Girls 'more afraid' of maths than boys, says new study
- Published
Girls are "more afraid" of mathematics than boys in 80% of countries, .
So-called mathematics anxiety was found especially in countries which were more developed and where males and females were considered more or less equal.
University of Glasgow researchers looked at achievements, attitudes and emotions around maths and found girls showed more negative emotion about it.
Data was collected from 500,000 15-year-olds in 68 countries.
Mathematics anxiety is defined as "negative feelings experienced during the preparation of and engagement in maths activities".
Academics, led by Dr Gijsbert Stoet, from Glasgow University's school of education, said it did not seem to matter whether the girls' mothers worked in related fields and that efforts to attract more women into science, technology, engineering and mathematics subjects had largely failed.
Dr Liberty Vittert, a lecturer at the School of Maths and Statistics at University of Glasgow, told 成人快手 Radio Scotland's Good Morning Scotland programme that mathematics anxiety could hamper future job prospects.
'Lots of pressure'
Dr Vittert said: "When I was about 14, I had a maths teacher who called my parents into school to say that I couldn't do maths and I should stop and there was no point in further continuing with it.
"It really stops you with jobs if you stop with maths young.
"So I pushed through and I had an undergrad in pure mathematics from MIT (Massachusetts Institute of Technology) and now I have my Phd. So I think it's very important, but I think there's a lot of pressure on young girls to not do some subjects."
Asked if maths had caused her anxiety at school, she said: "Absolutely. I think when you have teachers or other authority figures telling you that you can't do something, of course it creates huge anxiety.
"And clearly there are pressures on a young girl not to do these things."
She added: "If you think about maths, there is always a right or a wrong answer. Whereas in some subjects such as English, there aren't always right or wrong answers.
"So if you can't get that exact answer, the teacher can just say, 'Well you don't know what you're doing, you're not smart.'
"Whereas maybe you just don't quite get it. In English you can have varying levels of understanding."