TY - JOUR
T1 - Parent and Self-Socialization of Gender Intergroup Attitudes, Perceptions, and Behaviors Among Ethnically and Geographically Diverse Young Children
AU - Halim, May Ling D.
AU - Atwood, S.
AU - Osornio, Alisha C.
AU - Pauker, Kristin
AU - Dunham, Yarrow
AU - Olson, Kristina R.
AU - Gaither, Sarah E.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 American Psychological Association
PY - 2023
Y1 - 2023
N2 - Previouswork has shown the robust nature of gender bias in both children and adults.However,much less attention has been paid toward understanding what factors shape these biases. The current preregistered study used parent surveys and child interviews to test whether parents’ conversations with their children about and modeling of gender intergroup relations and/or children’s self-guided interests about gender (self-socialization) contribute to the formation of gender attitudes, status perceptions, and gender intergroup behaviors among young 4- to 6-year-old children. Our participant sample also allowed us to explore variation by child gender, ethnicity (Asian-, Black-, Latiné-, and White-American), and U.S. geographical region (Northeast, Pacific Northwest, West, Southeast, and Hawaii). Data suggest that children whose parents reported they were especially active in seeking information about gender tended to allocate more resources to same-gender versus other-gender children and expressed less positive evaluations of other-gender children in comparison to children who were less active. By contrast, we found that parents’ conversations with their children about gender intergroup relations and about gender-play stereotypes showed few connections with children’s gender attitudes. In terms of demographic differences, boys raised in households with more unequal versus equal division of labor perceived that men had higher status than women, but few differences by ethnicity or geographic region emerged. In sum, our study suggests that both self- and parent socialization processes are at play in shaping early gender attitudes, status perceptions, and gender intergroup behavior, although self-socialization seemed to play a larger role.
AB - Previouswork has shown the robust nature of gender bias in both children and adults.However,much less attention has been paid toward understanding what factors shape these biases. The current preregistered study used parent surveys and child interviews to test whether parents’ conversations with their children about and modeling of gender intergroup relations and/or children’s self-guided interests about gender (self-socialization) contribute to the formation of gender attitudes, status perceptions, and gender intergroup behaviors among young 4- to 6-year-old children. Our participant sample also allowed us to explore variation by child gender, ethnicity (Asian-, Black-, Latiné-, and White-American), and U.S. geographical region (Northeast, Pacific Northwest, West, Southeast, and Hawaii). Data suggest that children whose parents reported they were especially active in seeking information about gender tended to allocate more resources to same-gender versus other-gender children and expressed less positive evaluations of other-gender children in comparison to children who were less active. By contrast, we found that parents’ conversations with their children about gender intergroup relations and about gender-play stereotypes showed few connections with children’s gender attitudes. In terms of demographic differences, boys raised in households with more unequal versus equal division of labor perceived that men had higher status than women, but few differences by ethnicity or geographic region emerged. In sum, our study suggests that both self- and parent socialization processes are at play in shaping early gender attitudes, status perceptions, and gender intergroup behavior, although self-socialization seemed to play a larger role.
KW - cognitive theories of gender development
KW - gender intergroup attitudes
KW - gender status perceptions
KW - parent gender socialization
KW - self-socialization
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U2 - 10.1037/dev0001586
DO - 10.1037/dev0001586
M3 - Article
C2 - 37768624
AN - SCOPUS:85184221580
SN - 0012-1649
VL - 59
SP - 1933
EP - 1950
JO - Developmental Psychology
JF - Developmental Psychology
IS - 10
ER -