Obesity may be most harshly judged in settings where girls are expected to be more stereotypically feminine.
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‘Obesity may be most harshly judged in settings where girls are expected to be more stereotypically feminine.’
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"Teachers rated them as less academically able as early as elementary school," said study's author Amelia Branigan. They analysed elementary school students around age nine and high school students approximately 18 years old in the National Longitudinal Study of Youth 1997 cohort. The students were evaluated by teacher-assessed academic performance, while grade point average was the measured outcome used to assess the high school students. 
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They found obesity to be associated with a penalty on teacher evaluations of academic performance among white girls in English, but not in math. There was no penalty observed for girls who were overweight but not obese. "Obese white girls are only penalised in 'female' course subjects like English," Branigan said.
This suggests that obesity may be most harshly judged in settings where girls are expected to be more stereotypically feminine. This may reflect findings that obesity is more stigmatised among women than among men or individuals of other races, according to Brannigan, who says social interventions for teachers may lessen the performance gap.
Source-ANI