Discussion paper

DP19432 Gender Role Models in Education

Using Greek administrative data, we examine the impact of being randomly assigned to a classroom with a same-gender top-performing student on both short- and long-term educational outcomes. These top performers are tasked with keeping classroom attendance records, which positions them as role models. Both male and female students are influenced by the performance of a same-gender top performer and experience both spillover and conformist effects. However, only female students show significant positive effects from the presence of a same-gender role model. Specifically, female students improved their science test scores by 4 percent of a standard deviation, were 2.5 percentage points more likely to choose a STEM track, and were more likely to apply for and enrol in a STEM university degree 3 years later. These effects were most pronounced in lower-income neighbourhoods. Our findings suggest that same-gender peer role models could reduce the underrepresentation of qualified females in STEM fields by approximately 3 percent. We further validate our findings through a lab-in-the-field experiment, in which students rated the perceived influence of randomized hypothetical top-performer profiles. The results suggest that the influence of same-gender top performers is primarily driven by exposure-related factors (increased perception of distinction feasibility and self-confidence) rather than direct interactions.

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Citation

Goulas, S, B Gunawardena, R Megalokonomou and Y Zenou (2024), ‘DP19432 Gender Role Models in Education‘, CEPR Discussion Paper No. 19432. CEPR Press, Paris & London. https://cepr.org/publications/dp19432