Asset Publisher

Article

Uses, skills and attitude in digital technology fields. Does a gender gap exist among Spanish secondary-school students?

Mireia Usart, Carme Grimalt-Alvaro y Luz Mayra Niño-Cortés, Universitat Rovira i Virgili (URV)
Project selected in the Social Research Call 2019 (LCF/PR/SR19/52540001)

It is said that a digital gender gap exists from childhood, but its actual reach is unknown; in other words, in which aspects specifically it materialises during the different educational phases. The digital gender divide goes beyond mere differences in the use of digital technology. It is also measured with respect to differing perceptions and attitudes regarding the use of technology between males and females. For this reason, it is necessary to know in which specific aspects differences exist – especially in those phases in which students are developing their identity – as well as to study their evolution over the course of secondary education. This study shows that girls recognise their dependency on technology to a larger degree than boys, but they are more aware of aspects related with cybersecurity, whereas boys consider themselves much more skilled than girls in technical and communication aspects, and they hold a slightly more positive attitude towards technology. These differences increase as secondary education stages advance, being more significant in the sixth form. The results highlight the need to improve the personalisation of learning with a view to reducing the gender differences observed: on the one hand, accompanying boys in the development of their technical-ethical competences; on the other, working specifically with girls on aspects of dependency and technology and communication skills, as well as helping them to positivise their attitude with regard to digital technology.
Key points
  • 1
       Although in Spain a digital gender gap exists, this is not measured in terms of differences in the use of digital technology, but differences in digital skills – technoethical, information, technology, multimedia and communication skills – and in attitude towards them.
  • 2
       In the two genders, both the perceived use of technology and perceived digital competence are situated at a medium-high level and increase significantly as students progress through the key stages of secondary education. However, technoethical aspects worsen with each key stage. With respect to attitude, on average it is positive (3.89/5), but in the sixth form it worsens.
  • 3
       As for gender differences, girls recognise their dependence on mobile devices and the internet to a larger extent than boys, as well as a higher real use in both, in the personal and the academic sphere alike. All in all, the differences are only significant in the sixth form and with respect to dependency, not to perceived use.
  • 4
       On analysing in detail the diverse skills that make up digital competence, the existence is confirmed of a significant advantage in favour of girls with respect to technoethical skills; specifically, in aspects related to cybersecurity. This gap gradually increases, until it reaches 6 percentage points in the sixth form.
  • 5
       In the gap observed in digital competence, the development of boys is situated above that of their female peers in technology and communication skills, exceeding 4 percentage points among boys (high level) and girls (medium level) by the end of the sixth form.
  • 6
       Boys display a more positive attitude to technology than girls: they consider that it is easy to use and that it facilitates learning. Despite this, the differences between the genders do not exceed 3 percentage points. Attitude worsens by key stage in a significant way for girls only, being more negative in the sixth form.
brechaGeneroTecnologiaEN_1.png

As can be observed in the above graph, the gender gap is focused on the perception of digital skills: boys consider that they are better than girls in technology and communication aspects, while girls think they are better in technoethics. Digital skills improve in each key stage and for both genders, except in technoethics, where they decline.

Classification

Tags

Subject areas

Related content

Article

Gender gaps working conditions

What is more important than salary? Flexibility, short commutes, and a good working environment... although the biggest difference emerges when safety against harassment comes into play.

Article

The impact of new technologies on wage inequality in Spain

Automation and artificial intelligence have increased the wage gap in Spain, which underlines the urgent need to adapt training and labour policies to the digital transformation.

Article

How is multimedia disinformation spread?

Why does disinformation spread better through images and videos? Analysis of over 1.5 million messages shows that multimedia not only expands its reach, but has become a key component of digital disinformation.

Article

Using statistical modelling to combat gender-based violence

The study confirms that primary healthcare could be a key area for the detection of gender-based violence. However, many victims do not go to health services after suffering an episode of violence, which makes it difficult to identify numerous cases.

Article

Suicidal behaviour among young students in Catalonia: risk and protective factors

In recent years, suicidal behaviours among young people have become consolidated as one of the main causes of non-natural deaths in this age group. This study analyses the prevalence of such behaviours and the associated risk and protection factors in students aged between 16 and 22 years in Catalonia.

You may also find interesting

Emotional well-being in children with neurodevelopmental disorders and their families

Article

Emotional well-being in children with neurodevelopmental disorders and their families


Science

How do children with neurodevelopmental disorders feel emotionally? This study reveals more depression, anxiety, and difficulties regulating emotions, especially when there are multiple diagnoses, and calls for including families as a key part of of assessment and intervention.

How are we adapting to climate change in Spain?

Article

How are we adapting to climate change in Spain?


Science

In Spain, climate change adaptation is already underway: shifts in consumption, new household practices and growing awareness in the face of more extreme conditions. This analysis explores how we respond and which factors shape our ability to adapt.

Climate emergency and citizens: what moves us (and what holds us back)

Article

Climate emergency and citizens: what moves us (and what holds us back)


Science

The perception of the climate crisis is high, but action remains limited. This study reveals how emotions, beliefs and social factors influence our response in the face of the environmental challenge.