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Body esteem, eating attitudes, and gender-role orientation in three age groups of children
Authors:Ellen C. Flannery-Schroeder and Joan C. Chrisler
Affiliation:(1) Temple University, USA;(2) Department of Psychology, Connecticut College, 06320 New London, CT
Abstract:The purpose of this study was to assess body esteem, eating attitudes, and gender-role orientation in three age groups (first, third, and fifth graders). The first graders were interviewed individually; the third and fifth graders completed a questionnaire in a group setting in which the questions were read aloud to set a pace and help those who may have had difficulty reading. All children completed the Children’s Sex Stereotypes Measure, the children’s version of the Eating Attitudes Test, and the Body Esteem Scale. It was hypothesized that children as young as six or seven do understand the connection between eating and body weight, that a proportion of children do experience eating and weight concerns, and that feminine children are most likely to experience such concerns. The results demonstrated that children, as early as first grade, were indeed engaging in eating disordered behaviors and expressing dieting and weight concerns. The children appeared to understand the connection between eating and weight, and body esteem was found to be significantly lower in the fifth than the third graders. However, feminine children were not more likely to exhibit eating disordered behaviors. An earlier version of this article was presented at the 1993 meeting of the Eastern Psychological Association in Arlington, VA.
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