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  1. Who Speaks and Who Listens: Revisiting the Chilly Climate in College Classrooms.Janice M. Mccabe & Jennifer J. Lee - 2021 - Gender and Society 35 (1):32-60.
    Almost 40 years ago, scholars identified a “chilly climate” for women in college classrooms. To examine whether contemporary college classrooms remain “chilly,” we conducted quantitative and qualitative observations in nine classrooms across multiple disciplines at one elite institution. Based on these 95 hours of observation, we discuss three gendered classroom participation patterns. First, on average, men students occupy classroom sonic space 1.6 times as often as women. Men also speak out without raising hands, interrupt, and engage in prolonged conversations during (...)
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  • Educational Outcomes Of Gender-Diverse Youth: A National Population-Based Study.Jennifer Pearson, Dara Shifrer & Lindsey Wilkinson - 2021 - Gender and Society 35 (5):806-837.
    Despite the growing population of youth identifying with a transgender or nonbinary gender identity, research on gender-diverse individuals’ educational outcomes is limited. This study takes advantage of the first nationally representative, population-based data set that includes measures of gender identity and educational outcomes: the High School Longitudinal Study of 2009. Using minority stress and structural symbolic interactionist frameworks, we examine the association between gender identity and high school and college educational outcomes. We compare the educational outcomes of gender-diverse youth—binary transgender, (...)
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  • “They Always Call Me an Investment”: Gendered Familism and Latino/a College Pathways.Sarah M. Ovink - 2014 - Gender and Society 28 (2):265-288.
    In the past 20 years, Latinas have begun to outperform Latinos in high school completion and college enrollment, tracking the overall “gender reversal” in college attainment that favors women. Few studies have examined what factors contribute to Latinas’ increasing educational success. This article focuses on gender differences in college-going behavior among a cohort of 50 Latino/a college aspirants in the San Francisco East Bay Area. Through 136 longitudinal interviews, I examine trends in Latinos/as’ postsecondary pathways and life course decisions over (...)
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  • Mechanism or Myth?: Family Plans and the Reproduction of Occupational Gender Segregation.Erin A. Cech - 2016 - Gender and Society 30 (2):265-288.
    Occupational gender segregation is an obdurate feature of gender inequality in the United States The “family plans thesis”—the belief that women and men deliberately adjust their early career decisions to accommodate their anticipated family roles—is a common theoretical explanation of this segregation in the social sciences and in popular discourse. But do young men and women actually account for their family plans when making occupational choices? This article investigates the validity of this central mechanism of the family plans thesis. Drawing (...)
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  • School as a Hostile Institution: How Black and Immigrant Girls of Color Experience the Classroom.Ranita Ray - 2022 - Gender and Society 36 (1):88-111.
    The paradox of girls’ academic gains over boys, across race and class, has perplexed scholars for the last few decades. Through a 3-year longitudinal ethnography of two predominantly economically marginalized and racially minoritized schools, I contend that while racially marginalized girls may have made academic gains, school is nevertheless a hostile institution for them. Focusing on the case of Black girls and recent immigrant girls of color, I identify three specific ways in which school functions as hostile institution for them: (...)
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  • Perceived mathematical ability under challenge: a longitudinal perspective on sex segregation among STEM degree fields.Samantha Nix, Lara Perez-Felkner & Kirby Thomas - 2015 - Frontiers in Psychology 6.
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  • Gendered Pathways: How Mathematics Ability Beliefs Shape Secondary and Postsecondary Course and Degree Field Choices.Lara Perez-Felkner, Samantha Nix & Kirby Thomas - 2017 - Frontiers in Psychology 8.
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  • Moving Beyond Cis-terhood: Determining Gender through Transgender Admittance Policies at U.S. Women’s Colleges.David L. Brunsma & Megan Nanney - 2017 - Gender and Society 31 (2):145-170.
    In 2013, controversy sparked student protests, campus debates, and national attention when Smith College denied admittance to Calliope Wong—a trans woman. Since then, eight women’s colleges have revised their admissions policies to include different gender identities such as trans women and genderqueer people. Given the recency of such policies, we interrogate the ways the category “woman” is determined through certain alignments of biology-, legal-, and identity-based criteria. Through an inductive analysis of administrative scripts appearing both in student newspapers and in (...)
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