated-moderation model of stereotype threat was tested. Domain identification and motivational orientation were treated as moderators of the threat effect on self-efficacy and cognitive interference, which were hypothesized to mediate the threat-performance relationship. Participants were prime...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Hardee Bailey, Alice Anne
Format: Others
Language:en_US
Published: Georgia Institute of Technology 2005
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1853/4942
id ndltd-GATECH-oai-smartech.gatech.edu-1853-4942
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-GATECH-oai-smartech.gatech.edu-1853-49422013-01-07T20:10:53ZEffects of Stereotype Threat on Females in Math and Science Fields: An Investigation of Possible Mediators and Moderators of the Threat-Performance RelationshipHardee Bailey, Alice AnneStereotype (Psychology)Sex differencesSelf-efficacyAcademic achievementStereotype threatGender differencesSelf-efficacyStereotypes (Social psychology)Sex differencesAcademic achievementA mediated-moderation model of stereotype threat was tested. Domain identification and motivational orientation were treated as moderators of the threat effect on self-efficacy and cognitive interference, which were hypothesized to mediate the threat-performance relationship. Participants were primed with stereotype-consistent, stereotype inconsistent, or no information regarding sex differences in mathematical abilities. While significant performance differences were found between males and females in the control and threat conditions, no differences were found in a female benefit condition that described a math task as favoring females. Significant sex differences in domain identity and self-efficacy were also found. Post-hoc analyses revealed that domain identification and self-efficacy explained significant amounts of variance in sex differences in math performance. The results provide general support for Steeles theory of stereotype threat and resulting disidentification with the task domain among targets.Georgia Institute of Technology2005-03-02T21:09:33Z2005-03-02T21:09:33Z2004-11-23Dissertation1390284 bytesapplication/pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/1853/4942en_US
collection NDLTD
language en_US
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Stereotype (Psychology)
Sex differences
Self-efficacy
Academic achievement
Stereotype threat
Gender differences
Self-efficacy
Stereotypes (Social psychology)
Sex differences
Academic achievement
spellingShingle Stereotype (Psychology)
Sex differences
Self-efficacy
Academic achievement
Stereotype threat
Gender differences
Self-efficacy
Stereotypes (Social psychology)
Sex differences
Academic achievement
Hardee Bailey, Alice Anne
Effects of Stereotype Threat on Females in Math and Science Fields: An Investigation of Possible Mediators and Moderators of the Threat-Performance Relationship
description A mediated-moderation model of stereotype threat was tested. Domain identification and motivational orientation were treated as moderators of the threat effect on self-efficacy and cognitive interference, which were hypothesized to mediate the threat-performance relationship. Participants were primed with stereotype-consistent, stereotype inconsistent, or no information regarding sex differences in mathematical abilities. While significant performance differences were found between males and females in the control and threat conditions, no differences were found in a female benefit condition that described a math task as favoring females. Significant sex differences in domain identity and self-efficacy were also found. Post-hoc analyses revealed that domain identification and self-efficacy explained significant amounts of variance in sex differences in math performance. The results provide general support for Steeles theory of stereotype threat and resulting disidentification with the task domain among targets.
author Hardee Bailey, Alice Anne
author_facet Hardee Bailey, Alice Anne
author_sort Hardee Bailey, Alice Anne
title Effects of Stereotype Threat on Females in Math and Science Fields: An Investigation of Possible Mediators and Moderators of the Threat-Performance Relationship
title_short Effects of Stereotype Threat on Females in Math and Science Fields: An Investigation of Possible Mediators and Moderators of the Threat-Performance Relationship
title_full Effects of Stereotype Threat on Females in Math and Science Fields: An Investigation of Possible Mediators and Moderators of the Threat-Performance Relationship
title_fullStr Effects of Stereotype Threat on Females in Math and Science Fields: An Investigation of Possible Mediators and Moderators of the Threat-Performance Relationship
title_full_unstemmed Effects of Stereotype Threat on Females in Math and Science Fields: An Investigation of Possible Mediators and Moderators of the Threat-Performance Relationship
title_sort effects of stereotype threat on females in math and science fields: an investigation of possible mediators and moderators of the threat-performance relationship
publisher Georgia Institute of Technology
publishDate 2005
url http://hdl.handle.net/1853/4942
work_keys_str_mv AT hardeebaileyaliceanne effectsofstereotypethreatonfemalesinmathandsciencefieldsaninvestigationofpossiblemediatorsandmoderatorsofthethreatperformancerelationship
_version_ 1716473880342691840