选择大学专业时的权衡

Trade-offs in choosing a college major

Economic Theory · 2025
被引 0
人大 A-ABS 3

中文导读

构建理论模型解释大学专业选择中的性别差异,认为学生对高收入专业的偏好使其更能容忍低分数,从而解释了女性在STEM等量化领域代表性不足的现象。

Abstract

Abstract Recent empirical analyses reveal substantial gender differences in the choices of and persistence in college majors, most prominently in significant underrepresentation of women in STEM and other quantitatively oriented fields. Such majors also happen to lead to relatively more lucrative careers; they also tend to feature lower grades. Empirical studies offer competing explanations for this gender imbalance. Some suggest that female students tend to generally exhibit stronger aversion to low grades, hence to low-grading disciplines. Competing evidence suggests that these gender biases are driven by differences in preferences toward pecuniary and non-pecuniary aspects of post-college careers. I develop a theoretical model, which proposes a foundation for the latter explanation as a predominant one and reconciles it with the empirical evidence of gender differences in responsiveness to grades. The paper argues that a student’s responsiveness to grades, in choosing and persisting in a major, is field-specific and is the stronger, the weaker the student’s preferential attachment to it. A key implication is that students who attach high importance to pecuniary benefits of post-college careers will be more tolerant toward inferior grades in their decisions to persist in more lucrative majors. It further explains why such students also tend to drop out of college at higher rates rather than switch to a less lucrative major.

大学专业选择性别差异STEM专业成绩敏感性