Gender representation in Filipino storybooks for children

Aside from learning values, traditions, and significant experiences from storybooks, children also learn about their roles as males and females from these learning materials. Previous studies on gender representation revealed that male characters in children’s storybooks are given more active roles...

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Main Authors: MA. Joahna Mante-Estacio, Fernand Kevin Dumalay, Philip Rentillo
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universitas Pendidikan Indonesia 2018-05-01
Series:Indonesian Journal of Applied Linguistics
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ejournal.upi.edu/index.php/IJAL/article/view/11460
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spelling doaj-b13aebe153874a72a06c308d971425fc2020-11-25T03:03:14ZengUniversitas Pendidikan IndonesiaIndonesian Journal of Applied Linguistics2301-94682502-67472018-05-018120821610.17509/ijal.v8i1.114607182Gender representation in Filipino storybooks for childrenMA. Joahna Mante-Estacio0Fernand Kevin Dumalay1Philip Rentillo2De La Salle University, PhilippinesDe La Salle University, PhilippinesDe La Salle University, PhilippinesAside from learning values, traditions, and significant experiences from storybooks, children also learn about their roles as males and females from these learning materials. Previous studies on gender representation revealed that male characters in children’s storybooks are given more active roles through the verbs assigned to them. The present study examines gender portrayal in bilingual children’s literature written by Filipino authors. Using word count guided by the verb taxonomy of Johnson and Young (2002), 60 award winning and non-award winning books published between 2006 to 2017 were analyzed. Overall, the results reveal that the male characters continue to be assigned more active roles in the stories; however, they can also be assigned to roles that were traditionally given to female characters. Furthermore, both male and female names follow a two-syllabic structure which underlies the hypothesis that they are easily remembered by young readers. The implications of these findings in critical literacy are further discussed.https://ejournal.upi.edu/index.php/IJAL/article/view/11460gender identitygender rolegender stereotypeschildren’s storybooksverb types
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author MA. Joahna Mante-Estacio
Fernand Kevin Dumalay
Philip Rentillo
spellingShingle MA. Joahna Mante-Estacio
Fernand Kevin Dumalay
Philip Rentillo
Gender representation in Filipino storybooks for children
Indonesian Journal of Applied Linguistics
gender identity
gender role
gender stereotypes
children’s storybooks
verb types
author_facet MA. Joahna Mante-Estacio
Fernand Kevin Dumalay
Philip Rentillo
author_sort MA. Joahna Mante-Estacio
title Gender representation in Filipino storybooks for children
title_short Gender representation in Filipino storybooks for children
title_full Gender representation in Filipino storybooks for children
title_fullStr Gender representation in Filipino storybooks for children
title_full_unstemmed Gender representation in Filipino storybooks for children
title_sort gender representation in filipino storybooks for children
publisher Universitas Pendidikan Indonesia
series Indonesian Journal of Applied Linguistics
issn 2301-9468
2502-6747
publishDate 2018-05-01
description Aside from learning values, traditions, and significant experiences from storybooks, children also learn about their roles as males and females from these learning materials. Previous studies on gender representation revealed that male characters in children’s storybooks are given more active roles through the verbs assigned to them. The present study examines gender portrayal in bilingual children’s literature written by Filipino authors. Using word count guided by the verb taxonomy of Johnson and Young (2002), 60 award winning and non-award winning books published between 2006 to 2017 were analyzed. Overall, the results reveal that the male characters continue to be assigned more active roles in the stories; however, they can also be assigned to roles that were traditionally given to female characters. Furthermore, both male and female names follow a two-syllabic structure which underlies the hypothesis that they are easily remembered by young readers. The implications of these findings in critical literacy are further discussed.
topic gender identity
gender role
gender stereotypes
children’s storybooks
verb types
url https://ejournal.upi.edu/index.php/IJAL/article/view/11460
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