Hicks Brian M, Johnson Wendy, Iacono William G, McGue Matt
Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Medical University of South Carolina.
Eur J Pers. 2008 May 1;22(3):247-268. doi: 10.1002/per.671.
Girls consistently achieve higher grades than boys despite scoring lower on major standardized tests and not having higher IQs. Sex differences in non-cognitive variables such as personality might help to account for sex differences in grades. Utilizing a large sample of 17 year-old twins participating in the Minnesota Twin Family Study (MTFS), we examined the roles of Achievement Striving, Self-Control, and Aggression on sex differences in grade point average (GPA). Each personality trait was a significant predictor of GPA, with sex differences in Aggression accounting for one-half the sex difference in GPA and genetic variance accounting for most of the overlap between personality and GPA. Achievement Striving and Self-Control moderated the genetic and environmental influences on GPA. Specifically, for girls but not boys, higher Achievement Striving and Self-Control were associated with less variability in GPA and greater genetic and environmental overlap with GPA. For girls, certain personality traits operate to shape a context yielding uniformly higher GPA, a process that seems absent in boys.
尽管女孩在主要标准化测试中的得分低于男孩且智商也不更高,但她们的成绩始终比男孩好。非认知变量(如性格)方面的性别差异可能有助于解释成绩方面的性别差异。利用参与明尼苏达双胞胎家庭研究(MTFS)的大量17岁双胞胎样本,我们研究了成就追求、自我控制和攻击性在平均绩点(GPA)性别差异中的作用。每种人格特质都是GPA的重要预测指标,攻击性方面的性别差异占GPA性别差异的一半,遗传方差占人格与GPA之间大部分的重叠部分。成就追求和自我控制调节了遗传和环境对GPA的影响。具体而言,对于女孩而非男孩,更高的成就追求和自我控制与GPA的变异性较小以及与GPA更大的遗传和环境重叠相关。对于女孩来说,某些人格特质会塑造一个产生始终较高GPA的环境,而男孩似乎不存在这个过程。