Most teen girls still experience sexual haMost teen girls still experience sexual harassment and sexism, according to ne

May 15, 2008

Nine of 10 teen girls report experiencing sexual harassment, and majorities also say they have received discouraging comments about their abilities in school and athletics, according to a new study that appears in the May/June issue of the journal Child Development.

The study of 600 girls between the ages of 12 and 18 from California and Georgia was conducted by Campbell Leaper, professor of psychology at the University of California, Santa Cruz, and Christia Spears Brown, assistant professor of psychology at the University of Kentucky.

"Sexism remains pervasive in the lives of adolescent girls," said Leaper. "Most girls have experienced all three types of sexism--sexual harassment, sexist comments about their academic abilities, and sexist comments about their athletic abilities."

Sexual harassment included receiving inappropriate and unwanted romantic attention, hearing demeaning gender-related comments, being teased about their appearance, receiving unwanted physical contact, and being teased, bullied, or threatened with harm by a male. "Our findings on sexual harassment are, sadly, consistent with previous research," said Leaper. "But on the other hand, most girls said they'd experienced sexual harassment at least once, as opposed to several times."

Girls also commonly reported having received discouraging comments about their abilities because of their gender. In particular, 76 percent of girls said they had received discouraging comments about their abilities in sports, and 52 percent said they'd received discouraging comments related to their abilities in science, math, or computers--three areas Leaper focused on because of the persistent gender gap in academics.

"In all cases, the most common sources of discouraging comments were their male peers, which is both understandable and sad," said Leaper, noting that parents, teachers, and coaches also convey such comments.

As grim as the findings appear, Leaper said the frequency of discouraging incidents may be decreasing, compared to the experiences of girls 30 years ago. "It may be that these girls are experiencing isolated incidents that occur here and there," said Leaper. "The fact that there are more girls in sports and math and science today than 30 years ago suggests there are fewer barriers than there were in the past."

Leaper's study was the first to try to identify the factors that predict whether girls will recognize their experiences as sexism. Recognizing when sexism occurs is a crucial first step toward overcoming discrimination, according to Leaper. “Otherwise, it is more likely that individuals attribute failure to their lack of ability rather than to the obstacles in their environment," he said.

Older girls and those from lower socioeconomic backgrounds reported more sexism than their peers, and Latina and Asian American girls reported less sexual harassment than girls from other ethnic groups, according to the study. Moreover, girls who had learned about feminism through the media or from people in their lives, including mothers and teachers, were more likely to recognize it than girls who had never heard about feminism, and girls who felt pressure from parents to conform to gender stereotypes perceived more sexism than other girls.

"The more girls feel encouraged to adopt traditional gender roles, the more sensitive they are to sexism," said Leaper, who likened sensitivity to sexism to awareness of racism. "In order to recognize sexism, you probably have to believe it's wrong."

But being aware of sexism doesn't predispose girls to overreport it, noted Leaper.

"We know from previous studies that people tend to underreport discrimination," said Leaper. "After Anita Hill, reports of sexual harassment increased dramatically in the United States, because it gave people a label for their experience. So, if anything, sexism is probably occurring more than the girls in this study are saying it is. Our research suggests that parents, teachers, and the media can help girls to learn about discrimination and recognize when it occurs."

Source: University of California, Santa Cruz


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  • fuchikoma - May 15, 2008
    • Rank: 5 / 5 (1)
    By those criteria, I have experienced sexual harassment from girls/women hundreds of times. The difference being that if it happens to a guy, he's supposed to "be a man" and take it. If it happens to a girl, it's more men discriminating against women.

    "Recognizing when sexism occurs is a crucial first step toward overcoming discrimination, according to Leaper."
  • thinking - May 15, 2008
    • Rank: 5 / 5 (1)
    Dumb, dumb, dumb.... make the definition of harassment as broad as this study, I'm suprised that 100% of women haven't reported harassment. I think the 1 of the 10 that didn't say they were harassed realized that this survey was dumb and was just being used to further an agenda. The study should read.. 1 in 10 women are smart enough to determine that this study is promoting an agenda and is not worth their time commenting on.

    to prove my point... the article says that 9 out of 10 women are experience sexual harrasment .. then goes on to say.. We know from previous studies that people tend to underreport discrimination.. so the reality according to this person is that 100 percent of women are sexually harrased....

    People like this author of the article are demeaning those that really experience harasment, and do a diservice to all women
  • EmeraldSky33 - Oct 11, 2008
    • Rank: not rated yet
    Agreed, thinking and fuchikoma. I'm a woman, so obviously I have experienced all the types of "sexual harassment" focused on in the study. I'm horrible at sports (so that one's true about me), but I'm highly intelligent and want to go into a career in neuroscience. So the other parts, not so much. I think the key is not believing that crap, just like men are supposed to not believe the crap we women tell them about being dumb and brutish.

    Em

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