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Gender differences in computer attitudes: Does the school matter?

Contenu

Titre

Gender differences in computer attitudes: Does the school matter?
Computers in Human Behavior
Instructional Support for Enhancing Students' Information Problem Solving Ability

Créateur

Martina R. M. Meelissen
Marjolein Drent

Sujet

Computer attitudes
Gender Differences
Primary education

Résumé

In most western countries, the participation of females in ICT professional careers is not only low but is also still falling [Anderson, N., Lankhear, C., Timms, C., & Courtney, L. (in press). Because it’s boring, irrelevant and I don’t like computers’: Why high school girls avoid professionally-oriented ICT subjects. Computers & Education.]. Policy makers as well as researchers often assume that the interest of girls in computing and ICT-professions could be increased at school. For example, female teachers who are confident ICT-users, are expected to act as positive role models for girls. However, because most of the research on gender and computing has been focussing on the influence of none-school related factors, there is little empirical evidence that schools or teachers are able to influence girls’ attitude toward ICT. Using the data of a Dutch large-scale survey on ICT use in primary education (almost 4000 grade 5 students), this study explores the influence of both none-school related factors and school related factors on students’ computer attitude. Although the between-school variance of girls’ computer attitude is higher than that of boys’ computer attitude, multilevel analyses show that most of the variance in computer attitude is explained by none-school related student factors. Two school related factors turned out to have a small positive effect on the computer attitude of girls: a teacher-centred pedagogical approach and the computer experience of female teachers.

volume

24

numéro

3

pages

969-985

Date

May 2008

Titre abrégé

Computers in Human Behavior
Gender differences in computer attitudes

doi

10.1016/j.chb.2007.03.001

issn

0747-5632