Abstract
Attitudes towards success in mathematics, and attributions for such success, among tertiary
mathematics students, were investigated using a semi-structured writing task. A large
majority reported no expectation of internal conflict about success or of deliberately
lowered future performance, but a majority, significantly larger among males, did expect
problems with peers. Students most frequently attributed success to effort. Problems with
peers tended to be seen as resolved if this attribution was made. Females reported
resolution significantly more frequently than did males.
Mary-Ruth Freislich & Alan Bowen-James