Do female teachers pass on their fear of math to young girls?

A story in the AJC on why girls fear math was especially relevant to me as my youngest daughter tested very high in math skills on the COGAT but doesn’t like math and perceives that she’s not good at it. Not surprisingly, it has become her most challenging subject.

A study suggests that female teachers who fear math pass the fear onto girls in their classes.

A study suggests that female teachers who fear math pass the fear onto girls in their classes.

I keep wondering why she struggles and whether somehow we communicated that math is hard. My youngest daughter’s teacher has offered to work with her in the morning before class, and I hope to make that happen as I think that math fluency is critical today.

I am one of those English majors who could not wait to satisfy the math requirements in college and retire my protractor and calculator. Now, I wish I had taken more college-level math, especially statistics.

According to the AP story:

WASHINGTON — Little girls may learn to fear math from the women who are their earliest teachers.

Despite gains in recent years, women still trail men in some areas of math achievement, and the question of why has provoked controversy. Now, a study of first- and second-graders suggests what may be part of the answer: Female elementary school teachers who are concerned about their own math skills could be passing that along to the little girls they teach.

Young students tend to model themselves after adults of the same sex, and having a female teacher who is anxious about math may reinforce the stereotype that boys are better at math than girls, explained Sian L. Beilock, an associate professor in psychology at the University of Chicago.

Beilock and colleagues studied 52 boys and 65 girls who in classes taught by 17 different teachers. Ninety percent of U.S. elementary school teachers are women, as were all of those in this study.

Student math ability was not related to teacher math anxiety at the start of the school year, the researchers report in Tuesday’s edition of Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

But by the end of the year, the more anxious teachers were about their own math skills, the more likely their female students — but not the boys — were to agree that “boys are good at math and girls are good at reading.”

In addition, the girls who answered that way scored lower on math tests than either the classes’ boys or the girls who had not developed a belief in the stereotype, the researchers found.

“It’s actually surprising in a way, and not. People have had a hunch that teachers could impact the students in this way, but didn’t know how it might do so in gender-specific fashion,” Beilock said in a telephone interview.

Beilock, who studies how anxieties and stress can affect people’s performance, noted that other research has indicated that elementary education majors at the college level have the highest levels of math anxiety of any college major.

“We wanted to see how that impacted their performance,” she said.

After seeing the results, the researchers recommended that the math requirements for obtaining an elementary education teaching degree be rethought.

“If the next generation of teachers — especially elementary school teachers — is going to teach their students effectively, more care needs to be taken to develop both strong math skills and positive math attitudes in these educators,” the researchers wrote.

Janet S. Hyde, a professor in the Department of Psychology at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, called the study a “great paper, very clever research.”

“It squares with an impression I’ve had for a long time,” said Hyde, who was not part of the research team.

Hyde was lead author of a 2008 study showing women gaining on men in math skills but still lagging significantly in areas such as physics and engineering.

Girls who grow up believing females lack math skills wind up avoiding harder math classes, Hyde noted.

“It keeps girls and women out of a lot of careers, particularly high-prestige, lucrative careers in science and technology,” she said.

Beilock did note that not all of the girls in classrooms with math-anxious teachers fell prey to the stereotype, but “teachers are one source,” she said.

55 comments Add your comment

Nicole

January 27th, 2010
11:59 am

Michael the slow reader : :) hi :) what you are not knowing (or maybe you are, not sure) is that its not the math itself, but the way they are teaching the math. Some teachers can’t adapt to different styles of learning, especially if they are not versed in math. For example, when my daughter began kindergarten we explained to her teacher that she already knew her addition and subtraction. However, when it came time for them to begin subtraction..this was how the teacher explained it.:
Mrs Brown goes grocery shopping every wednesday and she always buys alot of food. Mrs. Green never goes grocery shopping and has very little food. Mrs Green is having a party and she has 15 guest coming. She needs 15 hamburgers, and only has 9. How many hamburgers does she need to get from Mrs. Brown?

Now you have to understand, this was the introduction to subtraction, this wasn’t students doing it for a while and then beginning on word problems. This was the teacher’s way of explaining what subtraction was all about. To 5 and 6 year olds. So, when my daughter came home with her first subtraction worksheet that had 10-9= all the way to 1-0….she thought she had to go through the whole Mrs. Brown, Mrs. Green thing over and over again. When I explained to her that she just needed to subtract she was totally confused as to why then the teacher wanted them to use Mrs. Brown and Mrs. Green.

Fast Forward to 3rd grade where they are only just now working on division and geometry. Do you know how they learn division now? its not your simple just memorizing multiplication and then memorizing the reverse…instead they use these cubes and you have to take the cube of 100s and break it down into 10s and ones. So..you have a situation where…us as parents learned Multiplication and division one way, but they are teaching our children a different way, and while the results are the same, the fact is…they have to know how to use the new way because its on the CRCTs that way…the problem is that us as parents have not ever learned that new way. And in my opinion? it makes no sense and takes more time and more complication, they are trying to for whatever reason over exaggerate the complications of multiplication and division…in my honest opinion? I believe if they went back to the old way of teaching the subjects…they would move through them much faster and already be on to something more. All you have to do is go to Walmart and go to the book section, by the coloring books they have educational workbooks listed by grades and subjects, pick up a 2nd and 3rd grade math one and you’ll see the cube system i’m talking about (its not for learning their places of numbers) it makes no sense.

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yo mama

March 3rd, 2010
3:16 pm

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yo mama

March 3rd, 2010
3:17 pm

yo mama

March 4th, 2010
3:21 pm

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