TY - JOUR
T1 - Preadolescents' social judgments
T2 - The relationship between self-endorsement of traits and gender-related judgments of female peers
AU - Lobel, Thalma E.
AU - Gewirtz, Jonathan
AU - Pras, Rinat
AU - Shoeshine-Rokach, Michal
AU - Ginton, Ronit
PY - 1999/3
Y1 - 1999/3
N2 - The present study investigated the relationship between preadolescents' and early adolescents' Inferences and judgments of a target girl, their self-endorsement of traditionally feminine and masculine traits, the gender of the playmates and the gender-typedness of the game. Preadolescents and early Jewish Israeli adolescents males and females (n = 251) were shown a video film portraying a female target playing a feminine, masculine or neutral game with either boys or girls and then made a variety of inferences and judgments about the target. The gender of the playing partners and the gender-typedness of the game were found to influence preadolescents' inferences of female targets' traits, roles and occupations, but not their motivational-emotional judgments. Gender differences emerged such that the inferences of boys were more often in accordance with traditional gender stereotypes. Self-endorsement of traits did not seem to influence preadolescents' judgments, except in those of the cross-gender children. The results are discussed within the framework of gender schema theories.
AB - The present study investigated the relationship between preadolescents' and early adolescents' Inferences and judgments of a target girl, their self-endorsement of traditionally feminine and masculine traits, the gender of the playmates and the gender-typedness of the game. Preadolescents and early Jewish Israeli adolescents males and females (n = 251) were shown a video film portraying a female target playing a feminine, masculine or neutral game with either boys or girls and then made a variety of inferences and judgments about the target. The gender of the playing partners and the gender-typedness of the game were found to influence preadolescents' inferences of female targets' traits, roles and occupations, but not their motivational-emotional judgments. Gender differences emerged such that the inferences of boys were more often in accordance with traditional gender stereotypes. Self-endorsement of traits did not seem to influence preadolescents' judgments, except in those of the cross-gender children. The results are discussed within the framework of gender schema theories.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=0033084362&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1023/A:1018827827921
DO - 10.1023/A:1018827827921
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AN - SCOPUS:0033084362
VL - 40
SP - 483
EP - 498
JO - Sex Roles
JF - Sex Roles
SN - 0360-0025
IS - 5-6
ER -