| Literature DB >> 18719986 |
Lu Yu1, Sam Winter, Dong Xie.
Abstract
Boys and girls establish relatively stable gender stereotyped behavior patterns by middle childhood. Parent-report questionnaires measuring children's gender-related behavior enable researchers to conduct large-scale screenings of community samples of children. For school-aged children, two parent-report instruments, the Child Game Participation Questionnaire (CGPQ) and the Child Behavior and Attitude Questionnaire (CBAQ), have long been used for measuring children's sex-dimorphic behaviors in Western societies, but few studies have been conducted using these measures for Chinese populations. The current study aimed to empirically examine and modify the two instruments for their applications to Chinese society. Parents of 486 Chinese boys and 417 Chinese girls (6-12 years old) completed a questionnaire comprising items from the CGPQ and CBAQ, and an additional 14 items specifically related to Chinese gender-specific games. Items revealing gender differences in a Chinese sample were identified and used to construct a Child Play Behavior and Activity Questionnaire (CPBAQ). Four new scales were generated through factor analysis: a Gender Scale, a Girl Typicality Scale, a Boy Typicality Scale, and a Cross-Gender Scale (CGS). These scales had satisfactory internal reliabilities and large effect sizes for gender. The CPBAQ is believed to be a promising instrument for measuring children's gender-related behavior in China.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2008 PMID: 18719986 PMCID: PMC2946550 DOI: 10.1007/s10508-008-9403-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Arch Sex Behav ISSN: 0004-0002
Gender differences for game items
| Girl typical game | Gender differencea | Boy typical game | Gender differencea |
|---|---|---|---|
| Plays with kitec | .09* | – | – |
| Read picture booksc | .09* | Camping or fishing | −.16** |
| Cookingc | .10* | Plays relay race | −.17** |
| Plays Giant step | .11* | Plays King of mountain (castle)c | −.21** |
| Plays storec | .17** | Climbs trees | −.22** |
| Puts on playsc | .22** | Plays chess | −.24** |
| Plays with plasticenec | .23** | Plays with tool toysc | −.30*** |
| Plays hopscotchc | .24** | Uses toolsc | −.31** |
| Dresses upc | .25** | Plays with marblesc | −.34*** |
| Sings songs | .30*** | Plays with telescope | −.35*** |
| Plays jacks and jump-ropec | .31*** | Wrestling or Wushu | −.37*** |
| Plays see-saw | .37*** | Plays darts | −.40*** |
| Plays with sliding board | .49*** | Plays with toy vehicles | −.40*** |
| Plays teacher or nurse gamesc | .51*** | Plays rough-and-tumble games | −.44*** |
| Plays games like Put a handkerchief behind youc | .52*** | Likes building fort in gamesc | −.50*** |
| Plays with stuffed animalsc | .54*** | Plays as spaceman or soldierc | −.55*** |
| Likes fairy tales like Snow Whitec | .56*** | Plays with boyish dolls, like robot dollc | −.58*** |
| Plays housec | .59*** | Plays soccer or basketball | −.69*** |
| Plays with girlish dolls, such as Barbie dollsc | .68*** | Plays toy gunc | −.69*** |
aResults of multiple regression analyses: Variables entered at Block 1 = subject’s age, Block 2 = subject’s sex
bPartial correlation of subject’s sex with game item (controlling for age)
cItems with significant age effects (p < .05)
* p < .05; ** p < .01; *** p < .001; p = probability of regression coefficient after controlling for age (Block 1)
Gender differences for behavior and activity items
| Girl typical | Gender differencea | Boy typical | Gender differencea |
|---|---|---|---|
| Play-acts, puts on little dramasc | .22** | Interested in sports competition | −.26** |
| Wears things like wigs, towels and shirts on headc | .30*** | Reads books about dinosaurs and space | −.37*** |
| Popular among girls | .38*** | Popular among boys | −.38*** |
| Plays with girls at school | .42*** | Imitates male characters seen on T.V. or in the moviesc | −.46*** |
| Likes knitting or sewing | .46*** | Likes to use toolsc | −.53*** |
| Wears things like towels around waist as a skirtc | .48*** | Likes real automobilesc | −.52*** |
| Imitates female characters seen on T.V. or in the movies | .48*** | Plays with boys at school | −.76*** |
| Uses feminine gestures with hands when talkingc | .56*** | ||
| Likes dress and make upc | .58*** | ||
| Likes to dancec | .59*** |
aResults of multiple regression analyses: Variables entered at Block 1 = subject’s age, Block 2 = subject’s sex
bPartial correlation of subject’s sex with behavior and activity item (controlling for age)
cItems with significant age effects (p < .05)
* p < .05; ** p < .01; *** p < .001; p = probability of regression coefficient after controlling for age (Block 1)
Gender differences for cross-gender behavior items
| Cross gender behavior | Gender differencea | |
|---|---|---|
| He (She) is good at imitating females (males)c | .07 | .02 |
| In playing “mother/father,” “house” or “school” games, he (she) takes the role of a girl (boy) or a woman (man) | .11 | .01 |
| He (She) does things with female (male) relatives | .03 | |
| He (She) has stated the wish to be a girl (boy) or a woman (man)c | .13 | .01 |
| He (She) dresses in female (male) clothing | −.07 | |
| He (She) prefers the company of adult women (men) | .06 | |
| At home, he (she) plays with girls (boys) | −.16 | .01 |
| In dress-up games, he (she) likes to dress-up in women’s (men’s) clothing | −.06 | |
| He (She) is called a “sissy” (“tomboy”) or similar names by other peoplec | .13 | .01 |
| He (She) prefers the company of girls (boys) | .03 | |
aResults of multiple regression analyses: Variables entered at Block 1 = subject’s age, Block 2 = subject’s sex
bPartial correlation of subject’s sex with cross gender behavior item (controlling for age)
cItems with significant age effects (p < .05)
p = probability of regression coefficient after controlling for age (Block 1)
Factor loadings for CPBAQ items
| Items | Unrotated coefficients | Rotated coefficients | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Factor 1 | Factor 1 | Factor 2 | Factor 3 | |
| He (She) plays with stuffed animals | −.35 | .04 | ||
| He (She) plays teacher or nurse games | −.16 | .14 | ||
| He (She) plays with girlish dolls, such as Barbie dolls | −.39 | .08 | ||
| He (She) plays house | .02 | .02 | ||
| He (She) likes fairy tales like Snow White | −.18 | .05 | ||
| He (She) plays games like Put a handkerchief behind you | −.08 | .16 | ||
| He (She) wears things like towels around waist as a skirt | −.19 | .10 | ||
| He (She) likes knitting or sewing | −.32 | −.03 | ||
| He (She) likes dress and make up | −.26 | .01 | ||
| He (She) uses feminine gestures with hands when talking | −.20 | .08 | ||
| He (She) plays with girls at school, | −.45 | .04 | ||
| He (She) imitates female characters seen on T.V. or in the movies | −.08 | .11 | ||
| He (She) prefers staying with female relatives | −.16 | −.03 | ||
| He (She) plays toy guns | −.40 | .06 | ||
| He (She) plays as spaceman or soldier | −.22 | .04 | ||
| He (She) plays football or basketball | −.42 | .01 | ||
| He (She) plays with boy-typed dolls, like robots | −.23 | .02 | ||
| He (She) plays rough-and-tumble games | −.17 | .01 | ||
| He (She) is popular among boys | −.10 | .01 | ||
| He (She) likes to use tools | −.05 | −.03 | ||
| He (She) likes real automobile | −.18 | −.07 | ||
| He (She) is interested in sports competition | −.15 | .15 | ||
| He (She) plays with boys at school | −.49 | .02 | ||
| He (She) imitates male characters seen on T.V. or in the movies | −.20 | .13 | ||
| He(She) is popular among girls | .40 | .02 | .03 | |
| He (She) likes building fort in games | −.39 | .11 | .09 | |
| He (She) has stated the wish to be a girl (boy) or a woman (man) | .19 | .07 | −.13 | |
| In dress-up games, he (she) likes to dress-up in women’s (men’s) clothing | .02 | .02 | .07 | |
| In playing “mother/father”, “house” or “school” games, he (she) takes the role of a girl (boy) or a woman (man) | .08 | .11 | .08 | |
| He (She) dresses in female (male) clothing | .08 | .01 | .03 | |
| He (She) is called a “sissy” (“tomboy”) or similar names by other people | .03 | .06 | .10 | |
| He (She) is good at imitating females (males) | .08 | .21 | .16 | |
Note: Extraction method: Principal component analysis. Rotation method: Varimax with Kaiser normalization
Internal consistencies and effect sizes of CPBAQ, CBAQ and CGPQ
| Scale | Cronbach’s alpha | Cohen’s | |
|---|---|---|---|
| CPBAQ-GSa | 903 | .94 | −3.84 |
| CPBAQ-GTSb | 901 | .93 | 3.86 |
| CPBAQ-BTSc | 901 | .92 | 2.29 |
| CPBAQ-CGSd | 887 | .84 | – |
| CBAQ-FEMe* | 681 | .93 | −5.67 |
| CBAQ-Cf* | 353 | .62 | – |
| CBAQ-Bg* | 331 | .53 | – |
| CBAQ-Ah* | 685 | .55 | −0.33 |
| CGPQ-Ai** | 682 | .92 | 3.90 |
| CGPQ-Bj** | 684 | .87 | −0.44 |
| CGPQ-Ck** | 678 | .92 | 1.90 |
| CGPQ-Dl** | 687 | .92 | −0.67 |
aCPBAQ Gender scale
bCPBAQ Girl typicality scale
cCPBAQ Boy typicality scale
dCPBAQ Cross gender scale
eCBAQ Gender scale
fCBAQ Girl scale
gCBAQ Boy scale
hCBAQ Cross-gender scale
iCGPQ Gender scale
jCGPQ Preschool scale
kCGPQ Masculinity scale
lCGPQ Femininity scale
* Data from Meyer-Bahlburg et al. (1994b)
** Data from Meyer-Bahlburg et al. (1994a)
Inter-correlations among the Four CPBAQ Scales
| GSa | CGSb | BTSc | GTSd | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| GSa | – | −.38** | −.46** | .76** |
| CGSb | .15 | – | .52** | -.06 |
| BTSc | −.73** | .03 | – | .21* |
| GTSd | .64** | .23** | .03 | – |
Note: Correlations for girls are above the diagonal; those for boys are below the diagonal
aGender scale
bCross gender scale
cBoy typicality scale
dGirl typicality scale
* p < .05; ** p < .01