What Are the Gender Differences in Mathematics Achievement?
           Exhibit 
            1.5 presents average mathematics achievement separately for girls 
            and boys for each of the participating entities, as well as the difference 
            between the means, in increasing order of the difference. The gender 
            difference for each entity is shown by a bar indicating the amount 
            of the difference, whether its direction favored girls or boys, and 
            whether it is statistically significant (a darkened bar).
           It is good news that in mathematics at the eighth grade, the TIMSS 
            1999 Benchmarking Study shows relatively equivalent average achievement 
            for girls and boys in each of the Benchmarking jurisdictions. The 
            United States as well as a number of other countries around the world 
            appear to be making progress towards gender equity in mathematics 
            education. On average across all TIMSS 1999 countries, there was a 
            modest but significant difference favoring boys, although this varied 
            considerably from country to country. The only countries with differences 
            large enough to be statistically significant were Israel, the Czech 
            Republic, Iran, and Tunisia.
           Although achievement differences between the 
            genders are becoming smaller in mathematics, research indicates that 
            they still exist in those areas involving the most complex mathematical 
            tasks, particularly as students progress to middle and secondary schools.(8) 
            Thus, Exhibit 
            1.6 provides information on gender differences in mathematics 
            achievement among students with high performance compared with those 
            in the middle of the achievement distribution. For each entity, score 
            levels were computed for the highest-scoring 25 percent of students, 
            called the upper quarter level, and for the highest-scoring 50 percent, 
            called the median level. The percentages of girls and boys in each 
            entity reaching each of the two levels were computed. For equitable 
            performance, 25 percent each of girls and boys should have reached 
            the upper quarter level, and 50 percent the median level.
           On average across countries, 23 percent of girls compared with 27 
            percent of boys reached the upper quarter level, and 49 percent of 
            girls compared with 51 percent of boys reached the median level. These 
            gender differences, although small, were statistically significant. 
            In all but four countries, however, the percentages reaching the upper 
            quarter and median levels were not significantly different, indicating 
            that gender equity exists in most countries at these levels. Even 
            though the four countries with significant differences did include 
            the United States (as well as Israel, the Philippines, and Tunisia), 
            this was not reflected in the results for the Benchmarking jurisdictions. 
            Michigan was the only Benchmarking jurisdiction to show a significant 
            gender difference favoring males among high-performing students.