The developmental course of gender differentiation: conceptualizing, measuring, and evaluating constructs and pathways.

Gender differentiation is pervasive, and understanding how and why it develops is important for both theoretical and practical reasons. The work described here is rooted in constructivist accounts of gender differentiation. Past research provides considerable support for constructivist predictions concerning (a) developmental changes in gender attitudes and (b) the relation between gender attitudes and information processing. Little work, however, has addressed the more fundamental question of how children's developing gender attitudes about others are related to developing gender characterizations of self. The focus of the current Monograph is on this other-self relation during middle childhood. A brief review of past theory and empirical work on gender differentiation is provided. It is argued that a major explanation of the limitations and inconsistencies evident in earlier work may be traced to restrictions in the measures available to assess key constructs. A conceptual analysis of the specific limitations of past measures is presented. The Monograph then offers alternative models of the developmental relation between attitudes toward others and characterization of self (the attitudinal and the personal pathway models), and identifies conditions expected to influence the strength of the observed other-self relation. Four studies establish the reliability and validity of a suite of measures that provides comparable methods for assessing attitudes toward others (attitude measures, or AM) and sex typing of self (personal measures, or PM) in three domains: occupations, activities, and traits (or OAT). Parallel forms are provided for adults (the OAT-AM and OAT-PM) and for children of middle-school age, roughly 11-13 years old (the COAT-AM and COAT-PM). A fifth study provides longitudinal data from children tested at four times, beginning at the start of grade 6 (approximately age 11 years) and ending at the close of grade 7 (approximately age 13 years). These data are used to examine the developmental relation between children's sex typing of others and sex typing of the self, and to test the predictions concerning the factors hypothesized to affect the strength of the relation between the two types of sex typing. Overall, the data supported the conceptual distinctions among individuals' (a) gender attitudes toward others, (b) feminine self, and (c) masculine self, and, additionally, revealed some intriguing differences across domains. Interestingly, the data concerning the other-self relation differed by sex of participant. Among girls, analyses of concurrent relations showed that those girls who held fewer stereotypes of masculine activities for others showed greater endorsement of masculine items for self, a finding compatible with both the other-to-self attitudinal pathway model and the self-to-other personal pathway model. The prospective regression analyses, however, showed no effects. That is, preadolescent girls' gender attitudes about others did not predict their later self-endorsements, nor did self-endorsements predict later attitudes. Data from boys showed a strikingly different pattern, one consistent with the self-to-other personal pathway model: There was no evidence of concurrent other-self relations, but prospective analyses indicated that preadolescent boys who endorsed greater numbers of feminine traits as self-descriptive early in grade 6 developed increasingly egalitarian gender attitudes by the end of grade 7. The Monograph closes with discussions of additional implications of the empirical data, of preliminary work on developing parallel measures for younger children, and of the need to design research that illuminates the cognitive-developmental mechanisms underlying age-related changes in sex typing.

[1]  L. S. Liben,et al.  Language at work: children's gendered interpretations of occupational titles. , 2002, Child development.

[2]  L. S. Liben,et al.  Pink and blue collar jobs: children's judgments of job status and job aspirations in relation to sex of worker. , 2001, Journal of experimental child psychology.

[3]  Roderick M. Kramer,et al.  The Psychology of the Social Self , 2001 .

[4]  F. Sani,et al.  Contextual Variability in Young Children's Gender Ingroup Stereotype. , 2001 .

[5]  Rupert Brown Social identity theory: past achievements, current problems and future challenges , 2000 .

[6]  C. Leaper Gender, affiliation, assertion, and the interactive context of parent-child play. , 2000, Developmental psychology.

[7]  J. Spence,et al.  Instrumental and Expressive Traits, Trait Stereotypes, and Sexist Attitudes: What Do They Signify? , 2000 .

[8]  D. W. Kee,et al.  Girls Not Boys Show Gender-Connotation Encoding from Print , 2000 .

[9]  K. Powlishta The Effect of Target Age on the Activation of Gender Stereotypes , 2000 .

[10]  Diane F. Halpern,et al.  Sex Differences in Cognitive Abilities. Third Edition. , 2000 .

[11]  Alan A. Block,et al.  Build it, and they will Come , 1999 .

[12]  A Bandura,et al.  Social cognitive theory of gender development and differentiation. , 1999, Psychological review.

[13]  T. Chartrand,et al.  THE UNBEARABLE AUTOMATICITY OF BEING , 1999 .

[14]  N. Signorielli,et al.  Recognition and Respect: A Content Analysis of Prime-Time Television Characters Across Three Decades , 1999 .

[15]  A. Greenwald,et al.  Measuring individual differences in implicit cognition: the implicit association test. , 1998, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[16]  C. Steele A threat in the air. How stereotypes shape intellectual identity and performance. , 1997, The American psychologist.

[17]  Irene Hanson Frieze,et al.  Single-Sex Versus Mixed-Sex Classes and Gender Schemata in Children and Adolescents: A Longitudinal Comparison , 1996 .

[18]  D. Ruble,et al.  Gender stereotypes during adolescence: Developmental changes and the transition to junior high school. , 1996 .

[19]  C. Steele,et al.  Stereotype threat and the intellectual test performance of African Americans. , 1995, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[20]  C. Martin,et al.  Children's gender-based reasoning about toys. , 1995, Child development.

[21]  K. Powlishta Intergroup Processes in Childhood: Social Categorization and Sex Role Development. , 1995 .

[22]  Marianne G. Taylor,et al.  Traditional and evaluative aspects of flexibility in gender roles, social conventions, moral rules, and physical laws. , 1995, Child development.

[23]  A. Doyle,et al.  Gender, ethnic, and body type biases: The generality of prejudice in childhood. , 1994 .

[24]  S. Gelman,et al.  Mapping the Mind: Domain Specificity In Cognition And Culture , 1994 .

[25]  P. Katz,et al.  Developmental aspects of gender role flexibility and traditionality in middle childhood and adolescence. , 1994 .

[26]  G. Russell,et al.  Measures of children's sex typing in middle childhood , 1993 .

[27]  L. Serbin,et al.  The development of sex typing in middle childhood. , 1993, Monographs of the Society for Research in Child Development.

[28]  Sheri A. Berenbaum,et al.  Early Androgens Are Related to Childhood Sex-Typed Toy Preferences , 1992 .

[29]  B. Fagot,et al.  Observations of parent reactions to sex-stereotyped behaviors: age and sex effects. , 1991, Child development.

[30]  M. Biernat A multicomponent, developmental analysis of sex typing , 1991 .

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

[32]  P. Katz,et al.  Modification of Children's Gender‐Stereotyped Behavior , 1991 .

[33]  Hugh Lytton,et al.  Parents' differential socialization of boys and girls: A meta-analysis. , 1991 .

[34]  C. Martin,et al.  The development of gender stereotype components. , 1990, Child development.

[35]  A. Petersen,et al.  Masculinity, femininity, and sex role attitudes in early adolescence: exploring gender intensification. , 1990, Child development.

[36]  L. S. Liben,et al.  The role of attitudes and interventions in gender-schematic processing. , 1990, Child development.

[37]  J. Eccles,et al.  Gender Role Stereotypes, Expectancy Effects, and Parents' Socialization of Gender Differences , 1990 .

[38]  Carole A. Beere Gender Roles , 1990 .

[39]  A. Hochschild,et al.  The Second Shift: Working Parents And The Revolution , 1990 .

[40]  C. Martin,et al.  Attitudes and expectations about children with nontraditional and traditional gender roles , 1990 .

[41]  B. Fagot,et al.  The young child's gender schema: environmental input, internal organization. , 1989, Child development.

[42]  William T. Bielby,et al.  Revolving Doors: Sex Segregation and Women's Careers , 1989 .

[43]  D. B. Carter,et al.  Cognitive aspects of early sex-role development: The influence of gender schemas on preschoolers' memories and preferences for sex-typed toys and activities. , 1988 .

[44]  R. P. McDonald,et al.  Goodness-of-fit indexes in confirmatory factor analysis : The effect of sample size , 1988 .

[45]  C. Stangor,et al.  Development of gender role knowledge and gender constancy. , 1987, New directions for child development.

[46]  L. S. Liben,et al.  Reformulating children's gender schemata , 1987 .

[47]  Sandra L. Calvert,et al.  Television and children's gender schemata. , 1987, New directions for child development.

[48]  M. L. Signorella Gender schemata: individual differences and context effects. , 1987, New directions for child development.

[49]  M. Hogg,et al.  Intergroup behaviour, self-stereotyping and the salience of social categories , 1987 .

[50]  K. Deaux,et al.  Putting gender into context: An interactive model of gender-related behavior. , 1987 .

[51]  J. Spence,et al.  Gender-related traits, stereotypes, and schemata. , 1987 .

[52]  B. Reskin,et al.  Women's work, men's work : sex segregation on the job , 1986 .

[53]  J. Smetana Preschool Children's Conceptions of Sex-Role Transgressions. , 1986 .

[54]  R. Unger,et al.  Social change: Introduction , 1986 .

[55]  P. Katz Modification of children's gender-stereotyped behavior: General issues and research considerations , 1986 .

[56]  M. Linn,et al.  Emergence and characterization of sex differences in spatial ability: a meta-analysis. , 1985, Child development.

[57]  Nancy L. Galambos,et al.  The Attitudes Toward Women Scale for Adolescents (AWSA): A study of reliability and validity , 1985 .

[58]  J. Jacobs,et al.  Occupational prestige: A sex-neutral concept? , 1985 .

[59]  M. Bierly Prejudice Toward Contemporary Outgroups as a Generalized Attitude , 1985 .

[60]  Janet Shibley Hyde,et al.  Children's understanding of sexist language. , 1984 .

[61]  L. S. Liben,et al.  Recall and Reconstruction of Gender-related Pictures: Effects of Attitude, Task Difficulty, and Age. , 1984 .

[62]  C. Martin,et al.  The effects of sex-typing schemas on young children's memory. , 1983 .

[63]  Russell H. Fazio,et al.  Toward a process model of the attitude-behavior relation: Accessing one's attitude upon mere observation of the attitude object. , 1983 .

[64]  M. Snow,et al.  Sex-of-Child Differences in Father-Child Interaction at One Year of Age. , 1983 .

[65]  Shelley E. Taylor,et al.  Cognitive Bases of Stereotyping , 1982 .

[66]  Aletha C. Huston,et al.  Sex Typing and Socialization. , 1982 .

[67]  K. Bussey,et al.  Same-sex imitation: The avoidance of cross-sex models or the acceptance of same-sex models? , 1982 .

[68]  M. Rothbart,et al.  Perception of Out-Group Homogeneity and Levels of Social Categorization: Memory for the Subordinate Attributes of In-Group and Out-Group Members , 1982 .

[69]  Charles F. Halverson,et al.  A schematic processing model of sex typing and stereotyping in children. , 1981 .

[70]  G. Bohrnstedt,et al.  Social Measurement: Current Issues , 1981 .

[71]  B. McEwen Sexual differentiation of the brain , 1981, Nature.

[72]  N. L. Toder The Effect of the Sexual Composition of a Group on Discrimination Against Women and Sex-Role Attitudes , 1980 .

[73]  K. Bussey,et al.  The social learning theory of sex differences: Imitation is alive and well. , 1979 .

[74]  S. Bem,et al.  Theory and Measurement of Androgyny: A reply to the Pedhazur-Tetenbaum and Locksley-Colten Critiques. , 1979 .

[75]  K. McGraw,et al.  Doctor or nurse: children's perception of sex typed occupations. , 1979, Child development.

[76]  C. Edelbrock,et al.  Acquisition of Sex-Typed Preferences in Preschool-Aged Children. , 1978 .

[77]  W. Overton,et al.  The development of cognitive gender constancy and sex role preferences. , 1978, Child development.

[78]  W. T. Bryant,et al.  Mapping sex group stereotypes of elementary and high school students , 1978 .

[79]  I. Ajzen,et al.  Attitude-behavior relations: A theoretical analysis and review of empirical research. , 1977 .

[80]  Lisa A. Serbin,et al.  Shaping cooperative cross-sex play. , 1977 .

[81]  R. Barkley,et al.  The effects of sex typing and sex appropriateness of modeled behavior on children's imitation. , 1977 .

[82]  L. Silvern Children's sex-role preferences: Stronger among girls than boys , 1977 .

[83]  J. McKillip,et al.  Group salience and stereotyping , 1977 .

[84]  Susan M. Bennett,et al.  Awareness and Expression of Sex Stereotypes in Young Children. , 1975 .

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

[86]  R. Montemayor Children's Performance in a Game and Their Attraction to It as a Function of Sex-typed Labels. , 1974 .

[87]  G. Āllport The Nature of Prejudice , 1954 .

[88]  M. Mead,et al.  Coming of Age in Samoa , 1929 .

[89]  L. S. Liben,et al.  The effects of sex steroids on spatial performance : a review and an experimental clinical investigation , 2002 .

[90]  D. Ruble,et al.  Cognitive theories of early gender development. , 2002, Psychological bulletin.

[91]  Brian A. Nosek,et al.  A unified theory of implicit attitudes, stereotypes, self-esteem, and self-concept. , 2002, Psychological review.

[92]  Laurie A. Rudman,et al.  Prescriptive Gender Stereotypes and Backlash Toward Agentic Women , 2001 .

[93]  R. Margo,et al.  Women's Work? , 2001 .

[94]  Barbara Pease,et al.  Why men don't listen & women can't read maps : how we're different and what to do about it , 1999 .

[95]  D. Ruble,et al.  The role of gender knowledge in children's gender-typed preferences. , 1999 .

[96]  D. Kimura Sex and cognition , 1999 .

[97]  M. L. Signorella Signorella (1999). Multidimensionality of gender schemas: Implications for the development of gender-related characteristics , 1999 .

[98]  K. Powlishta,et al.  Self-Esteem and Own-Sex Favoritism in Middle Childhood and Early Adolescence , 1999 .

[99]  William B. Swann,et al.  Sexism and stereotypes in modern society : the gender science of Janet Taylor Spence , 1999 .

[100]  John C. Turner,et al.  Social identity, personality, and the self-concept: A self-categorizing perspective. , 1999 .

[101]  E. Maccoby,et al.  The Two Sexes: Growing Up Apart, Coming Together. Family and Public Policy Series. , 1998 .

[102]  Susan Morse,et al.  Separated by sex : a critical look at single-sex education for girls , 1998 .

[103]  Richard M. Lerner,et al.  Theories of human development: Contemporary perspectives. , 1998 .

[104]  K. Powlishta Gender bias in children's perceptions of personality traits , 1995 .

[105]  David C. Geary,et al.  Sexual selection and sex differences in spatial cognition , 1995 .

[106]  D. Ruble,et al.  A phase model of transitions: cognitive and motivational consequences , 1994 .

[107]  J. Twby Origins of domain specificity: The evolution of functional organization , 1994 .

[108]  R. E. Whalen,et al.  The Development of sex differences and similarities in behavior , 1993 .

[109]  S. Gaulin How and Why Sex Differences Evolve, with Spatial Ability as a Paradigm Example , 1993 .

[110]  L. S. Liben,et al.  Gender-Schematic Processing in Children: The Role of Initial Interpretations of Stimuli. , 1993 .

[111]  C. Ridgeway,et al.  Gender, interaction, and inequality , 1992 .

[112]  J. Gray Men Are from Mars, Women Are from Venus : A Practical Guide for Improving Communication and Getting What You Want in Your Relationships , 1992 .

[113]  Barry S. Hewlett,et al.  Intimate Fathers: The Nature and Context of Aka Pygmy Paternal Infant Care , 1991 .

[114]  J. L. Orlofsky,et al.  Stereotypic and nonstereotypic sex role trait and behavior orientations, gender identity, and psychological adjustment. , 1990, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[115]  P. R. Sanday,et al.  Beyond the second sex : new directions in the anthropology of gender , 1990 .

[116]  Sandra Morgen,et al.  Gender and anthropology : critical reviews for research and teaching , 1989 .

[117]  J. Langlois,et al.  Sex typing: Construct and measurement issues , 1988 .

[118]  L. S. Liben,et al.  Children's gender schemata , 1987 .

[119]  A. Khalique,et al.  A Study of Prejudice in Hindu and Muslim College Students , 1987 .

[120]  S. Worchel,et al.  Psychology of intergroup relations , 1986 .

[121]  L. Waite,et al.  Women in Nontraditional Occupations , 1985 .

[122]  J. Spence Gender identity and its implications for the concepts of masculinity and femininity. , 1984, Nebraska Symposium on Motivation. Nebraska Symposium on Motivation.

[123]  Mary Ellen Lynch,et al.  The Intensification of Gender-Related Role Expectations during Early Adolescence , 1983 .

[124]  D. Best,et al.  Measuring sex stereotypes : a thirty-nation study , 1982 .

[125]  S. Bem Gender schema theory: A cognitive account of sex typing. , 1981 .

[126]  E. Carmines,et al.  Analyzing models with unobserved variables: analysis of covariance structures , 1981 .

[127]  H. Tajfel,et al.  An integrative theory of intergroup conflict. , 1979 .

[128]  R. Helmreich,et al.  Masculinity & femininity: Their psychological dimensions, correlates, and antecedents , 1978 .

[129]  A. Bandura Social learning theory , 1977 .

[130]  E. Maccoby,et al.  The development of sex differences , 1966 .

[131]  B. Maher,et al.  Progress in experimental personality research , 1964 .

[132]  A Handbook of Child Psychology , 1932, Nature.