18 January, 2019
I freely admit loving to buy presents for kids, and this Christmas I鈥檝e given out monstrosities like a pink light-up tweeting bird and a talking dinosaur that can transform into a motorbike 鈥 taking great pleasure in the annoyance of the associated parents. But I鈥檓 also acutely aware how we influence our children by our choice of toys for them.
If you haven鈥檛 heard of the campaign , check it out. It鈥檚 basically about stopping toys being marketed towards a particular gender 鈥 pink dolls for girls, cars and trucks for boys. You may or may not subscribe to the idea that there is an innate difference between girls鈥 and boys鈥 play, but it is clear that there is a wide spectrum of different interests in children. By telling them what toys they should play with we limit their full potential.
I鈥檝e long wondered what determines what children want to play with. Is it genetic for some children to conform to gendered play expectations and for others to go against it? Is it just about what toys we offer them? What does the well-meant mantra 鈥淭here鈥檚 no such thing as girls鈥 and boys鈥 toys?鈥 actually achieve?
As a scientist, I quite often entertain myself by regarding the whole serious matter of raising kids as an imaginary scientific experiment. Our first child is therefore filed as a small pilot study (n=1). In this instance, their preferences were perfectly aligned with gender stereotypes 鈥 despite, or possibly because of, my persistent offers of alternatives.
No experiment is complete without repeats though. My follow-up experiment consisted of genetically identical litter mates (n=2) 鈥 monozygotic twins. Unexpectedly, despite their similarities, these two showed opposite preferences for gender marketed toys. But why? The experimental design argues against genetic factors 鈥 they are genetically identical after all. Also, they鈥檝e been in the same womb at the same time ruling out many so-called in utero effects, for example maternal hormone levels. It must be environmental factors then, right? Of course I can鈥檛 claim that all my children have been exposed to precisely the same conditions throughout their lives, after all they don鈥檛 grow up in a controlled environment, but they grow up in the same family and school, which is about as similar as it gets for a natural habitat. There must be more to it.
With just my maternal observations based just on experiences with my own three children, I obviously don鈥檛 have enough information to draw any real scientific conclusions, and of course there is proper science looking into this. Other ideas need to be explored, one of them being that children may need to develop different interests to find their own niche in the family or other social contexts. Another idea suggests that we may find our judgement victim of our own human nature. It鈥檚 well documented that humans everywhere. Once we find a pattern (real or perceived), we tend to favour information that . As a result, we risk putting kids into boxes that fit our expected patterns and limiting their aspirations and potential.
Let鈥檚 consider our need to find patterns in the context of the twin example: Parents of twins are often advised to support their children to develop their own identities by avoiding the desire to dress them the same and have everything matching. For most things from water bottles to wellie boots, you can often find your choice is between a 鈥榞irl鈥 and a 鈥榖oy鈥 version. So you buy one of each. And you give the blue and black superhero bottle to one child, and the white and pink unicorn bottle to the other because it was right on the day.
But it鈥檚 easy for the direction of these individual actions to become a habit, which finally results in a genuine preference as the children start to identify themselves with a certain set of attributes. If this is true for genetically identical individuals growing up in the same environment, it would be a miracle if we managed to avoid confirmation bias regarding girls鈥 and boys鈥 preferences in general.
Let me end with a description of a recent instance of my personal observations. We recently gave our study participants the opportunity to buy their most wanted toy and their biggest wishes were a race track and a selection of pony toys (you know the ones). Personally, I鈥檝e always thought driving cars round in circles wasn鈥檛 particularly interesting, find the hideous ponies pinkish enough to trigger nightmares. What鈥檚 more, I feel that few toys are more gender marketed than these. But I respected my children鈥檚 desires and went shopping.
On the face of it, all my preconceptions were confirmed as both children conformed to their previous behaviours in choosing their toys 鈥 and I could have stopped the observation here. However, the really interesting results came later when the two sets of toys were out side by side in the living room. It鈥檚 maybe not surprising that both played with either toy, alongside each other or together. But what truly amazed me was that they actually came up with a game that involved both toys at the same time 鈥 bringing the speeding cars together with the pink ponies in surprising harmony.
Golly gosh, isn鈥檛 it sometimes astounding how limited the adult imagination is? Maybe we could try to learn something from our children about being imaginative in how we look at the world and in breaking down the barriers that we use to structure our lives.
18 January 2019