The Influence of the Teacher’s Sex on High School Students’ Engagement and Achievement in Science

Authors

  • Eyvind Elstad University of Oslo
  • Are Turmo University of Oslo

Keywords:

Teachers’ gender, teacher behaviour, student engagement, classroom interaction, student-teacher relationship, teacher influence, science

Abstract

The purpose was to explore relationships between teachers’&sex and a range of variables relating to adolescent students’ perceptions of their classroom engagement, quality of teaching and responses to their teacher, and their own achievements in science. A cross-sectional survey of 798 Norwegian students showed the potential influence of the sex of the teacher on engagement, motivation, volition, and learning outcomes which was estimated after they had known their teachers for six months. The conclusion is that there are interesting interactions between the sex of students and the sex of science teachers in high school along some dimensions. The statistical significant findings support the sex-stereotypic notion, while there are also tendencies supporting the sex-opposite notion. However, in most instances significant interactions between teacher sex and student sex are not established. &The conclusion is more nuanced than in earlier studies. Study shortcomings and implications for the practice& of future research are discussed.

Author Biographies

  • Eyvind Elstad, University of Oslo

    Professor, Department of Teacher Education and School Development

  • Are Turmo, University of Oslo
    Assistant Professor, Department of&Teacher Education and School Development
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Published

06-08-2009

Issue

Section

Research and theoretical papers

How to Cite

The Influence of the Teacher’s Sex on High School Students’ Engagement and Achievement in Science. (2009). International Journal of Gender, Science and Technology, 1(1). https://genderandset.open.ac.uk/index.php/genderandset/article/view/41