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Kids See More Women in Science than Five Decades Ago


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A woman scientist.

Researchers at Northwestern University found children have greater awareness of women in science than children did 50 years ago.

Credit: Curtis Memorial Library

Fifty years back, asking a child to draw a scientist would have resulted in their drawing a male scientist 99% of the time. A same exercise given to children today would yield at least one third of the pictures of women scientists, finds a new heartening study.

The study from Northwestern University was looking at gender stereotypes in science over years and how these develop in children. It was published in the latest issue of the journal Child Development.

The study looked at 78 different studies that included over 20000 children over a span of several years between 1966 and 2016. With time, they noted that kids now tend to depict more women scientists than they did before. David I. Miller, lead scientist from Northwestern University and a PhD candidate in psychology explained that the reason behind this was the fact that more women were being represented in science and also more women scientists were depicted in popular culture and the media for the kids to pick up.

He explains that since the 1960's the percentage of women scientists in the United States "rose from 28% to 49% in biological science, 8% to 35% in chemistry, and 3% to 11% in physics and astronomy." This was part of the contributor to this trend. Another part was that more TV shows, movies and magazines and even dolls portray female scientists. Miller said there were movies like "Hidden figures" that showed black female scientists/mathematicians at NASA. These and other movies and magazines are what children see and what they pick up, he said.

The team of researchers looked at research between 1966 and 1977 where 5000 elementary school students were asked to draw a scientist and of all those students 28 children (all of them girls) drew a female scientist. This makes for less than 1 percent of all kids. The next span of time that they studied was between 1985 and 2016. Now they found that 28 percent of the kids drew female scientists. This trend however was seen to reverse as the child grew older. By the time the kids reached high school, they tended to draw men again as scientists. Authors write, "During elementary and middle school, the tendency to draw male scientists increased rapidly with age… When children started high school at ages 14-15, they drew more male than female scientists by an average ratio of 4 to 1."

 

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