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New study finds gender bias starts young

Children as young as six are influenced by gender stereotypes over what jobs they want to do, new research has found. 

When I was six, I wanted to be an archaeologist. I didn’t necessarily understand what that would entail, but I knew I loved the ancient Egyptians. I was fascinated by drawings of Howard Carter discovering Tutankhamun’s tomb by candlelight. ‘That looks like a cool job’ I thought. And thus began years of dragging my parents to obscure historical sites.

Like most childhood dreams, that one quickly faded with puberty. But I never felt limited by my gender when it came to planning my future. I was lucky to have a mum who encouraged every wild and outrageous fantasy I conjured up. Her childhood career of choice had been ice-road trucker. Niche, certainly.

While both myself and my mum have gone on to do vastly different jobs in adult life, I’d always thought these unconventional fantasies were relatively ‘normal’ daydream fodder for young girls. But a recent study suggests otherwise.

The Careers & Enterprise Company (CEC) reported that a three-year study, encompassing almost 1,400 primary schools, found children as young as six are already being limited by gender stereotypes when considering potential careers.

As part of the research, the CEC sought to encourage diverse career interests among primary school children by engaging teachers and parents. By empowering young students, through workplace visits and career talks, nearly 200,000 pupils were exposed to alternative pathways and gender stereotypes were successfully challenged.

‘This pilot has shown what’s possible when schools, employers and communities come together to inspire children about their futures from an early age,’ said John Yarham, interim chief executive officer of the CEC.

Results of the study showed that girls’ interests in the business and finance sector increased by 31% over the three year period. 75% of teachers observed that, by the end of the pilot, fewer pupils felt limited by gender stereotypes when it came to career dreams.

This outcome is reassuring, but it also highlights the need for further work across the education system. Evidently, early career-related learning isn’t a ‘nice to have’ but a fundamental part of childhood development.

Gender bias is particularly prevalent when it comes to STEM subjects – creating barriers for young women from an early age. As it stands, women account for only 26% of the STEM workforce, and progress to diversify the industry is slow.

By age six, girls are already less likely than boys to associate their own sex with brilliance or genius, and demonstrated gender-stereotyped beliefs about who can be employed in certain occupations. Around this age, boys are also more likely to accept information given to them by a man than they are by a woman.

So where does this influence come from? Besides mainstream media, everything down to parental relationship dynamics and toys can play a role.

Hyper-feminised toys like Barbie dolls have been proven to cultivate a fixation on appearance within very young girls, while toys labelled ‘for boys’ like cars and construction sets reinforce gender stereotypes for strength. They also perpetuate the myth that STEM fields are primarily masculine domains.

Exposing young girls to the myriad career opportunities during their early years at school is vital to broadening their horizons in later life. I may not have become an archeologist, but I was always told it was an option – a dream I was allowed to have as a woman.

In the same vein, I never felt maths or science were realistic pathways. I lacked confidence in these subjects from primary school onwards, and constantly told myself I was ‘bad’ at them despite performing well in my GCSEs. Looking back, I wonder how much of that was rooted in preconceived ideas of gender.

And gender bias in childhood doesn’t simply disappear with age. It calcifies – shaping everything from subject choices to career confidence to pay disparity.

Research by the Fawcett Society found that girls as young as seven already describe themselves as less confident than boys. That confidence gap continues into adulthood, where women are statistically less likely to apply for jobs unless they meet every qualification listed.

Role models matter, too. When children see female engineers, scientists, or pilots speaking in schools, it chips away at the quiet assumptions that shape their sense of what’s possible. A girl who hears a female aerospace engineer explain her job doesn’t just learn about rockets, she learns that women can build them.

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