US kids’ doodles of scientists reveal changing gender stereotypes

Authored by nature.com and submitted by the_phet
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Children's tendency to envision a generic scientist as a man or a woman changes with age.Vladimir Godnik/Getty

When US children are asked to draw a scientist, today roughly one in three will doodle a woman. That’s a major shift since the 1960s and 1970s, when fewer than 1 in 100 kids would depict a female scientist, a new study finds. But although stereotypes that associate men with science seem to have weakened over time, most US children still see science as a male profession.

To investigate how children’s drawings have changed, a team of psychology researchers combined and analysed the results of 78 “draw-a-scientist” studies that examined doodles made between 1966 and 2016 (see ‘Sketching scientists’). Together, these analyses have asked more than 20,000 US kids from kindergarten to high school to depict a researcher.

A girl between the ages of 10 and 11 drew this female scientist.Credit: Vasilia Christidou

In the 1960s and 1970s, 99.4% of children drew a male scientist. That proportion dropped to an average of 72% in studies published between 1985 and 2016. By the 2010s, about one in three drawings portrayed a female scientist.

This shift in perception is probably the result of an increasing number of women becoming scientists, and mass media — such as television shows and children’s magazines — featuring female scientists more often, says lead author David Miller, a psychology researcher at Northwestern University in Evanston, Illinois. The findings were published in Child Development on 20 March1.

The researchers also looked at how stereotypes about scientists change as kids grow up. From the 1980s onwards, an average of 30% of girls and 83% of boys aged 6 sketched male scientists. But by age 16, 75% of girls and 98% of boys drew male researchers. These results suggest that children — especially older ones — tend to link science with men, probably because women remain under-represented in some fields, such as physics, Miller says.

This female chemist was drawn by a girl between the ages of 10 and 11.Credit: Vasilia Christidou

“Children draw what they see,” says Toni Schmader, a psychological scientist at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver, Canada. The findings suggest that kids need to learn more about women's roles in science, because stereotypes can affect what children think they can and cannot do, Schmader says. “If we can change these representations, young girls might more easily be able to envision a future for themselves in science.”

stiggie on March 20th, 2018 at 14:10 UTC »

I wonder how you could ever conduct this research in a lot of other languages, because the word for 'scientist' is often dependant on gender.

I guess you could describe without implying gender, but using the proper noun you'd be forced to choose a gender.

In Dutch for instance if you say 'wetenschapper' male gender is implied. 'wetenschapster' implies female. However there's a word 'geleerde' which is male but there is no female counterpart so you could use this as a gender neutral choice.

_cross_ on March 20th, 2018 at 13:28 UTC »

I wonder what percentage would draw a man/woman if the asked for a human? And how many woman researchers were drawn by boys I wonder

thro_way on March 20th, 2018 at 12:27 UTC »

Is there any chance that the actual proportion of female scientists increased during this time as well? People get so focused on the idea that perceptions/media depictions control real life that I feel like some might ignore the possibility that the reason children think more scientists are female is because more scientists are female.