Résumé
We provide experimental evidence of teacher-to-student transmission of gender attitudes in Pakistan. We randomly show teachers a pro-women’s rights visual narrative. Treated teachers increase their and students’ support for women’s rights, unbiasedness in gender IATs, and willingness to petition parliament for greater gender equality. Students improve coordination and cooperation with the opposite gender. Effects are larger when teachers teach a gender-rights curriculum. Mathematics achievement increases for classrooms assigned to form mixed-gender study groups treated with an intense program (visual narrative and curriculum), while no significant effects appear in same-sex study groups. Gender attitudes are transmissible, and cooperation improves student outcomes
Mots-clés
teachers; attitudes; IATs; gender; inter-gender contact;
Codes JEL
- I24: Education and Inequality
- I28: Government Policy
- O12: Microeconomic Analyses of Economic Development
- C93: Field Experiments
Référence
Sultan Mehmood, Shaheen Naseer et Daniel L. Chen, « Transmitting Rights: Effective Cooperation, Inter-Gender Contact, and Student Achievement », TSE Working Paper, 2024.
Voir aussi
Publié dans
TSE Working Paper, 2024