T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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318.1 | gee, & I thought the bias was _for_ girls | CIVIC::JOHNSTON | a pole in my right half-plane? pfthhhh! | Wed Nov 30 1988 12:22 | 19 |
| Nothing really to add -- no information on the case.
Frankly, I'm amazed at these statistics. Not really doubting them
you understand, but based on my own experience I'd like to see evidence
that the bias was really in the _test_ and not some other thing
-- like the name accompanying the score, for example...which of
course wouldn't explain the difference when grades were also
considered...
Of those of us on scholarship at A&M, the percentage of high scorers
on the SAT was considerably higher among women proportional to the
gender mix of the group. [OK, paint me an elitist pig who got hers
and could give a flip, etc, etc, etc :^)...I really do care, I'm
just surprised.]
Ann
|
318.2 | SAT's are biased? | NATASH::MOORE | Reality is just a collective hunch. | Wed Nov 30 1988 13:25 | 17 |
| Since those objecting to the SAT-only based system of awarding scholarships
are implying that SAT's are biased against girls, I assume there is data to
support that. I don't remember anything about it, though, so if anyone has
statistics on sex differences and SAT scores, that would help answer the
question.
Anyway, it wouldn't surprise me if that's true, since half of the SAT score
if I remember is math, and there's lots of documentation that girls have
more trouble with math than boys. (Why is another question; personally,
I believe it's the adverse effects of stereopying - the self-fulfilling
prophecy. But I imagine that's been written about elsewhere in this file.)
So if girls have a tougher time with math, and math is half of the SAT score,
but it's only one of a number of different subjects represented in
grades/academic average, then the SAT-only based criteria does discriminate
against girls.
Susan
|
318.3 | need more data...lots more | CVG::THOMPSON | I'm the NRA | Wed Nov 30 1988 13:48 | 27 |
| New York state used (17 years ago when I was in high school)
give scholarships based on the Regents Scholarship Test which
was clearly not the same as the SAT. It's interesting if they
are using the SAT now. While I know, as a sociologist by training
that its harder not to bias a test then it is to bias one, I'm
somewhat suspicious of this report. Why? Basically because boys
and girls get the same education usually. There aren't boy schools
and girl schools anywhere resembling white schools and black
schools. The 'girls can't do that' attitude is much less then
it used to be.
If the boys are really getting that different an education that
the SAT scores are that off then the class grades should be off
the same way. My best guess here is that fewer girls are taking
the test when it's just the test and more take it when grades
count. This would easily be explained by guidance counselors telling
girls (incorrectly) that they can't handle tests of that sort.
I'd have to see a lot more data to make a reasonable final conclusion.
For example, compare boys and girls from the same school, with the
same grades. Are their SAT scores different? If they are then perhaps
you've got a biased test. Of course it could just as easy (though
perhaps less likely depending on your politics) that the girls are
getting 'helped' in their grades. The point being that coming to
a conclusion of sexual bias takes some serious study.
Alfred
|
318.4 | | ULTRA::ZURKO | UI:Where the rubber meets the road | Wed Nov 30 1988 15:10 | 8 |
| > Basically because boys
> and girls get the same education usually.
I suppose you're really saying they tend to sit in the same classroom if
they're taking the same class. Which ain't really the same thing as getting the
same education (as you point out near the bottom of your note with a nod to how
sexism can change what you get).
Mez
|
318.5 | | ULTRA::GUGEL | Who needs evidence when one has faith? | Wed Nov 30 1988 20:47 | 4 |
| re .3
New York State started using the SAT score to deterine Regents'
scholarhips for the high school graduating class of 1978.
|
318.6 | | FDCV10::IWANOWICZ | Deacons are Permanent | Thu Dec 01 1988 08:47 | 11 |
| Today's WSJ .. P. a22 has an article on the editorial page focusing
on the efficacy or not of the SAT.
The writer, Paul Crouse, contends that the ETS and college board
people sell the SAT well. How efficacious the SAT is for admissions
people and the students is somewhat controversial. Bowdoin and
Yale departed from others in the late '60's making SAT scores
optional in the admissions process. Bates has since followed.
|
318.7 | Another possibility: | SALEM::JWILSON | Just A Natural Man | Thu Dec 01 1988 12:02 | 16 |
| Is it possible that girls live up to their potentials with regard
to scholarship, while boys tend to slack off? From personal
experience, I was basically a B/C student in high school, because
school at the time was not important to me. I was an A student
when I finally got around to college. My oldest son was a B/C student
in high school, also, but did quite well on his SAT's (knowing that
getting into college was important to him). In his first semester
of college he made the dean's list.
So perhaps males do better on "must" tests, such as the SAT, while
females do consistently well in their regular studies, but not
indicatively well on tests.
I'd be interested in any studies done in this regard.
Jack
|
318.8 | | STC::HEFFELFINGER | Aliens made me write this. | Fri Dec 02 1988 09:21 | 38 |
| I'm surprised at this also.
In my (limited) experience, I didn't see any differentiation
as to how well you did along gender lines. (How's THAT for an awkward
sentence!) In fact if I remember correctly, here in South Carolina,
every time we National Merit semi-finalists and finalists got together
the girls dominated. NM semi's are chosen soley on the basis of
SAT score. I can't remember if an essay was included in the
determination of the finalists or not. But I do remember that grades
and such were not included until the final determination of who
got what scholarship.
As for girls doing poorly (or not as well) because math is half
the test and girls are not encouraged to succeed in math... Well
the same arguement could be given for boys and verbal skills.
Just out of curiosity, could anybody who has taken the test more
recently than I, tell me if they made the LOGIC section a permanent
part of the test. When I took it in 78-79, the SAT was comprised
of a verbal section worth up to 800 points, a Math section worth
up to 800 points , and an experimental Logic section which had a
total of 80 points available but not included in your final score.
I found it interesting that while I had a math score that quite
good for this area but not up to the standards of, say, an MIT;
my Logic score was almost perfect (79 out of 80). I thought this
gave an accurate picture of my abilities/applications. That is
I'm quite good at problem solving/understanding the underlying structure
of things, but when it gets down to the actually adding up of the
numbers and dealing with the picky details, if I'm not interested,
I get sloppy. I'd be interested in hearing if a) others felt that
the Math and Logic sections helped better represent them than the Math
section alone and b) if the College board people decided to add
it as a permanent part, if they are still evaluating it or if they've
dropped it altogether.
tlh
|
318.9 | NM's chosen from the psat/nmsqt test | MEWVAX::AUGUSTINE | Purple power! | Fri Dec 02 1988 10:10 | 8 |
| actually, when i took those tests, the National Merit semi-finalists
were chosen based on the scores from the PSAT/NMSQT (something like
Preparatory SAT/ Nat'l Merit Something Qualifying Test). I was
disappointed because they arrived at the "final result" by doubling the
English score and adding the Math score. I didn't do as well in English
as I did in Math, so I missed the cutoff by a few points. Oh well...
Liz
|
318.10 | More "girls" were near the top than "boys", at my school | SKYLRK::OLSON | green chile crusader! | Fri Dec 02 1988 13:22 | 13 |
| re .8, .9-
Liz, your description sounds closer to my recollections, though
I took the tests the same years as tlh. Nat Merit results were
based on PSATs, which we took as sophomores in 1976-7. Then the
SATs as juniors in 77-78, and it was available as a senior if you
wanted to retake.
Also, I don't remember an experimental logic section, but there
was a separate "Test of Standard Written English (TSWE)" also
as an experiment...
DougO
|
318.11 | In my day, it worked like this: | TALLIS::ROBBINS | | Fri Dec 02 1988 16:28 | 15 |
| When I graduated from high school (1982), National Merit Semi-finalists
were selected solely on the basis of PSAT/NMSQT scores. (The verbal
score counted twice as much as the math score).
Then to be a finalist you had to get an equivalently good score
on the SAT's and write a short essay basically just listing what
extracurricular activities you're involved with (although I think
the wording was more of a "tell us why you're a wonderful human
being" type of thing).
Then to be a scholarship winner, your parents had to work for a company that
sponsored a scholarship or you had to be going to a college that offered
National Merit Scholarships (not hard to do, but since most colleges
only offered one such scholarship but accepted hundreds(?) of
National Merit Finalists...)
|
318.12 | | COGMK::CHELSEA | Mostly harmless. | Fri Dec 02 1988 19:01 | 11 |
| The Test of Standard Written English was part of the SAT test I
took in '80 or '81. I believe it also had a logic section.
Re: .11
I'm not entirely sure that's how it worked, because my SAT score
was as good as my PSAT score and I was only a Semi-finalist. I
remember the cut getting made before the SAT, possibly on the basis
of the essay. (It was a while ago, so I don't remember too clearly.)
It might have been that there were just too many qualified students
in the state (Texas) and they needed to cut back.
|
318.13 | hummmmm | SSDEVO::GALLUP | Arizona 68 Temple 50!!!!! | Tue Dec 06 1988 13:55 | 16 |
|
At my school...all the Nat'l Merit Scholarships went to women
from '78 til I graduated in '83. (I don't know about
afterwards) Also, when I there, there were only two guys in the
entire graduating class that got substantial scholarships
anyway...(over $500). But that may have something to do
with the fact that there were no men in the top 10% on my
graduating class (class size...approx 450)....I also remember
a statistic after the SAT's saying that at our school that
the girls did much better than the guys....
i think there has to be alot more to it than just
gender....maybe the environment the students grew up
in...this school was in an army town...
|
318.14 | | STC::HEFFELFINGER | Aliens made me write this. | Fri Dec 09 1988 20:08 | 17 |
| You sho'nuff are right. I forgot all about the fact
that it was the PSAT that started off the whole thing.
re:Whoever it was that said they may have had too many
students from their state... I don't think so. The competition
was nationwide only until the awards of the scholarships came.
If remember correctly (and I may not), there were ways to get
scholarships other than from the school or the company your parents
worked for, I believe they *were* all special interest though.
(Something the Southern Baptist Association giving a scholarship
to a young man or woman who intends to devote their life to missionary
work.) (I don't claim that as a real example; it just popped into
my head. :-) ) I can't offer any proof though, I got mine from
my university.
tlh
|
318.16 | a possibility... | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Why do you have to die to be a hero? | Wed May 17 1989 16:03 | 23 |
| I just read through the whole string, and decided that since I hadn't
really been roasted in a long while, now was as good a time as any. :-)
Perhaps the reason that girls do better in school than boys do is due
to their choice of curriculum. I went to an all male high school, so I
don't have any direct information, but I do know that when you get to
the higher math classes, the gender mix tends to be more heavily guys
than girls.
I think that it's possible that while the girls are taking "easier"
courses and getting better grades, the guys are taking "harder" classes
and not getting comparable grades, but are learning more of the types
of things that are useful in an aptitude test. It seems to me that some
girls tend to take the kinds of classes (like history and othe social
sciences) that increase knowledge on certain subjects without
increasing the ability to learn other types of subjects. Math is one
subject where taking more related classes translates into a higher
aptitude as measured by any standardized aptitude test.
I'm not sure I'm getting my point across. Does anybody see where I'm
coming from?
The Doctah
|
318.17 | What support do we give them? | FRECKL::HUTCHINS | If you want it, go after it... | Wed May 17 1989 17:41 | 23 |
| re .16
Doctah, you raised a perplexing issue. One wonders what messages
young women are receiving from "guidance" counselors, teachers,
parents and friends.
As long as bright women are an anomaly, and they are socialized
in the home/hearth/family manner, and discouraged from non-traditional
paths, then they shall continue to follow the more familiar path.
If you remember high school (ugh), the bright women were looked
upon as being a bit odd. We know that that isn't true, but where's
the logic in a teenager?
Before I get flamed, my main point is that many bright women have
to work bloody hard to maintain their grades, amongst the challenges
of adolescence - extracurricular activities, friends, after school
jobs, family situation, etc. Some are fortunate to have supportive
adults who encourage their development. Unfortunately, many "fall
through the cracks" and just get by.
Judi
|
318.18 | | RAINBO::TARBET | I'm the ERA | Wed May 17 1989 17:44 | 11 |
| Mark, if the SAT (which I've never taken) is anything like the GRE
(which I have) then both clumps of skills are tested and equally
weighted. A techno-nerd will do neither better nor worse overall than
a touchyfeely wiz.
The question of "culture-free" tests is an *extremely* vexed one
and has been for at least 20 years.
=maggie-who-used-to-
be-fairly-knowledgeable-in-
that-part-of-psych.
|
318.19 | | ACESMK::CHELSEA | Mostly harmless. | Wed May 17 1989 18:42 | 10 |
| Re: .17
>If you remember high school (ugh), the bright women were looked
>upon as being a bit odd.
Actually, a lot of the bright women in my class were in the upper
social ranks -- half the cheerleaders were in my advanced English
and math classes. Oddly enough, I don't think many of them were
in the advanced history courses. And of course, I was one of very
few females taking physics.
|
318.20 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Why do you have to die to be a hero? | Thu May 18 1989 09:09 | 12 |
| > Before I get flamed, my main point is that many bright women have
> to work bloody hard to maintain their grades, amongst the challenges
> of adolescence - extracurricular activities, friends, after school
> jobs, family situation, etc.
I don't think that females have a monopoly on these situations.
re: maggie-
Do you mean that you feel that the SAT is not biased against women?
The Doctah
|
318.21 | | ANALYZ::KEANE | | Thu May 18 1989 09:09 | 14 |
|
.16 & .17
Prehaps I'm dating myself, but in my classes (in high school) the
majority in the 'tougher' classes was female. This was true of AP
Calculus as well as Honors English. The classes in which there were
few girls were Electronics (a total of 1 in two levels) and Drafting (3
in four levels). I think this division of knowledge and skill is
responsible for lower scores and lesser ambitions. The number of
women in advanced level and technical course plummets in college.
Ann
|
318.22 | half and half | ACESMK::POIRIER | Be a Voice for Choice! | Thu May 18 1989 13:57 | 8 |
| My AP calculus class 7 years ago was half boys and half girls.
Both the validictorian and the salutorian were women that were in
my AP calculs, AP physics, and AP biology. It was after highschool
that I noticed a difference. About one quarter of my AP calulus
class went into a science related major - and I was the only woman.
Reasons?
Suzanne
|
318.23 | here, too, half and half | CADSYS::RICHARDSON | | Fri May 19 1989 14:37 | 20 |
| The advanced classes in my high school were at least half female, and
our valedictorian was a girl (I was salutatorian; third honors was a
boy, however). Only 8 of us took advanced calculus, but I think it was
50/50. The AP literature classes were maybe 2/3 female. The same
thing was true of the mathematics and computer science classes in
college, about half women, but very few other women in the physics and
EE courses I took (don't flame me, please: I just noticed that I guess
I think I was a "girl" in high school but a "woman" in college - must
have something to do with turning 18...).
I never thought that the SAT or GRE tests were sex-biased, although you
could argue that they are (or were) somewhat culturally-biased: I
remember all those silly "analogy problems" (you know, "mud is to
shellac as milk is to fill-in-the-blank"), which would be hard if you
didn't know how some of the words or objects were used in the "average"
home. At any rate, I scored well in both of them - in the case of the
GREs, I took them the morning after a real big party, and hadn't even
slept! (Went back to the dorm and crashed out after the tests...)
/Charlotte
|
318.24 | | VIA::BAZEMORE | Barbara b. | Fri May 19 1989 18:21 | 24 |
| At this time of year I like to amuse myself by looking at the local
paper's coverage of graduations. The paper has pictures of the
valedictorian and salutorian from each high school. Over half the
pictures are of females. Usually, when I see males take both the
val. and the sal. they are at the all male school.
Hardly a scientific, unbiased sampling, but amusing nonetheless :-)
I did notice in high school that the females in the advanced
science and math classes tended to be from affluent families.
I don't think they were necessarily brighter than some of my
less affluent friends, but that the affluent were more encouraged
to take these classes.
I've always been a good student, especially in math and science. I
still remember my 10th grade guidance counselor advising me to take a
typing course so I'd have some job skills (late '70s). So I gave up
one of my electives to take typing instead of Anatomy. Out of a 30
person typing class there were only 2 males. I guess the counselors
didn't push them to take typing... I must admit that the class did help
me in my job as a software engineer here at DEC. I can type in the
code almost as fast as I think it up :-)
Bb
|
318.25 | biased? In whose favor? | PH4VAX::MCBRIDE | Pikes Peak or Bust!!! | Fri May 19 1989 21:14 | 14 |
| re: typing.
An old friend of mine took typing in High School and was able to
type 80 words a minute. Years later he was a system manager for
a major DEC customer ( I was the Field Service Account Rep.) This
guy could type 80 WPM. 40 of them were on the delete key.
I guess I went to an unusual public high school, but, of the graduating
class of 100 there were 7 people with 700 SAT's. 5 were female.
One of those was the daughter of the School's Alegebra Teacher
par excellance. Granted, it was an unusual class. For every vemale
grad who dressed hair there was a mathemetician. For every teacher
there was a female architect. Needless to say...the 25th reunion
was enlightening.
|
318.26 | not typecast as a typist | CADSYS::RICHARDSON | | Mon May 22 1989 10:24 | 25 |
| My mother (trained as a mathematician and musician, but employed until
my birth as a secretary) told me to never admit that I knew how to
type, and not to take typing class in high school so I would not get
type-cast (like she did). I took typing at the local secretarial
college one summer, and made sure the (dimbulb) high school guidance
counselor did NOT know about it - strengthened my case later when I
went in to complain that I had asked him to order me the harder of the
two calculus advanced placement tests instead of the easier one the
rest of the class had requested. He even eventually got it for me in
time (found one of the local "snob" private schools had ordered too
many copies). (That test score, along with a couple of others and
several semesters of heavy course loads while working 20 hours a week
saved me the cost of a whole year of college; I graduated in three
years.)
I don't know where this idea that high school girls who did well on
their SAT tests and/or took the advanced placement tests and the top
academic courses were all from "affluent" families came from. There
were about two kids from relatively wealthy families in my whole school
(graduating class about 350). It was a pretty solidly middle-class
environment. Wealthy people (the few there were in our region) tended
to send their kids to the snobby private schhols, along with the kids
who were behavior problems in the public school system (eg, my cousin).
|
318.27 | | WHYVAX::KRUPINSKI | Blackflies don't just bite, they suck! | Tue May 23 1989 13:15 | 6 |
| At the Vo-Tech I went to instead of High School made the boys
take blueprint reading and the girls take typing. Sigh, I really
wanted to take typing. I knew how to read blueprints pretty
well already, but couldn't type to save my life. Still cat'n :-)
T_onK
|
318.28 | experiment in test-changing | ROLL::MINER | | Tue May 23 1989 13:23 | 19 |
| I heard an excellent lecture on this subject last year. For sometime
now, females have out-scored males on verbal; males have outscored
females on math (even when comparison is made only between students
similar background coursework -- i.e., comparing students who have
taken HS calculus to each other, but not to students who took only
geometry).
Then in 1987 males outperformed females in the verbal!! Had males in
general learned better communication skills?? Was it a large-scale
social change? No . . . actually the test had been redesigned to
emphasize slightly different verbal skills.
The lecturer said that the test had been changed *in order* to make
the male scores better. I am willing to say that I don't know the
motivations for changing the emphasis of the exam, but if changing the
questions reverses male/female performances, then THERE IS GENDER
BIAS in the exam.
|
318.29 | | ANALYZ::KEANE | | Tue May 23 1989 17:26 | 17 |
| Of interest from Technological Review, May 89:
Gender differences in spatial and mathematical ability have
declined almost to zero, says a researcher at the University of
California at Berkeley. Paralleling reports last year that the
verbal abilities of men and women are converging, the findings
suggest that gender differences in all cognitive abilities are
disappearing.
According to Marcia Linn, adjunct professor in the Graduate
School of Education. women's lower spatial and mathematical ability
has often been used to explain men's greater access to scientific
fields, higher income, and better math scores on the SATs.
However, the gaps in SAT scores, occupation, and income
remain, even though gender differences in ability have narrowed,
Linn observes.
Ann-I'm-not-adding-to-the-education-deficit
|