Publication | Closed Access
University Students from Single-Sex and Coeducational High Schools: Differences In Majors and Attitudes at a Catholic University
27
Citations
21
References
2007
Year
HomosexualityEducationSocial StratificationUniversity StudentsSocial SciencesGender DisparityStudent RetentionCatholic UniversityStudent CultureGender StudiesUniversity Student RetentionStudent SuccessCoeducational High SchoolsHigher EducationCollege MajorsSecondary EducationSociologyArchival StudyCoeducational Catholic UniversitySexual Orientation
We conducted an archival study at a coeducational Catholic university to test the proposition that single-sex secondary education predicts lasting differences in college majors. Men from single-sex schools were more likely to both declare and graduate in gender-neutral majors than those from coeducational schools. Women from single-sex schools were more likely to declare gender-neutral majors, but were not different from their coeducated peers at graduation. A second study was conducted with a sample of first-year students to examine the correspondence between egalitarian attitudes, single-sex secondary education, and major choice. Egalitarianism was higher in students in nontraditional majors, but did not correspond in expected ways with single-sex education. Men from single-sex schools were less likely to hold egalitarian attitudes about gender roles, whereas women from single-sex and coeducational high schools did not differ in egalitarianism. Taken together, our results raise questions about the potential of single-sex high schools to reduce gender-stratification in professions.
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