Research has shown links between gender and choices and achievements. When parents’ expectations differ for boys and girls, this is reflected in the activities and toys they provide for them. Consequently those boys and girls engage in different hobbies and pastimes from an early age and their interests continue to diverge as they grow older. At school This divergence of interests can have far-reaching effects when children go to school: girls are more concerned with reading stories and creative work while boys tend towards constructive work and reading non-fiction. In the early school years girls gravitate to the home corner while boys take over the playground with ball games. Studies have shown that boys overestimate their abilities while girls have lower expectations and both these attitudes need to be addressed. Of course this is a generalisation |
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but boys fear being seen as “sissy” more than girls worry about not being feminine - maybe because we are doing more to encourage our daughters to regard themselves as equal. |