Friday, February 28, 2014

Girls Toys, Boy Toys: Gendered Preference for Childhood Playthings

In her book “Pink Brain, Blue Brain,” Lise Eliot discusses the differences in behavior and aptitude between boys and girls, and how these differences have been explained, both correctly and incorrectly, by neuroscience. In a section entitled “Toddlers and Their Toys” Eliot brings up “boy toys,” “girl toys,” and the early gender bias in choosing playthings, which she cites as one of the largest and most obvious early psychological differences. By the age of 12 months there is said to be a significant difference in toy choices between boys and girls. However, the effect weakens with age, especially for girls, and it is doubtful how important these choices are to development over time despite the early strength of the bias.

A commonly studied toy dichotomy is the difference in preference for either dolls or toy trucks. Most studies show a similar pattern: at six-months children tend to favor the two toys at least equally, with the dolls usually winning out, especially for girls. By the age of 12 months, girls favor dolls and boys favor trucks. By the age of 5 boys spend drastically favor trucks, but girls once again divide their attention almost equally between the gendered toys. Many attribute this tendency to our society’s more rigid demands for men to fit into traditional gender roles and the growing acceptability for women to take on more traditionally masculine roles. In short, they say that we give girls more freedom to choose, to split their attention equally.  In any case, this view suggests that toy choices are not innate, nor are they predictive of a child’s disposition and choices later in life.

Others suggest that toy choice is indeed innate. Evidence for this viewpoint comes in the form of monkey research. In studies using vervet and rhesus monkeys it was shown that female monkeys spent more time playing with rag dolls and red cooking pots, males spend more time with balls and toy cars, and that both sexes spent equal time with gender neutral toys such as a stuffed dog or a book. Because monkeys are not human, and thus have not been socially conditioned to recognize toys, much less if a certain toy is for boys or girls, the results suggest that toy preferences may have an innate factor. According to this school of thought girls are innately drawn to babies (the red pot preferred by female vervets was the same color as a baby vervet’s face) and boys are drawn to action and motion, such as that of a ball or a car. After discussing both possibilities, Eliot proceeds with the understanding that toy preference across genders is probably a result of both innate and social factors, a wise and highly probable conclusion.

Given these findings, one might ask “How should we go about gendering and marketing toys?” A New York Times article by Peggy Orenstein does just that. In “Should the World of Toys be Gender-Free?” Orenstein discusses the differences in gendered toy choices and recent moves by toymakers and sellers in both more and less-gendered directions. On one side we have F.A.O. Schwartz, a London based department store that rearranged its entire toy sales floor to be gender neutral. It donned red and white décor, instead of the traditional blue and pink, and arranged toys by interest instead of gender categories. On the other end of the spectrum in Lego, who unveiled a new collection of Lego products aimed at girls, featuring pastel colored blocks and more girlish figurines. The article explores both sides of the issue, citing some of the same research used by Eliot. Both sides argue for gender-fairness which they see manifesting itself in different ways. To some it is brought about by reaping the benefits that come with a variety of gender-neutral play styles, to others it means access to gendered toys that a male or female child is more disposed to desire.



This leaves us asking, which way is the right way? I think the better question is “Is there really a right way at all?” The fact remains that kids will choose the toys that they choose. Most girls will choose dolls and most boys will choose trucks, others will go against the grain. While childhood is a very important period of development, toy choice has not been shown to be highly predictive of future behavior or performance. As long as a child is developing healthily and happily, gendered toy choices are very interesting but do not appear to be highly influential. I would sooner devote more research to WHY gender preferences exist than whether they SHOULD exist. 

Article: http://www.nytimes.com/2011/12/30/opinion/does-stripping-gender-from-toys-really-make-sense.html?action=click&module=Search&region=searchResults%230&version=&url=http%3A%2F%2Fquery.nytimes.com%2Fsearch%2Fsitesearch%2F%3Faction%3Dclick%26region%3DMasthead%26pgtype%3DSectionFront%26module%3DSearchSubmit%26contentCollection%3Dscience%26t%3Dqry187%23%2Fgender+differences