Impacts of child gender on parents' conversational dominance

Prior studies pinpoint that gender stereotypes may be reflected in parent-child conversations whereby more assertive speech is used by men to communicate with women or children. This study investigates if child gender influences parent-child conversational dominance by examining (i) the number of wo...

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Main Authors: Crinis, La-Mia, Sudo, Mioko, Ting, Sharon, Setoh, Peipei
Other Authors: School of Social Sciences
Format: Working Paper
Language:English
Published: 2024
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/176105
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1761052024-06-02T15:31:32Z Impacts of child gender on parents' conversational dominance Crinis, La-Mia Sudo, Mioko Ting, Sharon Setoh, Peipei School of Social Sciences Division of Psychology Social Sciences Prior studies pinpoint that gender stereotypes may be reflected in parent-child conversations whereby more assertive speech is used by men to communicate with women or children. This study investigates if child gender influences parent-child conversational dominance by examining (i) the number of words spoken, (ii) length of turn speaking (expressed as the average number of words per turn), and (iii) wh-questions (e.g., who, what, when) asked by parents. 97 Singaporean parent-child dyads (mean child age: 8.9 years, 49 girls) participated in shared storybook sessions. The picture-book was designed to facilitate parent-child conversation, and contained open and close-ended prompts about the story’s protagonists. Parent-child conversations were transcribed using the Codes for the Human Analysis of Transcripts format. High inter-coded reliability was achieved for the coding of wh-questions (κ = .89). The three aspects of conversational dominance were analysed using Computerized Language Analysis. Length of turns were more balanced in parent-child conversations with girls than with boys, ( . ) = − . , =. , contradicting expectations for girls’ parent-child conversations to be more dominated. This finding may be attributed to the socialisation of girls, who are encouraged to develop their interpersonal sensitivity more than boys (Leaper & Robnett, 2011). However, parents’ word count and wh-question frequency did not differ significantly based on child gender, challenging the predicted gender stereotypes in parent-child conversations. These findings urge for the need of a replicated study to be conducted in a real-world setting to further validate these observations on child gender. Ministry of Education (MOE) Nanyang Technological University 2024-05-31T00:51:49Z 2024-05-31T00:51:49Z 2024 Working Paper Crinis, L., Sudo, M., Ting, S. & Setoh, P. (2024). Impacts of child gender on parents' conversational dominance. Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/176105 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/176105 en RG39/22 © 2024 The Author(s). All rights reserved. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Social Sciences
spellingShingle Social Sciences
Crinis, La-Mia
Sudo, Mioko
Ting, Sharon
Setoh, Peipei
Impacts of child gender on parents' conversational dominance
description Prior studies pinpoint that gender stereotypes may be reflected in parent-child conversations whereby more assertive speech is used by men to communicate with women or children. This study investigates if child gender influences parent-child conversational dominance by examining (i) the number of words spoken, (ii) length of turn speaking (expressed as the average number of words per turn), and (iii) wh-questions (e.g., who, what, when) asked by parents. 97 Singaporean parent-child dyads (mean child age: 8.9 years, 49 girls) participated in shared storybook sessions. The picture-book was designed to facilitate parent-child conversation, and contained open and close-ended prompts about the story’s protagonists. Parent-child conversations were transcribed using the Codes for the Human Analysis of Transcripts format. High inter-coded reliability was achieved for the coding of wh-questions (κ = .89). The three aspects of conversational dominance were analysed using Computerized Language Analysis. Length of turns were more balanced in parent-child conversations with girls than with boys, ( . ) = − . , =. , contradicting expectations for girls’ parent-child conversations to be more dominated. This finding may be attributed to the socialisation of girls, who are encouraged to develop their interpersonal sensitivity more than boys (Leaper & Robnett, 2011). However, parents’ word count and wh-question frequency did not differ significantly based on child gender, challenging the predicted gender stereotypes in parent-child conversations. These findings urge for the need of a replicated study to be conducted in a real-world setting to further validate these observations on child gender.
author2 School of Social Sciences
author_facet School of Social Sciences
Crinis, La-Mia
Sudo, Mioko
Ting, Sharon
Setoh, Peipei
format Working Paper
author Crinis, La-Mia
Sudo, Mioko
Ting, Sharon
Setoh, Peipei
author_sort Crinis, La-Mia
title Impacts of child gender on parents' conversational dominance
title_short Impacts of child gender on parents' conversational dominance
title_full Impacts of child gender on parents' conversational dominance
title_fullStr Impacts of child gender on parents' conversational dominance
title_full_unstemmed Impacts of child gender on parents' conversational dominance
title_sort impacts of child gender on parents' conversational dominance
publishDate 2024
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/176105
_version_ 1800916345976520704