A child’s sex and age as predictors of the total time spent engaging in sex-specific toy play
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research papers
published 07/07/2008
 
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section Summary
 
 
This naturalistic observational study examined the effect of a child’s sex and age with regard to how long comparatively that child is likely to engage in the three established categories of sex-specific toy play: male sex-specific toy play, female sex-specific toy play, and neutral toy play. Ten male and ten female subjects of ages ranging from 21.5 to 38 months were observed for ten minutes each during the free-play period, being coded for the total time they spent engaged in the various categories of toy play. Various ANOVAs, pairwise comparisons, and paired sample t-tests were then conducted, revealing the most significant result to be that age significantly predicts the total time a child is likely to engage in male sex-specific toy play. More specifically, younger children are more likely to spend more time engaged in male sex-specific toy play than older children, and, even further, younger male subjects are more likely to spend significantly more time in male sex-specific play than older male subjects. Additionally, the results found that overall sex is a marginally significant predictor of the total amount of time boys and girls are likely to spend in male sex-specific toy play.
 
 

Table of Contents A child’s sex and age as predictors of the total time spent engaging in sex-specific toy play Table of Contents

 
  1. Abstract.
  2. Method.
  3. Materials.
  4. Procedure.
  5. Results.
  6. Discussion.
 
 
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