Abstract
A new instrument aimed at measuring the extent to which mathematics is stereotyped as a gendered domain was recently trialed. Included among the participating schools were two with distinct student populationsfrom strong, but different, ethnic and religious backgrounds. In this paper we report the findingsfrom comparisons made between the responses of students from the two schools (N = 75 and N = 67) and those of students from other schools participating in the trial (N = 394). The results indicate that ethnic/cultural backgrounds influence stereotyping of some dimensions of mathematics education.
Helen J Forgasz, Gilah C Leder, & Tasos Barkatsas
OF COURSE I CAN’T DO MATHEMATICS: ETHNICITY AND THE STEREOTYPING OF MATHEMATICS