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- Title
Gender Essentialism in Children and Parents: Implications for the Development of Gender Stereotyping and Gender-Typed Preferences.
- Authors
Meyer, Meredith; Gelman, Susan
- Abstract
Psychological essentialism is a set of lay beliefs about categories, according to which certain categories are seen as natural and arising from an inborn, causal force or 'essence.' Social categories, including gender, are often essentialized by both adults and children. The current study examines how gender essentialism relates to other gender-relevant beliefs and preferences, in both a child sample (5- to 7-year-olds) and an adult sample (the children's parents). Children's and parents' essentialism predicted children's gender-typed preferences, but not children's prescriptive stereotyping. In contrast, parents' essentialism predicted their own prescriptive stereotyping, but not their gender-typed preferences. Implications of these findings are discussed in the contexts of (a) past findings linking essentialism with stereotyping and (b) the practical implications of developmental shifts in the correlates of essentialism, including ways in which stereotyping and rigid beliefs about gender may be reduced.
- Subjects
UNITED States; GENDER stereotypes; CHILD psychology; PARENTS; SOCIAL groups research; PSYCHOLOGICAL judgment -- Social aspects; AMERICAN children; INDIVIDUALS' preferences; PSYCHOLOGY; PARENT-child relationships &; society; GENDER essentialism
- Publication
Sex Roles, 2016, Vol 75, Issue 9-10, p409
- ISSN
0360-0025
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1007/s11199-016-0646-6