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    Dev Psychol. 2004 Sep;40(5):868-81.

    Links between sex-typed time use in middle childhood and gender development in early adolescence.

    McHale SM, Kim JY, Whiteman S, Crouter AC.

    Pennsylvania State University, Department of Human Development and Family Studies, University Park, PA, US. x2u@psu.edu

    The authors studied sex-typing in the kinds (e.g., sports, handicrafts) and social contexts (same- vs. other-sex companions) of children's free time activities, and the links between sex-typed activities and gender development over 2 years. Participants were 200 White, working- and middle-class children (103 girls, 97 boys; mean age = 10.86 years). In annual home interviews, children rated their self-esteem, gender role attitudes and sex-typed personality qualities, academic interests, and school grades. During 7 nightly phone interviews each year, children reported on their activities. Boys were more sex-typed than girls in their peer activities, and children were least sex-typed in their activities with siblings. Sex-typed activities in middle childhood predicted individual differences in gender development in early adolescence. Copyright 2004 American Psychological Association

    PMID: 15355172 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

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