logo
ResearchBunny Logo
Two billion registered students affected by stereotyped educational environments: an analysis of gender-based color bias

Education

Two billion registered students affected by stereotyped educational environments: an analysis of gender-based color bias

J. Santos, I. Bittencourt, et al.

This fascinating study by Jário Santos and colleagues explores the alarming prevalence of color bias in educational technologies. By analyzing color palettes across different subjects and age groups, they uncover significant male color bias, especially in Computer Science, which may impact female participation in STEM fields. Dive into the insights of this important research!... show more
Abstract
According to the literature, educational technologies present several learning benefits to promote online education. However, there are several associated challenges, and some studies illustrate the limitations in elaborating educational technologies, called Design limitations. This aspect is responsible for unleashing various issues in the learning process, such as gender inequality, creating adverse effects on cognitive, motivational, and behavioral mediators, which opposes the fifth UN’s Sustainable Development Goal. Therefore, many studies notice the harmful effects of stereotypes in educational technologies. These effects can be included in the design, like colors or other stereotyped elements, or how the activity is conducted. Based on this, the present study aimed to verify the predominance of color bias in educational technologies available on the WEB. This study developed a computational solution to calculate male and female color bias in the available educational technology web pages. The results suggest the prevalence of the development of educational technologies with a male color bias, with an imbalance among genders, without adequate customization for age groups. Furthermore, some environments, such as Computer Science, present a higher color bias for men when compared to women. Despite both scales being independent, results indicated interesting evidence of a substantial prevalence of colors associated with the male scale. According to the literature, this may be associated with dropout and lack of interest in female students, especially in sciences, technology, engineering, and mathematics domains.
Publisher
Humanities & Social Sciences Communications
Published On
Jul 30, 2022
Authors
Jário Santos, Ig Bittencourt, Marcelo Reis, Geiser Chalco, Seiji Isotani
Tags
color bias
educational technologies
STEM
gender differences
computational analysis
Listen, Learn & Level Up
Over 10,000 hours of research content in 25+ fields, available in 12+ languages.
No more digging through PDFs, just hit play and absorb the world's latest research in your language, on your time.
listen to research audio papers with researchbunny