Understanding the Impact of Gender and Migration Background on High-Ability Students’ Behavior: Exploring Behavioral Differences in Business, Law, and Engineering Students Throughout Their Academic Careers
Keywords:
higher education, high-ability students, gender gap, migration, education, intersectionalityAbstract
Using a large sample with detailed information on 32,296 high-ability business, law, and engineering students, we explore gender- and migration-related differences in behaviour to better understand the persistent under-representation of women and migrants in the executive suites of German companies. Since in this homogenous group of ‘high-achievers’, students are quite similar in their intellectual abilities, observable differences in behaviour can be mainly attributed to differences in gender- and migration-related preference patterns. We find that irrespective of migration background, men are more likely to pursue activities that increase their human capital, such as completing a doctorate. At the same time, women tend to engage in lower-level temporary jobs and complete their studies faster. In contrast, in this selective sample of high-ability students, migration background has a marginal effect on students’ behaviour only. Perhaps most surprising, we find that the behaviour of women with a migration background – who potentially face ‘double discrimination’– is not different from that of their male peers.