Design vs. Content: A Study of Adolescent Girls' Website Design Preferences

This study considered the utility of gender schema theory in examining girls' website design preferences. It built on a previous study which identified eight website evaluation criteria related to biological sex: collaboration, social connectivity, flexibility, motility, contextuality, personal identification, inclusion, and graphic/multimedia concentration. Eleven fourteen-, fifteen-, and sixteen-year-old girls participated in the study. The participants completed the short form of the Children's Sex-Role Inventory (CSRI). Following 50-minute Web searching sessions, they were divided into a feminine-high group and a masculine-high group based on their CSRI scores. Each group then participated in interviews concerning their website evaluation and design preferences. Data analysis identified relationships between gender schema and five of the proposed criteria: social connectivity, flexibility, motility, inclusion, and graphic/multimedia concentration. More generally, members of the feminine-high group favored evaluation criteria relating to graphic and multimedia design, whereas members of the masculine-high group favored evaluation criteria relating to subject content. These results indicate that gender schema theory can indeed serve as a framework for making website design more appealing to female adolescent users.

[1]  Mark S. Wolcott Information-seeking and the World Wide Web: A qualitative study of seventh-grade students' search behavior during an inquiry activity , 1998 .

[2]  Y. Kafai Gender Differences in Children's Constructions of Video Games , 1996 .

[3]  Shazia Mumtaz,et al.  Children's enjoyment and perception of computer use in the home and the school , 2001, Comput. Educ..

[4]  Shelley Martin Internet Use in the Classroom , 1998 .

[5]  Denise E. Agosto Bounded rationality and satisficing in young people's Web-based decision making , 2002, J. Assoc. Inf. Sci. Technol..

[6]  Tracey A. Burdick,et al.  Success and Diversity in Information Seeking: Gender and the Information Search Styles Model. , 1996 .

[7]  J. Cassell,et al.  Chess for girls? Feminism and computer games , 1998 .

[8]  Jenny K. Holder,et al.  A visit to the information mall: Web searching behavior of high school students , 1999 .

[9]  U. Neisser Cognition and reality: principles and implications , 1976 .

[10]  Leslie Miller,et al.  Girls' Preferences in Software Design: Insights from a Focus Group , 1996 .

[11]  A. Colley,et al.  The effects of age, gender and computer experience upon computer attitudes , 1997 .

[12]  Margaret Honey,et al.  Girl games and technological desire , 1998 .

[13]  S. Turkle Computational reticence: why women fear the intimate machine , 2004 .

[14]  Claudia Medina,et al.  Engaging girls with computers through software games , 2000, Commun. ACM.

[15]  Matthew B. Miles,et al.  Qualitative Data Analysis: An Expanded Sourcebook , 1994 .

[16]  S. Bem The measurement of psychological androgyny. , 1974, Journal of consulting and clinical psychology.

[17]  M. S. Mayzner,et al.  Cognition And Reality , 1976 .

[18]  Maralee Mayberry,et al.  Reproductive and resistant pedagogies: The comparative roles of collaborative learning and feminist pedagogy in science education , 1998 .

[19]  S. Harding Whose Science? Whose Knowledge?: Thinking from Women's Lives , 1993 .

[20]  Denise E. Agosto Propelling Young Women into the Cyber Age: Gender Considerations in the Evaluation of Web-based Information , 2001 .

[21]  E. Seymour,et al.  Talking About Leaving: Why Undergraduates Leave The Sciences , 1997 .

[22]  Joseph B. Giacquinta,et al.  Beyond Technology's Promise: An Examination of Children's Educational Computing at Home , 1994 .

[23]  J. Boldizar,et al.  Assessing Sex Typing and Androgyny in Children: The Children's Sex Role Inventory. , 1991 .

[24]  S M Dorman Technology and the gender gap. , 1998, The Journal of school health.

[25]  Denise E. Agosto USING GENDER SCHEMA THEORY TO EXAMINE GENDER EQUITY IN COMPUTING: A PRELIMINARY STUDY , 2004 .

[26]  Yasmin B. Kafai,et al.  Internet Web-Searching Instruction in the Elementary Classroom: Building a Foundation for Information Literacy. , 1997 .

[27]  Gender schema theory and sex role inventories: some conceptual and psychometric considerations. , 1986 .

[28]  Yasmin Kafai Video game designs by girls and boys: variability and consistency of gender differences , 1998 .

[29]  J. Schofield Computers and classroom culture , 1995 .

[30]  S. Bem,et al.  Bem sex-role inventory : professional manual , 1981 .

[31]  P. Greenfield,et al.  Computer games for girls: what makes them play? , 1998 .

[32]  J. Twenge Changes in masculine and feminine traits over time: A meta-analysis , 1997 .

[33]  Edward F. McQuarrie,et al.  Focus Groups: Theory and Practice , 1991 .