Adult responses to child negotiations: effect of gender and advocacy

Literature on gender gaps in negotiations have found that women tend to ask for less and are given less. Additionally, women who advocated for themselves compared to advocating for others’ benefit faced more social backlash. Only one prior study has explored gender gaps in negotiations in children,...

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Main Author: Choo, Germaine Jing Wen
Other Authors: Setoh Pei Pei
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: Nanyang Technological University 2023
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/168014
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1680142023-06-12T15:32:59Z Adult responses to child negotiations: effect of gender and advocacy Choo, Germaine Jing Wen Setoh Pei Pei School of Biological Sciences psetoh@ntu.edu.sg Science::Biological sciences Social sciences::Psychology Literature on gender gaps in negotiations have found that women tend to ask for less and are given less. Additionally, women who advocated for themselves compared to advocating for others’ benefit faced more social backlash. Only one prior study has explored gender gaps in negotiations in children, but it is unknown as to how these develop. The current study explores whether adults respond differently to children in negotiations depending on child gender and advocacy style, as this may contribute to the development of gender gaps in negotiations. 284 US participants recruited via Prolific.co were shown hypothetical scenarios where a Scout completed a chore (e.g., sorting recycling) in exchange for a $5 donation to charity. After each scenario, participants were prompted to offer an additional donation and give a performance rating. After all scenarios, participants evaluated the Scouts based on seven positive and seven negative traits. A between-subject 2 (girl, boy) x 2 (self-, other-advocating) x 2 (child-, system-prompted) design was used. Prompt condition was varied to determine if responses would differ if children were shown negotiating by themselves versus if a computer-generated prompt was used. Results found that participants gave more positive trait evaluations to other-advocating girls than boys, suggesting that other-advocating girls may receive less social backlash, similar to other-advocating women in negotiations. There were no other significant differences in how adults responded, suggesting that adults may not reward children differently according to gender or advocacy. This study is the first to explore a possible origin of gender gaps in negotiations, however further studies are required. Bachelor of Science in Biological Sciences and Psychology 2023-06-06T06:56:58Z 2023-06-06T06:56:58Z 2023 Final Year Project (FYP) Choo, G. J. W. (2023). Adult responses to child negotiations: effect of gender and advocacy. Final Year Project (FYP), Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/168014 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/168014 en MOE2019-SSHR-005 application/pdf Nanyang Technological University
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Science::Biological sciences
Social sciences::Psychology
spellingShingle Science::Biological sciences
Social sciences::Psychology
Choo, Germaine Jing Wen
Adult responses to child negotiations: effect of gender and advocacy
description Literature on gender gaps in negotiations have found that women tend to ask for less and are given less. Additionally, women who advocated for themselves compared to advocating for others’ benefit faced more social backlash. Only one prior study has explored gender gaps in negotiations in children, but it is unknown as to how these develop. The current study explores whether adults respond differently to children in negotiations depending on child gender and advocacy style, as this may contribute to the development of gender gaps in negotiations. 284 US participants recruited via Prolific.co were shown hypothetical scenarios where a Scout completed a chore (e.g., sorting recycling) in exchange for a $5 donation to charity. After each scenario, participants were prompted to offer an additional donation and give a performance rating. After all scenarios, participants evaluated the Scouts based on seven positive and seven negative traits. A between-subject 2 (girl, boy) x 2 (self-, other-advocating) x 2 (child-, system-prompted) design was used. Prompt condition was varied to determine if responses would differ if children were shown negotiating by themselves versus if a computer-generated prompt was used. Results found that participants gave more positive trait evaluations to other-advocating girls than boys, suggesting that other-advocating girls may receive less social backlash, similar to other-advocating women in negotiations. There were no other significant differences in how adults responded, suggesting that adults may not reward children differently according to gender or advocacy. This study is the first to explore a possible origin of gender gaps in negotiations, however further studies are required.
author2 Setoh Pei Pei
author_facet Setoh Pei Pei
Choo, Germaine Jing Wen
format Final Year Project
author Choo, Germaine Jing Wen
author_sort Choo, Germaine Jing Wen
title Adult responses to child negotiations: effect of gender and advocacy
title_short Adult responses to child negotiations: effect of gender and advocacy
title_full Adult responses to child negotiations: effect of gender and advocacy
title_fullStr Adult responses to child negotiations: effect of gender and advocacy
title_full_unstemmed Adult responses to child negotiations: effect of gender and advocacy
title_sort adult responses to child negotiations: effect of gender and advocacy
publisher Nanyang Technological University
publishDate 2023
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/168014
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