journal :: Baram-Tsabari, A., Sethi, R. J., Bry, L., Yarden, A. (2009). Asking scientists: A decade of questions analyzed by age, gender, and country. Science Education, 93(1), 131-160.

last updated: 2009-01-08 11:31:23

Abstract

Nearly 79,000 questions sent to an Internet-based Ask-A-Scientist site during the last decade were analyzed according to the surfer's age, gender, country of origin, and the year the question was sent. The sample demonstrated a surprising dominance of female contributions among K-12 students (although this dominance did not carry over to the full sample), where offline situations are commonly characterized by males' greater interest in science. This female enthusiasm was observed in different countries, and had no correlation to the level of gender equity in those countries. This suggests that the Internet as a free-choice science-learning environment plays a potentially empowering and democratic role that is especially relevant to populations that are traditionally deprived of equal opportunities in learning formal science. However, worldwide, girls' interest in submitting questions to scientists dropped as they grew older relative to the boys' interest, and the stereotypically gendered science interests persisted in this environment as well. The strengths and limitations of using free-choice Web-based data sources for studying youth interest in science are discussed.

DOI 10.1002/sce.20284
Associated Grant Israel Science Foundation #605/06

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Authors
  • No_image_small_mask_ffffff Ayelet Baram-Tsabari
  • No_image_small_mask_ffffff Ricky Sethi
  • No_image_small_mask_ffffff Lynn Bry
  • No_image_small_mask_ffffff Anat Yarden

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Target Audience

Women/Girls
Youth (13-18)
Adults (19-54)

Project Type

Research
Website

Project Setting

Internet

Subject Area

General Science
Computer Science
Robotics
Science Education
Earth Sciences
Social & Behavioral Sciences
Environment/Ecology
History of Science
Space Sciences
Evolution
Meteorology
Nanotechnology
Neuroscience
Oceanography
Paleontology
Art & Science
Biology/Life Sciences
Physics
Engineering
Chemistry & Material Sciences