Submission status
Accepted
Submission Editor
Noah Carl
Title
Diversity in STEM: Merit or Discrimination via Inaccurate Stereotype?
Abstract
Leslie et al. (2015) advocated a model where a stereotype that a given field requires brilliance
to succeed scares women away from the field, thus resulting in a self-fulfilling prophecy similar to
stereotype threat. Leslie however ignored decades of findings in stereotype accuracy research, where
stereotypes are generally known to accurately track real existing differences. As such, a simpler
explanation for the data is that the brilliance stereotype results from real existing differences in
academic ability between fields of study, which is also the variable that explains the different
distribution of demographic groups in these fields due to differences in academic abilities. Chiefly,
men’s superior mathematical ability explains why they are overrepresented in fields that require
strong mathematical talent to succeed (e.g. physics). We present an analysis which suggests that
the proportion of a field that is female is better predicted by that field’s average math GRE score
(r = −0.79) than Leslie et al.’s Brilliance stereotype (r = −0.65), and the proportion of a field
that is Black is predicted equally well by both that field’s average GRE score (r = −0.49) and
Leslie et al.’s Brilliance stereotype (r = −0.53). We show that a field’s Brilliance stereotype is
furthermore closely associated with its average GRE score (r = 0.58). Additionally, we show that
a field’s scientificiness stereotype score is predicted by its GRE math tilt (r = 0.36) while a field’s
conservativeness stereotype score is associated with the actual percent of registered Republicans in
that field (r = 0.55). We conclude that Leslie et al.’s uncritical reliance on inaccurate stereotype to
explain disparities in racial and gender diversity by academic field is deeply flawed. Finally, their
results failed to replicate among the doctorate holding public; GRE Math was a better predictor of
the percent of a field that is female than brilliance stereotype among doctorate holders (r = −0.79
vs. r = −0.39).
Keywords
intelligence,
sex differences,
stereotype,
female,
brilliance,
male
Reviewer 1: Accept
Reviewer 2: Accept