posted on 2013-11-08, 00:00authored byRichard Cameron
A characteristic of children’s social orders is gender segregation. When children can
choose, girls play more with girls and boys with boys. This begins around age three
and peaks in later childhood. If children separate into same-gender groups, their
interactions across the gender line will not be as frequent as those with members of
the same sex. Following on Bloomfield’s assertion (1933:46) that “density of
communication” results in the “most important differences of speech” within a
community, I predict that differences will increasingly emerge between girls and boys.
I test this using two sociolinguistic variables, (dh) and (ing), in the English spoken by
children in an elementary school. The prediction is supported. Results contribute to
research into language socialization and the acquisition of gendered linguistic expression.
History
Publisher Statement
This is a pre-copy-editing, author-produced PDF of an article accepted for publication in Language Variation and Change following peer review. The definitive publisher-authenticated version Cameron, R. (2010). "Growing up and apart: Gender divergences in a Chicagoland elementary school." Language Variation and Change 22(2): 279-319. is available online at: http://journals.cambridge.org DOI:10.1017/S0954394510000074