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eridani

(51,907 posts)
Tue Mar 1, 2016, 05:34 AM Mar 2016

The remarkably different answers men and women give when asked who’s the smartest in the class


https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/wonk/wp/2016/02/16/the-remarkably-different-answers-men-and-women-give-when-asked-whos-the-smartest-in-the-class/

Anthropologist Dan Grunspan was studying the habits of undergraduates when he noticed a persistent trend: Male students assumed their male classmates knew more about course material than female students — even if the young women earned better grades.

“The pattern just screamed at me,” he said.

So, Grunspan and his colleagues at the University of Washington and elsewhere decided to quantify the degree of this gender bias in the classroom.

After surveying roughly 1,700 students across three biology courses, they found young men consistently gave each other more credit than they awarded to their just-as-savvy female classmates.

Men over-ranked their peers by three-quarters of a GPA point, according to the study, published this month in the journal PLOS ONE. In other words, if Johnny and Susie both had A's, they’d receive equal applause from female students — but Susie would register as a B student in the eyes of her male peers, and Johnny would look like a rock star.
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The remarkably different answers men and women give when asked who’s the smartest in the class (Original Post) eridani Mar 2016 OP
it's the same in the workplace Skittles Mar 2016 #1
This helps to explain... orwell Mar 2016 #2

Skittles

(153,150 posts)
1. it's the same in the workplace
Tue Mar 1, 2016, 06:07 AM
Mar 2016

hence the old saying, "Women have to be twice as good to be considered half as good."

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