Equity, Diversity and Inclusion

Kids are more flexible about gender identity than you might think

A child plays with soap bubbles at an event to support autistic children and their families in a park in Kiev May 28, 2013. The event, which was organised by several local charities, gave autistic children and their families the opportunity to spend a day in the park playing with soap bubbles as clowns and other performers entertained them. REUTERS/Gleb Garanich  (UKRAINE - Tags: SOCIETY HEALTH) - GM1E95S1NMQ01

Image: REUTERS/Gleb Garanich

Joan Brasher

Children may think more flexibly about gender identities than previously thought, according to new research.

The first-of-its kind study that examined children’s reactions to a genderless character on the Amazon children’s television program Annedroids.

The live-action series features “PAL,” a human-like android programmed to choose its own gender by a young scientist named Anne. In a series of episodes, PAL explores the meaning of girlhood and boyhood. Ultimately PAL chooses not to adopt a binary gender identity, and “just be me.”

Sara Beck, a doctoral candidate in developmental science at Vanderbilt University’s Peabody College of education and human development, and her team conducted a multi-method pilot study featuring individual interviews with 8- to 10-year-olds (15 girls and six boys) in the Southeast United States. The researchers and participants co-viewed segments of the show in which PAL explores gender identity. PAL joins friends in various situations, including a school dance, where boys and girls stand on different sides of the room.

“…it was promising to find that so many children had empathy for a character who did not fit into a binary gender role.”

Using dialogic questioning, the researchers asked participants if they thought PAL should choose to be a boy or a girl, and why. They recorded the children’s answers and measured the flexibility of their attitudes about gender stereotypes before and after viewing.

“Our results suggest that exposing children to this type of genderless character and engaging in one-on-one conversation about the character’s gender identity may have the potential to encourage more flexible thinking in children who hold rigid gender stereotypes,” Beck says.

When asked which gender the children thought PAL should choose, half of the children thought PAL should not specify a gender, even though “neither” was not given as an option. One said, “I think PAL will choose to not be a he or a she but to just be PAL.”

This sentiment was echoed throughout the inquiry. Researchers found that children who initially believed PAL should choose a gender showed increased flexibility in thinking about gender after viewing the selected clips. When asked what they thought about PAL’s ultimate choice to remain ungendered, the majority of children responded positively to PAL’s choice with comments like, “It’s a good choice to be yourself.”

With a few exceptions, children’s television characters are clearly gendered. Boys are typically portrayed as smart and aggressive and girls are portrayed as more sensitive and relationship-oriented.

“We saw that children were well aware of society’s expectations about behavior based on binary gender identities,” Beck says. “But it was promising to find that so many children had empathy for a character who did not fit into a binary gender role.”

Nordicom published the paper.

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