Gender Differences in Class Participation in Online versus In-Person Core CS Courses
Madison Brigham, Joël Porquet-Lupine
TL;DR
The paper addresses whether shifting from in-person to online CS courses alters the gender gap in class participation and related attitudes. It analyzes forum and survey participation from two core CS courses across multiple in-person and online quarters, complemented by a targeted student survey. The findings show that online forums exhibit near-equal participation across genders, while in-person forums are male-dominated; survey participation remains female-biased in both formats. The study suggests that classroom environment, rather than inherent gender differences, drives participation patterns, underscoring the need to investigate root causes and develop equity-focused strategies as formats evolve.
Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic significantly altered how post-secondary students receive their education. Namely, the transition from an in-person to an online class format changed how students interact with their instructors and their classmates. In this paper, we use student participation scores from two core computer science classes across ten in-person and three online quarters at a public research university to analyze whether the shift to primarily asynchronous online learning has impacted the gender gap in student participation scores and students' attitudes towards themselves and their peers. We observe a shift on the online class forum: in in-person classes, males score higher on average and dominate the top scores while in online classes, male and female students participate at approximately the same rate classwide. To understand what might be driving changes in participation behavior, we analyze survey responses from over a quarter of the students enrolled in the online classes. While we find that students of both genders tend to compare themselves to their peers less when classes are online, we also find that this trend is much more accentuated for females than males. This data suggests that observed female participation habits in typical in-person classes are not inherent gender differences, but rather, a product of the environment. Therefore, it is critical the community investigates the root causes of these behavioral differences, and experiments with ways to mitigate them, before we soon return to an in-person format.
