Toddlers pick up gender roles during play

June 11th, 2010 - 2:15 pm ICT by IANS  

Washington, June 11 (IANS) Parental interaction with their children, particularly in play situations, may predispose toddlers to link specific behaviours with male and female genders.
Context, gender of the parent and gender of the child combine in a complex pattern to shape parent-child interaction, say Eric Lindsey and his colleagues from Penn State University (PSU).

The authors looked at how a situation involving caring for the physical and emotional needs of a child - here, sharing a snack - is likely to produce very different types of verbal interaction from both parent and child compared to a play situation.

Lindsey and team used data from eighty families recruited from two small cities in Kansas, as part of the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD) study of early child care.

Parents and their children were videotaped during a 15-minute parent-child play session and a 10-minute parent-child snack (the caregiving session).

Researchers looked at differences in the way play and caregiving were initiated verbally, and how the participants responded, also verbally, to this initiation, for mother-son, mother-daughter, father-son and father-daughter combinations.

They found that the quality of verbal interactions between parents and their toddlers was dependent on the context.

In the snack situation, the focus of the interaction was on parent authority and management of the child’s behaviour, or whether it was a parent-cenetred context.

Conversely, the play context was much more child-centered with more equal interactions between parents and their toddlers.

When it came to comparing boys’ and girls’ verbal communication behaviors, the authors found very little difference between the two sexes.

Children seemed to pick up cues and adapt their behaviour according to the situation, irrespective of their gender.

In play situations, the children were more involved in determining the direction of the interaction whereas they accepted that parents were in charge during the snack situation.

Perhaps most significantly, mothers’ and fathers’ behaviours differed more in the play context than in the snack context.

During play, fathers were more assertive whereas mothers displayed more facilitative and cooperative behaviours; in the caregiving situation their behaviors were much more similar.

The authors suggest that children may pick up on these different behaviors and associate them with gender roles in the family.

Males are more assertive whereas females are more compliant and flexible, said a PSU release.

The findings are published online in Springer’s journal Sex Roles.

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