Gender-stereotyped preferences in childhood and early adolescence: A comparison of cross-sectional and longitudinal data |
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Authors: | Margit H. Kanka Petra Wagner Marlis Buchmann Christiane Spiel |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Business Administration and Economic Psychology, Ferdinand Porsche University of Applied Sciences, Wiener Neustadt, Austria;2. Department of Social Work, School of Medical Engineering and Applied Social Sciences, University of Applied Sciences Upper Austria, Linz, Austria;3. Department of Sociology, Jacobs Center for Productive Youth Development, University of Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland;4. Faculty of Psychology, Department of Applied Psychology: Work, Education, Economy, University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria |
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Abstract: | Children are exposed to a gender-specific environment on an everyday basis through media, books, school supplies and especially toys. Children’s movies and television programs were found to portray protagonists’ occupational and private roles in a very traditional, gender-stereotypical way. The present two studies aimed to investigate gender-specific preferences in childhood and early adolescence. Cross-sectional data (study 1) were compared to longitudinal one (study 2) as we specifically aimed to investigate changes in gender preferences over time. A person-oriented approach, namely Configural Frequency Analysis was applied, to categorically analyze the relationship and development of gender-stereotyped preferences throughout childhood and early adolescence. Consistent with former studies, study 1 showed that gender-stereotypical preferences increased by age, for boys to a higher extent than for girls. By the age of twelve, these preferences had decreased supporting the theory of Kohlberg that children’s gender-stereotypic preferences continuously grow until around six years of age to finally lower thereafter. Gender-specific preferences generally became much more flexible over time. |
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Keywords: | Sex roles gender preferences gender differences childhood early adolescence |
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