Baby Toys Bedfordshire
Local resource for Baby Toys in Bedfordshire. Includes detailed information on local businesses such as Toys R Us that provide access to newborn toys, infant toys, toddler play toys, and educational baby toys, as well as advice and content on where to find baby toys in your area.
Mothercare
+44 (0) 1582 728583
The Mall Arndale
Luton
Mothercare
+44 (0) 1582 728583
The Mall Arndale
Luton GB.LU12TD
Data Provided by:
Dr. Verghese & Partners
845 226 5603
9 Mersey Place
Luton
Next Retail Ltd
0844 8445126
148 The Luton Arndale Centre
Luton
Dr. Hawking & Partners
158 266 3218
Church St
Dunstable
Dr. Sahdev & Partner
158 272 6123
37 Castle St
Luton
Cardiff Road Surgery
158 272 2143
12 Cardiff Rd
Luton
Tadpoles Baby & Toddler Unit
01582 597093
Icknield Way
Luton
Dr. Freeman & Partners
158 266 4401
89 West St
Dunstable
Mothercare plc
01582 728583
Unit 31 33 The Luton Arndale Centre
Luton
Dr. McGill & Partners
158 272 9242
39 Castle Rd
Luton
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Boys and girls favour gender-specific toys from the moment they can first crawl. This is the finding of a study presented today at the British Psychological Society ’s Annual conference.
Dr Brenda Todd and Sara Amalie O´Toole Thommessen, from City University, presented 90 infants aged nine months to 36 months with seven different toys - some were stereotypically boy toys (a car, a digger, a ball and a blue teddy) and some were stereotypically girl toys (a pink teddy, a doll and a cooking set). The infants were placed one metre away from the toys, and could pick whichever toys they pleased. Their choice of toy, and the amount of time each child spent playing with each toy was recorded.
The infants showed a strong preference for the toys which were stereotypically representative of their own gender. Of the youngest children (9-14 months), girls spent significantly longer playing with the doll than boys, and boys spent significantly more time playing with the car and ball than the girls. No association was found between parents’ self-reported views on which toys were more appropriate for boys or girls or their report of gender-typed activities at home.
Sara Amalie O´Toole Thommessen said, “It was very obvious that even the youngest children went straight for gender-typed toys and colours. Boys went straight for the ball and the black car, and girls went to the teddy bear and the doll.”
Dr Brenda Todd added, “We were surprised to find the differences so early.”
The findings fit with similar studies with monkeys, says the BPS, and raise the possibility that there is a biological bias in children to play with gender-typed toys.
“Children of this age are already subject to a great deal of socialisation,” said Dr Todd, “but these findings are consistent with the idea of an intrinsic bias in children to show interest in particular kinds of toys.”
This research was undertaken by undergraduate Sara Amalie O' Toole Thommessen supervised by Dr Brenda Todd as part of a Student Research Bursary funded by the Experimental Psychology Society.
16 April 2010
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