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Preferences,constraints, and the process of sex segregation in college majors: A choice analysis
Institution:1. School of Economics and Business Administration, Ruppin Academic Center, and Department of Economics, Ben Gurion University, Israel;2. Melbourne Institute of Applied Economic and Social Research, The University of Melbourne, Australia;1. Department of Economics, Maastricht University, 6200 MD Maastricht, the Netherlands;2. Research Centre for Education and the Labour Market (ROA), Maastricht University, 6200 MD Maastricht, the Netherlands;3. Statistics Netherlands,6401 CZ Heerlen, the Netherlands
Abstract:The persistence of horizontal sex segregation in higher education continues to puzzle social scientists. To help resolve this puzzle, we analyze a sample of college entrants in Germany with a discrete choice design that allows for social learning from the experiences of others. We make at least two contributions to the state of research. First, we test whether essentialist gender stereotypes affect major selection mostly through internalization or rather as external constraints that high school graduates adapt their behavior to. Empirically, we find that internalized vocational interests better explain gendered major choices than conformance with friends' and parents' expectations does. Second, we scrutinize whether segregation results from women's anticipation of gendered family roles or from their anticipation of sex-based discrimination, but we find no evidence for either of these hypotheses. As in most previous studies, differences in mathematics achievement fail to explain gendered patterns of selection into college majors.
Keywords:Sex segregation  Higher education  Vocational preferences  Norms  Gender
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