Children clothes, toys, and costumes cue can influence and stimulate their cognitive skills, the professions they will like to chase, roles they play at home and in society. Eventually, as they grow it will permit that boy or girl to pursue the career that is the right match for their skills. Color serves as a cue to enlighten a girl or boy to be feminine or masculine. The color palette of clothes and toys will reproduce gender stereotypes, such that light colored items will be more likely to be for “girls only” than for boys and bold colored toys will be more likely to be for “boys only” than for girls only. A boys’ items will mostly associate with action or destruction: objects that move, characters that save the day and animals that prey. A girls’ items will be more passive: objects to be viewed at, characters that are rescued and animals that are submissive or appealing. It diverges children into gender stereotypes. It 's not just that means of transportation, weapons, and construction sets are for boys whereas toys of domesticity and beautification are for girls. Toys for boys facilitate competition, regulator, agency, and supremacy while toys for a girl will promote cooperation and nurturance. These gender stereotypes are representing traditionally masculine domains and roles for boys. In addition, they hinder boys from sharing more in the responsibilities and rewards of domestic life as a girl …show more content…
I learned that toys and clothes contribute to their physical and cognitive development, career choice, and personality. Gender segregation is a consistent phenomenon throughout childhood and research suggests that experience within these same-sex groups significantly contributes to children 's gender socialization (Maccoby, 1998; Martin & Dinella, 2002; Martin & Fabes, 2001, Ruble & Martin, 1998). Investigations advise that within these separate "cultures" children 's interests are channeled, their experiences and activities are limited, and their play and interpersonal styles are modified (Leaper, 1994; Maccoby, 1990; Martin & Dinella, 2002). No matter how devoted parents are to socializing their children, they may be limited by the constraints of younger children’s categorical thinking and the impact of other substantial socialization agents (e.g., children’s peer group