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Beyond Gender Performance in Accounting: Does Personality Distinction Matter?

Lars Fallan and Leiv Opstad

Accounting Education, 2014, vol. 23, issue 4, 343-361

Abstract: This study questions whether the contradictory results from previous studies of gender and performance in accounting is because gender has no mutually homogeneous groups. A combination of gender and personality types will provide a more balanced picture of academic performance in accounting.There are three main findings in this study: the dichotomous gender variable covers two groups that are mutually heterogeneous, and it contributes to diluting any effects of gender on academic performance in management accounting; when each of these groups is combined with personality characteristics of female and male students, we obtain a more robust and complex picture, showing that gender combined with personal preferences is significant for performance; performance is independent of personality preferences when it comes to positive affect of ability, perceived preparation before lectures, after lectures, and interest for the subject, and negative affect of perceived degree of difficulty of the subject.

Date: 2014
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Citations: View citations in EconPapers (5)

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DOI: 10.1080/09639284.2014.930693

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