The suggest 20-year declines in math and science gender gaps between boys and girls worldwide, but in the United States, the picture is a little less rosy.
In 1995, 8th grade boys significantly outperformed girls in math in 15 out of 28 participating countries and education systems, according to data from the National Center for Education Statistics, which supervises the United States鈥 participation in TIMSS. By 2015, only six countries showed statistically significant differences favoring boys, and in some countries, the gender gaps even had even reversed.
鈥淚鈥檓 a father of three daughters, so I鈥檓 always happy to see that,鈥 said Dirk Hastedt, the executive director of the IEA, the international research group that runs TIMSS every four years. 鈥淲e see that the world seems to be going in the right direction. The achievement overall is going up.鈥
In the United States, gender gaps in mathematics closed at both grades 4 and 8 from 2011 to 2015, but among 4th graders, the narrowing gap seems to be from boys losing ground while girls held theirs.
In math, there have been small but consistent differences in the United States favoring boys,鈥 said Peggy Carr, the acting commissioner of NCES. However, she noted, 鈥渋n the past these gender gaps were often differences at 20 points or more, but in 2015, the gaps were 4 points at 4th grade and 5 points at 8th 驳谤补诲别.鈥
Among 18-year-olds taking challenging courses, U.S. girls鈥 performance has on average declined significantly since 1995, when the United States last participated in the TIMSS Advanced study:
鈥淚t鈥檚 hard to say exactly what鈥檚 going on; the issues [around gender gaps] are very complex,鈥 said Matthew Larson, the president of the National Council of Teachers of Mathematics, but he added that stereotypes about math and science fields more generally could be at play: 鈥淚 think as students leave middle school and enter high school, societal messages about who mathematics is for and who STEM careers are for become more deeply embedded.鈥
Similarly in science, gender gaps closed, but somewhat at the expense of boys鈥 achievement:
Carr noted that in both math and science, boys in high school seem to be enrolling in advanced math and science classes more often than girls, which could also be contributing to the high school gender gaps.