B3984 - Long-Term Occupational Implications of Preschool Gender-Related Play Behaviour - 14/02/2022
Globally, there are substantial gender gaps in occupations. Men are overrepresented in leadership and managerial positions, as well as in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) fields, whereas women are overrepresented in administrative and assistant positions, as well as in education and social welfare fields. Similar gender differences are evident in the UK, where men represented 66% of parliament members in 2019 (UK Parliament, 2020), 67% of leadership board members across the top 350 companies listed on the London Stock Exchange in 2020 (FTSE Women Leaders, 2021), and 73% of the STEM workforce in 2019 (British Science Association, 2020), whereas women represented 72% of school teachers, 86% of nurses, and 92% of secretaries in 2018 (UK Office for National Statistics, 2018).
The developmental approach is underused in existing high-level strategies designed to tackle the gender gaps, although the roots of these gaps can be traced back to early childhood. Crucially, aspects of childhood play show some of the most substantial behavioural gender differences in human development. It has been proposed that male- and female-typical play are qualitatively different and differentially contribute to the development of personal characteristics and gender-related socio-cognitive processes (Kung, 2022). Recently, using ALSPAC data, Kung (2021) has provided the first evidence that preschool gender-related play behaviour longitudinally predicts gender-related occupational interests in adolescence. Nonetheless, it remains unknown whether childhood play contributes to actual occupational choices in adulthood.
This proposed study will test the relationship between preschool gender-related play behaviour and gender-related occupations in adulthood.
KEY REFERENCES
Kung, K. T. F. (2021). Preschool gender-typed play behavior predicts adolescent gender-typed occupational interests: A 10-year longitudinal study. Archives of Sexual Behavior, 50, 843–851.
Kung, K. T. F. (2022). Gender differences in children’s play. In P. K. Smith and C. H. Hart (Eds.), The Wiley-Blackwell handbook of childhood social development (3rd ed.). Chichester, UK: Wiley-Blackwell.