The Swedish preschool curriculum requires promotion of gender equality, but researchers at the University of Gothenburgās Department of Education, who performed gender analysis of 114 video sequences of six preschool groups (in total 45 hours of material), conclude that this may be easier said than done.
The analysis shows that girlsā questions and comments are responded to differently (in a negative sense), that teachers tend to masculinise teaching tools and that masculinity is the norm in childrenās play and art work. These tendencies are reinforced in the interaction between teachers and children since teachers often have stereotypical ideas of what boys and girls are interested in.
Yet, the analysis also identified that boys and girls very often share play and learning with each other. Furthermore, they show great concern for each other by being helpful and taking responsibility for othersā well-being regardless of gender.
The analysis also shows how children manage to achieve border crossing at preschool, which causes stereotypical gender structures to change. An example of border crossing is when a LEGO figure that has been gender-defined by a teacher is redefined by a child from āmanā to āmumā.
As Professor Ingrid Pramling Samuelsson and doctoral student Eva Ćrlemalm-HagsĆ©r write in the current issue of Pedagogisk Forskning i Sverige: āBoth children and teachers contribute to the creation and expression of gender structures at preschool.ā
āBut the study finds that it is the children that reformulate and expand their possibilities. There is not a single example in the material where teachers consciously challenge children to engage in border crossing.ā