Gender Comparisons in Responsiveness to Others' Evaluations in Achievement Settings

An experiment tested three possible explanations for gender differences in responsiveness to others' evaluations in achievement settings. Results replicated previous studies and showed that women and men perceived the valence of evaluative messages similarly. Further, women's privately made self-evaluations reflected the valence of others' evaluations to a greater extent than men's. Finally, women saw others' evaluations as more accurate assessments of their performance than did men and said they were more influenced by those evaluations than did men. The best explanation for the gender difference in responsiveness to others' evaluations, therefore, seems to lie in women's and men's differing construals of the informational value of those evaluations. The authors propose that different experiences girls and boys have with evaluative feedback may lead to gender differences in beliefs about the informational value of others' evaluations of our competence.

[1]  T. Roberts,et al.  Gender and the influence of evaluations on self-assessments in achievement settings. , 1991, Psychological bulletin.

[2]  R. Eisenberger,et al.  Decremental and nondecremental effects of noncontingent social approval. , 1974 .

[3]  S. Erkut Exploring sex differences in expectancy, attribution, and academic achievement , 1983 .

[4]  E. Greenberg,et al.  Attitudes toward women physicians in medical academia. , 1982, JAMA.

[5]  M. Linn,et al.  Gender differences in verbal ability: A meta-analysis. , 1988 .

[6]  B. Ilardi,et al.  Gender differences in self-system processes as rated by teachers and students , 1988 .

[7]  D. Adams,et al.  Motivational Factors Affecting fluctuations of Female Sexual Activity at Menstruation , 1981 .

[8]  Nina L. Colwill,et al.  The psychology of sex differences , 1978 .

[9]  S Arieti,et al.  The psychological organization of depression. , 1980, The American journal of psychiatry.

[10]  Nancy C.A. Roeske,et al.  Toward a New Psychology of Women , 1977 .

[11]  G. Thompson,et al.  Sex differences in the distribution of teacher approval and disapproval among sixth-grade children. , 1956 .

[12]  R. Cairns Meaning and Attention as Determinants of Social Reinforcer Effectiveness. , 1970 .

[13]  D. Hamilton,et al.  Attitudinal and Behavioral Effects of Initial Integration of White Suburban Neighborhoods , 1976 .

[14]  A. Preston,et al.  PARENTS' ATTITUDES AND BEHAVIORS AND GRADE-SCHOOL CHILDREN'S ACADEMIC ACHIEVEMENTS. , 1964, The Journal of genetic psychology.

[15]  William S. Davidson,et al.  Sex Differences in Learned Helplessness: II. The Contingencies of Evaluative Feedback in the Classroom and III. An Experimental Analysis , 1978 .

[16]  A. Kaplan The "self-in-relation": Implications for depression in women. , 1986 .

[17]  William S. Davidson,et al.  Sex differences in learned helplessness: II. The contingencies of evaluative feedback in the classroom and III. An experimental analysis. , 1978 .

[18]  Daniel N. Maltz,et al.  A Cultural Approach to Male-Female Miscommunication , 1983 .

[19]  N. Feather,et al.  Attribution of responsibility and valence of outcome in relation to initial confidence and success and failure of self and other , 1971 .

[20]  Nancy G. Lewis,et al.  Sex Role and Social Behavior in Four School Environments , 1977, The Elementary School Journal.

[21]  F. Vollmer Why do men have higher expectancy than women? , 1986 .

[22]  J. S. Shrauger,et al.  Responses to evaluation as a function of initial self-perceptions. , 1975, Psychological bulletin.

[23]  E. Lenney,et al.  Women's self-confidence in achievement settings. , 1977 .

[24]  R. Cairns,et al.  Social Reinforcement Satiation: An Outcome of Frequency or Ambiguity?. , 1972 .

[25]  J. M. Digman Principal dimensions of child personality as inferred from teachers' judgments. , 1963, Child development.

[26]  R. Carlson,et al.  Understanding Women: Implications for Personality Theory and Research , 1972 .

[27]  B. Rosen,et al.  Perceived sex differences in managerially relevant characteristics , 1978 .

[28]  J. Miller,et al.  Toward a new psychology of women , 1976 .

[29]  Jere Brophy,et al.  Teachers' communication of differential expectations for children's classroom performance: Some beha , 1970 .

[30]  C. Etaugh,et al.  Teachers' evaluations of sex-typed behaviors in children: The role of teacher sex and school setting. , 1975 .

[31]  Carol S. Dweck,et al.  Sex Differences in Learned Helplessness: I. Differential Debilitation with Peer and Adult Evaluators. , 1976 .

[32]  R. Lippitt,et al.  Classroom Social Structure As a Mental Health Problem , 1959 .

[33]  J. E. Stake,et al.  Ability Level, Evaluative Feedback, and Sex Differences in Performance Expectancy , 1983 .

[34]  A. Eagly Sex differences in influenceability. , 1978 .

[35]  S. Nolen-Hoeksema,et al.  Sex differences in reactions to evaluative feedback , 1989 .

[36]  Mary Anne Devanna Men and Women of the Corporation , 1978 .

[37]  D. Ruble,et al.  Cognitive‐Developmental Factors in Emerging Sex Differences in Achievement‐Related Expectancies , 1976 .

[38]  J. Berg,et al.  Attributional Modesty in Women. , 1981 .

[39]  A. Petersen,et al.  Adolescents' expectancies of success, self-evaluations, and attributions about performance on spatial and verbal tasks , 1982 .