Abstract
Tertiary mathematics students reported on the encouragement they perceived that parents and
teachers gave them to continue in their mathematics studies. Women had perceived stronger
encouragement than men, and correlations between early encouragement and university
achievement were stronger for women. Interviews confmned the importance of encouragement
for the women, and indicated that their confidence could be shaken by stereotyped views about
gender. Men's interviews indicated that, for them, the greatest social danger to their studies
was the anti-intellectual peer group.
Mary-Ruth Freislich & Alan Bowen-James
Gender, Early Encouragement, And Survival In Mathematics Studies