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| Title: | "Mechanisms and Impacts of Gender Peer Effects at School" |
| Authors: | Lavy, Victor Schlosser, Analía |
| Issue Date: | Jul-2007 |
| Series/Report no.: | 23 |
| Abstract: | The consequences of gender social and learning interactions in the classroom are of interest to parents, policy
makers, and researchers. However, little is known about gender peer effects in schools and their operational channels. In this
paper, we estimate the effects of classroom gender composition on scholastic achievements of boys and girls in Israeli
primary, middle, and high schools and identify the mechanisms through which these peer effects are enacted. In particular,
we examine whether gender peer effects work through changes in classroom learning and social environment, teaching
methods and pedagogy, and teacher burnout and work satisfaction. In assessing these mechanisms, we distinguish between
the effects generated by changes in the classroom gender composition and those generated by changes in the behavior of
students. To control for potentially confounding unobserved characteristics of schools and students that might be correlated
with peer gender composition, we rely on idiosyncratic variations in gender composition across adjacent cohorts within the
same schools. Our results suggest that an increase in the proportion of girls leads to a significant improvement in students’
cognitive outcomes. The estimated effects are of similar magnitude for boys and girls. As important mechanisms, we find
that a higher proportion of female peers lowers the level of classroom disruption and violence, improves inter-student and
student-teacher relationships as well as students’ overall satisfaction in school, and lessens teachers’ fatigue. We find,
however, no effect on individual behavior of boys or girls, which suggests that the positive peer effects of girls on classroom
environment are due mostly to compositional change, namely due to having more girls in the classroom and not due to
improved behavior of peers. |
| URI: | http://arks.princeton.edu/ark:/88435/dsp01ks65hc24r |
| Appears in Collections: | ERS Working Papers
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