British Prof. Bashes Barbie, Claims 'Sexist' Toys Deter Girls From Science

© AFP 2023 / PAUL J. RICHARDSBarbie dolls are seen for sale during the 2015 National Barbie Doll Collectors Convention in Arlington, Virginia on July 30, 2015
Barbie dolls are seen for sale during the 2015 National Barbie Doll Collectors Convention in Arlington, Virginia on July 30, 2015 - Sputnik International
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One of Britain's leading women in scientific research has claimed that girls still shy away from science and engineering, and it starts in early childhood when they start to play with toys she considers called sexist, media reports said.

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Girls still steer away from science and technology due to the social perceptions they develop during early childhood, when they start playing with popular toys that can be described as sexist, according to Dame Athene Donald, a professor of experimental physics at Cambridge University.

Speaking ahead of her inaugural address as the new president of the British Science Association, she argued that compelling girls to play with Barbie dolls rather than chemistry sets directly affects the career choices young girls make later in life, leaving little chance they will choose careers in science, for example.

"We need to change the way we think about boys and girls and what's appropriate for them from a very early age. Does the choice of toys matter? I believe it does," Dame Athene said.

She bemoaned the fact that the society "uses social constructs by stereotyping what boys and girls receive from the earliest age."

"Girls' toys are typically liable to lead to passivity – combing the hair of Barbie, for instance – not building, imaging or being creative with Lego or Meccano," she said.

She called for changing the mind-sets of teachers and parents alike as soon as possible because "the problem of how we introduce gender stereotyping for our children starts incredibly early."

"I know there are people who think that what children do at age four is irrelevant at their A-level choices, but I’m not so sure," Dame Athene pointed out.

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Her remarks come amid the ongoing public spat over the problem of so-called gender based toys, such as Barbies for girls and   Legos for boys, and their segregation in shops.

Earlier this year, the online retail giant Amazon announced that it would remove the terms "boys" and "girls" from its toy categories, while the Danish toy company Lego unveiled its first-ever female scientist figure.

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