Summer 2017: Oxford University extended exam times for maths and computer sciences undergraduates to preferentially boost female students’ grades. Initiative “successful”, but “there is clearly more progress to be made.”

A piece by two female journalists (Sian Griffiths and Julie Henry) in today’s Sunday Times. The emphases are ours.

Oxford University students were given longer to complete exams for the first time last summer in an effort to help women achieve higher grades.

Extended durations for exams have been introduced by the mathematical and computer sciences departments in response to a growing gender gap, especially in final year exams.

Undergraduates were given 105 minutes to complete papers rather than 90 minutes “with no change in length or difficulty of questions”. The university said women did better as a result.

It is hoped the change will reduce “the undue effects of time pressure”, which is thought to have more of an impact on female students than male ones.

Helen Zha, a member of Oxford’s Mirzakhani Society for women studying maths, said female undergraduates were more likely to experience problem-solving difficulties when male students were in the same room.

She said: “One thing I’ve heard and felt [J4MB: Heard AND felt? This trumps peer-reviewed scientific research, any day.] is that where there are more males in the room, women will . . . perform worse than they would otherwise.” [J4MB: Hmm, what would be the “solution” to this “problem”? Of course. Give women higher grades when they’re forced to sit exams in the same room as men. Sorted. And later, in the workplace environment? Give women more money if they have to work with men, or segregate the sexes. Sorted.]

The change to maths exams follows a decision by the history department to replace a traditional exam with a “take-home” paper, also done in an effort to try to boost results for female students. The move was criticised as “sexist” by some academics for implying that women were the “weaker sex”.

Of all subjects at Oxford, maths has one of the biggest gender variations in results. Just seven female maths finalists achieved firsts last year compared with 45 men. This means that 21.2% of women on the course graduated with first-class degrees against 45.5% of men.

Maths dons at Oxford looked at whether “shorter exams may particularly disadvantage women” and pointed out that exams were not supposed to be “a time trial”.

Internal documents obtained under freedom of information laws show the decision to extend the time of examination papers “with no change in length or difficulty of questions” had the intention of reducing the disadvantage to “students most sensitive to time pressure and stress”.

The document said: “It is thought that this might mitigate the . . . gender gap that has arisen in recent years, [J4MB: This simply begs the question of why the gap has arisen in recent years, and regardless of the answer to that question, why it’s a problem, other than when viewed through a feminist ideological lens] and in any case the exam should be a demonstration of mathematical understanding and not a time trial.”

It is widely accepted that there are no inherent gender differences in mathematical ability or intelligence. [J4MB: A truly absurd “argument from assertion”. In which cohort of people is that “generally accepted”? Obese one-legged Spanish feminists with blue hair? From an earlier paragraph: “Of all subjects at Oxford, maths has one of the biggest gender variations in results.”] However, Sarah Hart, a maths professor at Birkbeck, University of London and an Oxford graduate, said she had noticed a tendency for female students to double-check their answers in their heads [J4MB: In their heads? Probably the best option, given possible alternatives e.g. in their legs] before suggesting them to class. [J4MB: Two points. Double-checking is time wasting, why should exams be extended to accommodate it? And it’s suggestive of anxiety and/or narcissism – “before suggesting them to class” – both of which are qualities likely to be problematical in the workplace, and more generally in the “real world”.]

Male students were quicker to answer questions, she said, but were more likely to get the answer wrong. [J4MB: Male students’ higher grades suggest they were also more likely to get the answer RIGHT.]

She added: “I am a big fan of giving people as much time as they want to do exams. [J4MB: Because that’s how people will later compete in the real world, amirite?] After all, you never have to prove theorems against the clock in real life so mere speed is not what we want to assess.”

Oxford University said: “The departments are not drawing any firm conclusions from the first year’s data. [J4MB: Beyond confirming yet again that there’s no limit to how far female privileging and anti-meritocratic initiatives can be pushed in academia, as elsewhere, without effective opposition] However, third-year female students did show an improvement on their second-year marks. While there is clearly more progress to be made, the departments will continue with the longer papers for the foreseeable future, monitoring the exam data carefully.” [J4MB: With the ultimate objective being…?]

@siangriffiths6

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8 thoughts on “Summer 2017: Oxford University extended exam times for maths and computer sciences undergraduates to preferentially boost female students’ grades. Initiative “successful”, but “there is clearly more progress to be made.”

  1. Women can do anything a man can do except pass an exam within the same time limit, and even though they’ve been allowed longer to sit the exam it still isn’t long enough. Is that what they’re saying?

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    • But men getting higher grades here (hardly a thing nationally) is a sign of sexism because women are obviously too delicate to compete when a man is in the room.

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  2. [J4MB: Male students’ higher grades suggest they were also more likely to get the answer RIGHT.]

    Mansplaining* and logic in the same sentence, and no trigger warning. Double plus ungood – lots of melted snowflakes.

    I’ve added this word to my browser dictionary.

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  3. So the logic of this is that they believe (feel) women cannot work under pressure and can’t think properly in the mere presence of men. That they are less confident in their abilities and unwilling to risk negative comments by getting an answer wrong. And take longer to do the same tasks.
    Yet would shout “misogyny” if this was repeated back to them………….. And this is one of our top Universities.

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  4. Yet in Burke v College of Law and Another [2011]UKEAT 0301/10/0803 a case involving disability, and therefore an area in which there is a positive duty to make adjustments to secure a level playing field (though purely behavioural issues should IMHO cease to be regarded as a disability) it was confirmed that there was no duty to adjust a competency standard for a disabled person. It should not be adjusted for these pitiful little snowflakes; they are obviously so weak they need to be employed in a shop or typing pool, rather than going to Oxford.
    You can find the case on http://www.bailii.org.

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  5. “….While there is clearly more progress to be made, the….”
    Yes, there is clearly more ‘progress’ to be made which I take as flimsy code for more concessions and more corruption of the value of degrees, and the undermining of western scientific education which is, after all, the purpose of modern feMarxism, following the failure of the original Economic Marxist scam of setting the ‘workers’ against the ‘bourgeoisie’ and which has been replaced by the Cultural Scam of setting women against men, and men against women.

    I call this aspect of that, ‘The Wimbledon Effect’, i.e. paying the same money for less work, or in other words, paying men less money pro rata than women.

    The obvious conclusion of this approach is to not test Women (only) at all in which case they will ALL ‘pass’.

    Job done, quota met, and we can all go home and have our nice tea can’t we?

    Except NO, we can’t, because the job is NOT done.

    FeMarxism requires there to be Constant Conflict as it’s main tacticial technique, and another manufactured grievance will inevitably arise no matter how flimsy, null and void it is.

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  6. Setting aside the mountain of Fail and teeth grinding stupidly that is this article, can anyone explain to me why (a) we should give a crap about these women’s problems (this is Oxford, if you can’t hack it, someone else will step forwards) and (b) why this is an issue, given that across the world men’s scores are lower across all kinds of subjects. Women are hardly being driven out of higher education, and, were the scores to be reversed, I am sure we would be inundated with smug articles about how stupid men are when compared with women at Oxford. So, perhaps these girls should just knuckle down and… pass the exam?

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  7. I’m a disabled person and have been all my life. when it came to exams they were always made aware of my condition. I never asked for special privileges( I’m sick of people patronizing me like their lost cause). I only asked( as I always do in safety issue places like planes) for awareness of who I am so they understand if I didn’t respond or act in an expected way.

    if these women really feel they couldn’t cope with the pressure of time or the presence of other different to yourself, then come and live my life( my whole life) and then complain for special dispensation.

    oxbridge is meant to be a tough competitive place with high standards and responsibilities. Now its seem to be a snowflake growbag.

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