“…Besides of children's academic performance, also children's sex has been shown to play a role in parental attributions. Parents typically attribute boys' success in math to ability and girls' failure in math to lack of ability (e.g., Hess & McDevitt, 1986;Holloway et al, 1986;Jacobs & Eccles, 1992;Parsons, Adler, & Kaczala, 1982;Rouland, Rowley, & Kurtz-Costes, 2013;Räty, Vänskä, Kasanen, & Kärkkäinen, 2002;Yee & Eccles, 1988), whereas girls' competence in their native language is rated more positively than boys' (e.g., Rouland et al, 2013;Räty, Kasanen, & PATTERNS OF PARENTAL ABILITY ATTRIBUTIONS 10 Honkalampi, 2006;Räty, Kasanen, & Kärkkäinen, 2006), and boys' literacy failures are more likely attributed to lack of ability than girls' (Rouland et al, 2013). The results concerning sex differences in studies that combined performance in math and reading have been contradictory.…”