School of Psychology, University of Nottingham, Nottingham, UK.
Chancellor College University of Malawi, Zomba, Malawi.
Dev Sci. 2019 Sep;22(5):e12864. doi: 10.1111/desc.12864. Epub 2019 Jun 23.
Globally, gender differences are reported in the early acquisition of reading and mathematics as girls tend to outperform boys in reading, whereas boys tend to outperform girls in mathematics. This can have long-term impact resulting in an under-representation of girls in Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics subjects. Recent research suggests that sociocultural factors account for differences across genders in the acquisition of these foundational skills. In this study, we investigated whether a new technology-based intervention, that included activities accessible to both boys and girls, can reduce gender differences from emerging during the early primary school years. The novel instructional method used in this study employed apps developed by onebillion© delivered individually through touch-screen tablets. Over a series of experiments conducted in Malawi, a low-income country in sub-Sahara Africa, we found that when children were exposed to standard pedagogical practice typical gender differences emerged over the first grade (Experiment 1). In contrast, boys and girls learnt equally well with the new interactive apps designed to support the learning of mathematics (Experiment 2) and reading (Experiment 3). When implemented at the start of primary education, before significant gender discrepancies become established, this novel technology-based intervention can prevent significant gender effects for mathematics. These results demonstrate that different instructional practices influence the emergence of gender disparities in early mathematics. Digital interventions can mitigate gender differences in countries where standard pedagogical instruction typically hinders girls from acquiring early mathematical skills at the same rate as boys. A video abstract of this article can be viewed at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=55x-6hhAY9M&feature=youtu.be.
在全球范围内,阅读和数学的早期习得存在性别差异,女孩在阅读方面的表现通常优于男孩,而男孩在数学方面的表现通常优于女孩。这可能会产生长期影响,导致女孩在科学、技术、工程和数学等领域的代表性不足。最近的研究表明,社会文化因素解释了性别在这些基础技能习得方面的差异。在这项研究中,我们调查了一种新的基于技术的干预措施,该措施包括对男孩和女孩都可接受的活动,是否可以减少小学早期出现的性别差异。本研究中使用的新颖教学方法采用了由 onebillion© 开发的应用程序,通过触摸屏平板电脑单独提供。在马拉维(撒哈拉以南非洲的一个低收入国家)进行的一系列实验中,我们发现,当儿童接触到典型的标准教学实践时,在一年级就会出现明显的性别差异(实验 1)。相比之下,男孩和女孩在学习新的互动应用程序时都学得很好,这些应用程序旨在支持数学(实验 2)和阅读(实验 3)的学习。当这种新的基于技术的干预措施在小学教育开始时实施,即在性别差异变得明显之前,它可以防止数学方面出现显著的性别影响。这些结果表明,不同的教学实践会影响早期数学中性别差距的出现。在标准教学指导通常阻碍女孩以与男孩相同的速度获得早期数学技能的国家,数字干预可以减轻性别差异。本文的视频摘要可以在 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=55x-6hhAY9M&feature=youtu.be 观看。