ABSTRACT
The Internet serves as a media source to communicate information about modern societal perceptions and cultural attitudes regarding gender stereotypes. The current study evaluated sex-typed electronic birth congratulatory cards aimed at parents of newborns, to determine the extent the text and images in these cards communicated sex roles and gender stereotypes. In this quantitative content analysis of electronic cards (k= 200), coded variables included visual (e.g. dominant colour, presence of human baby or animals, presence of baby clothing/accessories, toy type, and decorations) and verbal (e.g. message style, message tone, physical and non-physical descriptors, and number of words) characteristics. Interrater reliability indices across the two coders were fair to excellent. Chi-square and t-tests found that the dominant colour of the images (pink and blue), decorations (frills/lace/ribbon), and the extent of interaction, independence, play, and gender stereotypes depicted differed significantly between boy and girl typed cards. A logistic regression model explained a substantial proportion of variance in the website gender-typed classification of boy versus girl cards. The findings provide insights regarding current societal attitudes towards social and gender roles in families, with the implication that people transmit these messages by sending and receiving such online communications.
Disclosure statement
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.
Additional information
Notes on contributors
Joan Christodoulou
Joan Christodoulou is an Assistant Professor at Palo Alto University. Her research focuses on understanding how trauma affects cognition among children and youth experiencing the greatest disparities. Joan teaches undergraduate and graudate level courses in research methods and statistics as well as developmental psychology.
Andrew Lac
Andrew Lac is an Associate Professor at the University of Colorado - Colorado Springs. His research interests focus on substance use, addictive behaviors, close relationships, and health psychology. Andrew teaches graduate courses in methodology and statistics and is coauthor of the graduate-level methods textbook “Principles and Methods of Social Research” (Taylor & Francis).