Parents' Influence on Infants' Gender-Typed Toy Preferences.

Sex Roles

Department of Human Development and Family Science, North Dakota State University, Dept. 2615, P.O. Box 6050, Fargo, ND 58108, USA.

Published: September 2018

Gender socialization influences children at early ages, shaping their developing identities. The toys provided by parents deliver some of the earliest gender-based messages by encouraging children to engage in activities associated with, for example, dolls and trucks. In the current study, we measured the influence of parental socialization by assessing 5- and 12 ½-month-old infants' exposure to dolls and trucks and by experimentally manipulating parents' encouragement to play with these toys. We found that infants displayed gender-typical toy preferences at 12 ½, but not 5 months, a pattern characteristic of previous studies. However, brief encouragement by a parent to play with toys from each category was ineffective in altering infants' preferences. Rather, the types of toys present in the home predicted preferences, suggesting that at-home exposure to toys may be influential in the development of toy preferences. These findings reveal that socialization processes may indeed play a role in the formation of early gender-typical toy preferences and highlight the importance of equal toy exposure during infancy to ensure optimal development.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7002030PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11199-017-0858-4DOI Listing

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