Gender Development
Children actively construct knowledge about gender by observing and interacting with their world. 18
There are three stages of understanding gender:
Gender identity (2-3 years): Children categorize themselves and others as boy or girl, but don't believe gender is permanent. 19
Gender stability (3-4 years): Children understand that gender remains stable over time, but non-typical appearance causes confusion. 19
Gender constancy (5-6 years): Children understand that gender is invariant across situations and begin to attend to gender roles. 19
Studies using pointing tasks show that 24-28 month olds can label themselves and others by gender, but don't yet label toys and activities as gender-typed. 【7,8】
By 4 years, children tend to understand gender stability but not constancy. 19
By 5 years, nearly all children pass gender constancy tasks. 7
Gender role stereotypes emerge early, even before gender constancy is achieved.
Toddlers (24 months) show awareness of gender stereotypes for household activities, with girls demonstrating more stereotyped behaviors than boys. 【14,15,16】
Gender stereotypes about occupations are established by 3-4 years old, with girls having more fixed stereotypes than boys. 【17,18】
Stereotypes about personality and emotion are evident from around 5 years old and well-established by 8-9 years. 【19,20】
Gender-typed toy preferences are observed in children as young as 9-17 months, prior to their ability to label gender identity. 7
Boys are more likely than girls to have intense interests, and most of these interests are gender-typed. 9
Preference for same-gender peers emerges in the toddler years and increases until age 6, reinforcing gender-typed behaviors. 20
In adolescence, gender role beliefs and behaviors either intensify or become more flexible, with girls more likely to explore gender role flexibility. 21
Social cognitive theory explains gender development as being constructed from social experiences, cognitive processes, motivational processes, and behavioral processes. 【25,26,27,29,30,31】
Children learn from observation and their understanding of gender is influenced by social experiences, such as observation, tuition, and evaluative reactions from others. 【27,28】
Cognitive, motivational, and behavioral processes, such as attention, retention, reinforcement, and self-regulation, also shape gender development. 【29,30,31】
Gender schemas are children's mental representations of gender, which develop as soon as they can label gender identity (18 months to 2 years). 【34,35】
Gender schemas filter information and directly motivate behavior, in contrast to Kohlberg's theory where gender constancy was a prerequisite. 【34,35】
Biological approaches examine how sex-related variation in physical development relates to gender development, particularly focusing on sex differences in play preferences, physical aggression, and activity levels. 【37,38,39】
Prenatal hormone exposure, such as increased testosterone, has been linked to male-typed play and interests, but the complex interactions between biological, social, and cognitive factors are not yet fully understood. 【38,39,40】
Children actively construct knowledge about gender by observing and interacting with their world. 18
There are three stages of understanding gender:
Gender identity (2-3 years): Children categorize themselves and others as boy or girl, but don't believe gender is permanent. 19
Gender stability (3-4 years): Children understand that gender remains stable over time, but non-typical appearance causes confusion. 19
Gender constancy (5-6 years): Children understand that gender is invariant across situations and begin to attend to gender roles. 19
Studies using pointing tasks show that 24-28 month olds can label themselves and others by gender, but don't yet label toys and activities as gender-typed. 【7,8】
By 4 years, children tend to understand gender stability but not constancy. 19
By 5 years, nearly all children pass gender constancy tasks. 7
Gender role stereotypes emerge early, even before gender constancy is achieved.
Toddlers (24 months) show awareness of gender stereotypes for household activities, with girls demonstrating more stereotyped behaviors than boys. 【14,15,16】
Gender stereotypes about occupations are established by 3-4 years old, with girls having more fixed stereotypes than boys. 【17,18】
Stereotypes about personality and emotion are evident from around 5 years old and well-established by 8-9 years. 【19,20】
Gender-typed toy preferences are observed in children as young as 9-17 months, prior to their ability to label gender identity. 7
Boys are more likely than girls to have intense interests, and most of these interests are gender-typed. 9
Preference for same-gender peers emerges in the toddler years and increases until age 6, reinforcing gender-typed behaviors. 20
In adolescence, gender role beliefs and behaviors either intensify or become more flexible, with girls more likely to explore gender role flexibility. 21
Social cognitive theory explains gender development as being constructed from social experiences, cognitive processes, motivational processes, and behavioral processes. 【25,26,27,29,30,31】
Children learn from observation and their understanding of gender is influenced by social experiences, such as observation, tuition, and evaluative reactions from others. 【27,28】
Cognitive, motivational, and behavioral processes, such as attention, retention, reinforcement, and self-regulation, also shape gender development. 【29,30,31】
Gender schemas are children's mental representations of gender, which develop as soon as they can label gender identity (18 months to 2 years). 【34,35】
Gender schemas filter information and directly motivate behavior, in contrast to Kohlberg's theory where gender constancy was a prerequisite. 【34,35】
Biological approaches examine how sex-related variation in physical development relates to gender development, particularly focusing on sex differences in play preferences, physical aggression, and activity levels. 【37,38,39】
Prenatal hormone exposure, such as increased testosterone, has been linked to male-typed play and interests, but the complex interactions between biological, social, and cognitive factors are not yet fully understood. 【38,39,40】