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Porträttfoto

Jonas Helgertz

Vice Dean Research, Associate Professor

Porträttfoto

Sex differences in academic strengths contribute to gender segregation in education and occupation : A longitudinal examination of 167,776 individuals

Author

  • S. Dekhtyar
  • D. Weber
  • J. Helgertz
  • A. Herlitz

Summary, in English

We investigate whether sex differences in academic strengths have an impact on society by affecting the career choices made by women and men. By longitudinally following 167,776 individuals from Sweden, we found that (1) more 16-year old girls than boys had a relative strength in verbal/language school subjects than in technical/numerical ones, whereas more boys than girls had a relative strength in technical/numerical school subjects than in verbal/language ones; (2) when these girls and boys attained higher education and entered employment, they largely pursued careers cognitively matching their initial academic strengths; (3) while individuals generally made career choices in line with their academic strengths, men and women matched on these strengths nevertheless made rather distinct career choices, in particular women with technical/numerical strengths who largely avoided careers demanding these skills; (4) sex distribution in education and occupation was related to the extent these career paths were perceived as either numerically or verbally demanding. Taken together, although gender segregation is to some extent associated with individuals making choices matching their academic strengths, the vast discrepancies in career outcomes between men and women can be only in part attributed to sex differences in academic performance.

Department/s

  • Department of Economic History

Publishing year

2018

Language

English

Pages

84-92

Publication/Series

Intelligence

Volume

67

Document type

Journal article

Publisher

Elsevier

Topic

  • Gender Studies

Status

Published

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 0160-2896