Home > Research > Publications & Outputs > Between gendered walls

Electronic data

  • Between_Gendered_Walls

    Accepted author manuscript, 642 KB, PDF document

    Available under license: CC BY: Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License

Links

Text available via DOI:

View graph of relations

Between gendered walls: Assessing the impact of single-sex and co-education on student achievement, self-confidence, and communication skills

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Published

Standard

Between gendered walls: Assessing the impact of single-sex and co-education on student achievement, self-confidence, and communication skills. / Karadağ, E.; Ş. Koza, Çiftçi; Cin, Melis.
In: Women's Studies International Forum, Vol. 107, 103003, 30.11.2024.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

APA

Vancouver

Karadağ E, Ş. Koza Ç, Cin M. Between gendered walls: Assessing the impact of single-sex and co-education on student achievement, self-confidence, and communication skills. Women's Studies International Forum. 2024 Nov 30;107:103003. Epub 2024 Oct 11. doi: 10.1016/j.wsif.2024.103003

Author

Bibtex

@article{f14140262b784ae59bad10bbf94edb89,
title = "Between gendered walls: Assessing the impact of single-sex and co-education on student achievement, self-confidence, and communication skills",
abstract = "In this study, we investigate the impact of educational environments characterized by single-sex and co-educational settings on students' academic performance, communication skills, and self-confidence. The analysis encompassed 677 research articles, comprising 798 effect sizes, and involving a cumulative sample size of 1,179,558 participants. The existing literature presents inconclusive results regarding the effects of co-education on students' overall educational well-being. This research contributes to this ongoing debate by examining the impact of educational settings, specifically co-educational and single-sex environments, on academic achievement, communication skills, and self-confidence. Our findings indicate that the type of educational setting, whether co-educational or single-sex, does not exert a statistically significant impact on academic achievement, except in countries with a low educational attainment index, where students in co-educational settings achieve higher. Additionally, students in co-educational settings demonstrate better communication skills and higher self-confidence than their counterparts in single-sex schools. These results challenge the prevailing notion that single-sex education enhances girls' achievement and self-confidence while providing a safer environment for self-expression. In contrast, our data suggest that gender-segregated schools may not be the most conducive environments for girls to thrive both socially and academically, potentially due to the promotion of passive femininity within such institutions.",
author = "E. Karadağ and {{\c S}. Koza}, {\c C}ift{\c c}i and Melis Cin",
year = "2024",
month = nov,
day = "30",
doi = "10.1016/j.wsif.2024.103003",
language = "English",
volume = "107",
journal = "Women's Studies International Forum",
issn = "0277-5395",
publisher = "Elsevier Limited",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Between gendered walls

T2 - Assessing the impact of single-sex and co-education on student achievement, self-confidence, and communication skills

AU - Karadağ, E.

AU - Ş. Koza, Çiftçi

AU - Cin, Melis

PY - 2024/11/30

Y1 - 2024/11/30

N2 - In this study, we investigate the impact of educational environments characterized by single-sex and co-educational settings on students' academic performance, communication skills, and self-confidence. The analysis encompassed 677 research articles, comprising 798 effect sizes, and involving a cumulative sample size of 1,179,558 participants. The existing literature presents inconclusive results regarding the effects of co-education on students' overall educational well-being. This research contributes to this ongoing debate by examining the impact of educational settings, specifically co-educational and single-sex environments, on academic achievement, communication skills, and self-confidence. Our findings indicate that the type of educational setting, whether co-educational or single-sex, does not exert a statistically significant impact on academic achievement, except in countries with a low educational attainment index, where students in co-educational settings achieve higher. Additionally, students in co-educational settings demonstrate better communication skills and higher self-confidence than their counterparts in single-sex schools. These results challenge the prevailing notion that single-sex education enhances girls' achievement and self-confidence while providing a safer environment for self-expression. In contrast, our data suggest that gender-segregated schools may not be the most conducive environments for girls to thrive both socially and academically, potentially due to the promotion of passive femininity within such institutions.

AB - In this study, we investigate the impact of educational environments characterized by single-sex and co-educational settings on students' academic performance, communication skills, and self-confidence. The analysis encompassed 677 research articles, comprising 798 effect sizes, and involving a cumulative sample size of 1,179,558 participants. The existing literature presents inconclusive results regarding the effects of co-education on students' overall educational well-being. This research contributes to this ongoing debate by examining the impact of educational settings, specifically co-educational and single-sex environments, on academic achievement, communication skills, and self-confidence. Our findings indicate that the type of educational setting, whether co-educational or single-sex, does not exert a statistically significant impact on academic achievement, except in countries with a low educational attainment index, where students in co-educational settings achieve higher. Additionally, students in co-educational settings demonstrate better communication skills and higher self-confidence than their counterparts in single-sex schools. These results challenge the prevailing notion that single-sex education enhances girls' achievement and self-confidence while providing a safer environment for self-expression. In contrast, our data suggest that gender-segregated schools may not be the most conducive environments for girls to thrive both socially and academically, potentially due to the promotion of passive femininity within such institutions.

U2 - 10.1016/j.wsif.2024.103003

DO - 10.1016/j.wsif.2024.103003

M3 - Journal article

VL - 107

JO - Women's Studies International Forum

JF - Women's Studies International Forum

SN - 0277-5395

M1 - 103003

ER -