Article

Sex differences in children's toy preferences: A systematic review, meta-regression, and meta-analysis

Details

Citation

Todd BK, Fischer RA, Di Costa S, Roestorf A, Harbour K, Hardiman P & Barry JA (2018) Sex differences in children's toy preferences: A systematic review, meta-regression, and meta-analysis. Infant and Child Development, 27 (2), Art. No.: e2064. https://doi.org/10.1002/icd.2064

Abstract
From an early age, most children choose to play with toys typed to their own gender. In order to identify variables that predict toy preference, we conducted a meta‐analysis of observational studies of the free selection of toys by boys and girls aged between 1 and 8 years. From an initial pool of 1788 papers, 16 studies (787 boys and 813 girls) met our inclusion criteria. We found that boys played with male‐typed toys more than girls did (Cohen's d = 1.03, p < .0001) and girls played with female‐typed toys more than boys did (Cohen's d = −0.91, p < .0001). Meta‐regression showed no significant effect of presence of an adult, study context, geographical location of the study, publication date, child's age, or the inclusion of gender‐neutral toys. However, further analysis of data for boys and girls separately revealed that older boys played more with male‐typed toys relative to female‐typed toys than did younger boys (β = .68, p < .0001). Additionally, an effect of the length of time since study publication was found: girls played more with female‐typed toys in earlier studies than in later studies (β = .70, p < .0001), whereas boys played more with male‐typed toys (β = .46, p < .05) in earlier studies than in more recent studies. Boys also played with male‐typed toys less when observed in the home than in a laboratory (β = −.46, p < .05). Findings are discussed in terms of possible contributions of environmental influences and age‐related changes in boys' and girls' toy preferences.

Keywords
gender differences; play; toy preference

Notes
Highlights: * Gender differences in toy choice exist and appear to be the product of both innate and social forces. * Despite methodological variation in the choice and number of toys offered, context of testing, and age of child, the consistency in finding sex differences in children's preferences for toys typed to their own gender indicates the strength of this phenomenon and the likelihood that has a biological origin. * The time playing with male‐typed toys increased as boys got older, but the same pattern was not found in girls; this indicates that stereotypical social effects may persist longer for boys or that there is a stronger biological predisposition for certain play styles in boys.

Journal
Infant and Child Development: Volume 27, Issue 2

StatusPublished
FundersUniversity College London
Publication date11/04/2018
Publication date online22/11/2017
Date accepted by journal25/08/2017
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/32133
PublisherWiley
ISSN1522-7227
eISSN1522-7219