Examining Gender Differences in Written Assessment Tasks in Biology: A Case Study of Evolutionary Explanations

Author:

Federer Meghan Rector1,Nehm Ross H.2,Pearl Dennis K.3

Affiliation:

1. *Department of Teaching and Learning, Ohio State University, Columbus, OH 43210

2. Center for Science and Mathematics Education, Stony Brook University, Stony Brook, NY 11794

3. Department of Statistics, Ohio State University, Columbus, OH 43210

Abstract

Understanding sources of performance bias in science assessment provides important insights into whether science curricula and/or assessments are valid representations of student abilities. Research investigating assessment bias due to factors such as instrument structure, participant characteristics, and item types are well documented across a variety of disciplines. However, the relationships among these factors are unclear for tasks evaluating understanding through performance on scientific practices, such as explanation. Using item-response theory (Rasch analysis), we evaluated differences in performance by gender on a constructed-response (CR) assessment about natural selection (ACORNS). Three isomorphic item strands of the instrument were administered to a sample of undergraduate biology majors and nonmajors (Group 1: n = 662 [female = 51.6%]; G2: n = 184 [female = 55.9%]; G3: n = 642 [female = 55.1%]). Overall, our results identify relationships between item features and performance by gender; however, the effect is small in the majority of cases, suggesting that males and females tend to incorporate similar concepts into their CR explanations. These results highlight the importance of examining gender effects on performance in written assessment tasks in biology.

Publisher

American Society for Cell Biology (ASCB)

Subject

General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,Education

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3. AI and formative assessment: The train has left the station;Journal of Research in Science Teaching;2023-06-22

4. Using Avida-ED Digital Organisms to Teach Evolution and Natural Selection Benefits a Broad Student Population;The American Biology Teacher;2023-02-01

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