4.5 Article

Noncognitive skills and gender gap in test scores

Journal

APPLIED ECONOMICS
Volume 53, Issue 29, Pages 3423-3437

Publisher

ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/00036846.2021.1883189

Keywords

Gender differences; test scores; noncognitive skills

Categories

Funding

  1. Special funds for basic scientific research of central-managed universities [17JNQN005]

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This study found that girls generally outperform boys in language, but their advantage in math decreases over time. Noncognitive skills can help reduce the gender gap in both Chinese and math, with the most significant effect seen in students in the bottom quantile group.
This article studies gender gap patterns in language and math during primary school periods in China, and investigates candidate theories to explain the observed patterns. Using an administrative test dataset, we find that girls on average outperform boys in language and have advantage in math in primary school. The gaps for language in all quantiles widen consistently over time. Female's advantages in math in most quantiles, except the lowest, shrink over time. Using a survey on students in primary schools, we find that noncognitive skills can effectively reduce the gender gap in both Chinese and math. This effect is most pronounced for students in the bottom quantile group.

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