Leigh snapped this picture of a Toys ‘R Us catalog. He noticed that, for both microscopes and telescopes, the version coded “girl” (i.e., the pink one) is the least powerful one (600x magnification vs. 900 or 1200x and 90x vs. 250 or 525x). Coincidence?
Lisa Wade, PhD is an Associate Professor at Tulane University. She is the author of American Hookup, a book about college sexual culture; a textbook about gender; and a forthcoming introductory text: Terrible Magnificent Sociology. You can follow her on Twitter and Instagram.
Comments 53
Victoria — December 29, 2009
What's up with that? Was it Toys R Us for choosing pink to show the inferior versions of each product? Or was it Edu-Science who only makes their inferior products IN pink? I tried going to the Edu-Science website but was unsuccessful in finding my answer.
Merinda — December 29, 2009
I used to work for Toys, and this is their store brand. And this little thing was one of several that drove me nuts. I think if my parents had given me a pink telescope as a kid I would have thrown a fit.
Perhaps it's pink to appeal to younger kids, hence the lower power?
John — December 29, 2009
I'm not defending Toys R Us but the print ad isn't complete. The pink telescope and microscope are offensive but Toys R Us does sell identical products in black on their web site so it isn't that the pink products are less powerful than the other products they sell.
tensity1 — December 29, 2009
The irony is, the less powerful magnifications actually have better image quality, because resolution is dependent upon the the size of the objective lens, thus smaller magnifications equal to better image quality. All you'll see with the bigger magnifications is fuzziness. I doubt that's why the pink ones are "lesser," though.
ELR — December 29, 2009
Tensity, I think you need to check your optics if all you see is fuzziness at higher magnifications.
The whole "pink for girls" thing IS utterly stupid, but as others have pointed out, they do sell the same products in pink and black/grey versions. I'd guess some cubicle drone just figured it was good to showcase that one model also comes in "pink for girls", rather than "girls don't need as good of a 'scope." Not that the lack of thought that went into it is not a bad thing in and of itself.
tensity1 — December 29, 2009
I agree, pink for girls as a gender norm is silly, but others don't see it as a problem, or see why it should be a problem in how it engenders inferiority/superiority.
My point is the irony of the girls' telescope actually being better. Hubble's optics are going to be better than Toys R Us's, but comparing apples to apples, after a certain threshold, magnification is useless except for dim and/or fuzzy images. That's just optical science.
Gen — December 29, 2009
Possibly they meant to make the one they think they'll sell least of (the 'girl' one) the cheapest.
Warren G — December 29, 2009
I was a microbiology major many years ago, and I think I can explain the differences in magnifying power in these microscopes: Females have better vision. Males need the extra magnification.
If you disagree, haven't you ever heard the phrase "stop or you'll go blind"?
:) Happy Holidays!
elly — December 29, 2009
In fairness to Toys R Us, I've known parents who wouldn't think of buying science toys for their daughters AT ALL. There are a lot of parents afflicted with the "princess" mentality when it comes to little girls. As ghastly as it is, having pink options available increases the odds that at least some of them will end up being given as presents to children who would otherwise never get them.
Lundie — December 29, 2009
Or maybe it's part of the "aestheticly pleasing vs. powerful"? (think toasters/blenders/refrigerators/etc) If I want the "good stuff" usually that only comes in "black/chrome". The pink was a poor marketing choice. At least they weren't pink v. blue...
Leigh — December 29, 2009
I sent in the above photo - I'm a woman by the way ;)
And as I see it, arguing the about the resolution of the lens is beside the point. As a mother of a daughter looking at this ad I was disappointed. Thousands of copies of this circular with this message are out there floating around. If they have stronger versions of this product in pink - you wouldn't know it from the ad.
My daughter is 2 1/2 and I'm sick and tired of fighting the pink war and the plastic war and the "educational DVD" war. Blech. I don't know why I even looked in the catalog at all.
12-29-2009 « Natter — December 29, 2009
[...] Food for Thought: “Girly” Play Microscopes Magnify to Less Power [...]
Starfoxy — December 30, 2009
I'm thinking that it may be a way to push the more expensive versions and it all goes back to the whole male as default thing.
The people who are buying a scope for their daughters will not be turned off by the black/grey color scheme and will feel free to purchase any scope from the least expensive to the most expensive.
People buying a scope for their sons will be turned off by the pink ones, and will therefore be willing to spring an extra ten bucks rather than risk being sullied by girly things. This means that the group marketers see as most likely to buy scopes (boys) can be prevented from buying the least expensive versions by simply making them pink.
So rather than just all-out-sexism, it is greed using and promoting sexism to squeeze more money out of the masses.
Heartwarming.
Gendered Color Dichotomies-R-Us « The Millikan Daily — December 30, 2009
[...] yesterday followed by a trail of outrage and discussion regarding gender and science education. The offending ad, blogged yesterday by Lisa Wade from Sociological Images, features side-by-side sets of three [...]
Matt S — December 30, 2009
Devil's advocate here. Looking at the ad, it appears that a different manufacturer made the pink models from the other models. So even though Toys R Us may be perpetuating a possible stereotype, I'd place more blame with the manufacturers who researched the market and came up with the underpowered, overprettied devices. However, it seems likely ... See Morethat some well intentioned marketing drone said "let's make pink devices that will be more attractive to girls, potentially attracting girls to male dominated scientific fields!" Then his director says, "good idea, but it sounds risky. Let's price it low!" Then quality is sacrificed with an underpowered scope. Then someone rips Toys R Us' toenails out. On Christmas!!!
Girl in Pink — December 31, 2009
This is just nitpicking.
technicolorsheep — December 31, 2009
Ok, maybe I am out of sync with American culture (being from Germany), but what went through my mind first was: "WTF, a pink telescope? Why would you do that?" Luckily, when I was a little girl, toys didn't seem to be gendered as much as they are today – obvious examples like Barbie excepted.
Actually, I have to agree with Leigh, it seems to be a tough job fighting the 'pink wave', even over here. My brother-in-law (I heart that guy!) was utterly taken aback when my mother gave my niece a pink bobby-car for Christmas. The reasoning? My nephew already has the standard red one and she couldn't have possibly given my niece a blue or green one. Becuse 'that wouldn't fit'. Oh, are you being serious, mum?
I hate hate hate that some colours apparently aren't for both genders. When she turns four, she'll get wooden toy-sword. And that will be brown and just as powerful as the one her brother got. Full stop.
Brad — December 31, 2009
I wish there was pricing info on the Ad. Another way to look at the ad is that poorer people with a male child are out of luck, cause there is no entry-level option for boys.
The definitive linkspam of this decade (1st January, 2010) | Geek Feminism Blog — December 31, 2009
[...] from Toys ‘R Us, in their marketing girls use pink telescopes and microscopes, and the pink ones have less powerful magnification. There’s also comment at Phrayngula and The [...]
Maureen — December 31, 2009
Hmm...I thought the pink ones were for boys.
Sociological Images Update (Dec. 2009) » Sociological Images — January 1, 2010
[...] marketing to children were discussed in a Salon article by Kate Harding; a recent post about pink telescopes and microscopes was featured on Pharygula; we were linked from the American Spectator; and Guardian named our [...]
ren — January 1, 2010
'why a pink telescope' was my ask too?
my daughter don't see black toy as an EXCLUSIVELY male toy. actually she prefers.
why pink is female, anyway?
Corporate Babysitter » Blog Archive » On pink toy microscopes — January 4, 2010
[...] pink microscopes and telescopes for girls offered in a Toys ‘R Us circular are getting some attention; my favorite discussion was at Pharyngula. From Minnesota’s own PZ Meyers: [...]
Anonymous — January 4, 2010
Some girls actually just like pink, it's always been my favourite colour growing up and I would have loved having cool things like that in my favourite colour. I think more colour options should be available with things though.
Emily — January 4, 2010
Some girls actually just like pink, it's always been my favourite colour growing up and I would have loved having cool things like that in my favourite colour. I think more colour options should be available with things though.
SensoryMetrics » Toys-R-Us Research Institute: Gender differences in size perception — January 9, 2010
[...] Sociological Images AKPC_IDS += "5016,"; Plurk This Post Buzz This Post Facebook Tags: Comments (0) [...]
Girls Get Less « SAMMY LIF — January 9, 2010
[...] Eta Alpha The Curvature Girls Get Less January 10, 2010, 2:57 am Filed under: 1 via sociological images, here’s a recent ToysR’Us coupon insert for some fun science [...]
SCIENCE GRRL: Research proves girls & boys equally good at math…again | Girl with Pen — January 13, 2010
[...] they have roles to play and only those roles. As recently as this past holiday toy buying season, Toys R Us advertised three different magnification power microscopes and telescopes, guess which one had the lowest power? Yup, the pink [...]
¿El débil rosa?: Las mujeres en el mundo de la ciencia - Ojo Cientifico — January 15, 2010
[...] vemos la versión grande del afiche, comprobamos que tanto el telescopio como el microscopio de los que hablamos tienen menos funciones [...]
Morgan Leichter-Saxby — February 6, 2010
[...] girl can aspire to be a doctor, so long as she wants to look hot while she’s doing it. Toy microscopes are available in black and in pink, but the pink one is less powerful. Now, I’ve taken [...]
AirFlow101 — February 12, 2010
After having two step-ladders stolen from my garage within a couple of weeks, I came up with an excellent plan: I painted the next one pink, and had no 'takers'. Back at-cha, guys.
Pink on geeks. Geeks on pink. — March 1, 2010
[...] ploy, it is part of a whole set of attitudes that do devalue girls and women (take, for instance, the pink microscope that has a lower magnification than the gender-neutral/masculine version). But, unless you would [...]
Ira — February 25, 2011
Ehh, I've noticed the color coding these days over toys. I didn't grow up with this sort of thing, so I find it a bit queer. It nearly twists my mind trying to comprehend it. I personally like pastels and pink is one of the colors I prefer, since it makes me appear less sickly ^_^ But does that make me any less manly? I guess only in the mind of crazy americans this sort of thing matters -_-
TOY FOR VIP » Blog Archive » Science Can Be Pink, But It Should Also Be Equal — December 2, 2011
[...] For example, tradesman Toys R Us offering a set of microscopes where a pinkish chronicle had the lowest ocular options. They seem to have given adopted a gender neutral approach: Now when we revisit a scholarship and [...]
Digital literacy – women in computing live Q&A « DediComm — January 12, 2012
[...] (Here’s a link to the catalogue entry for the telescopes, in case you don’t believe me.) [...]
Digital literacy – women in computing live Q&A | Buying A Website — January 16, 2012
[...] (Here’s a link to the catalogue entry for the telescopes, in case you don’t believe me.) [...]
Digital literacy – women in computing live Q&A - Property Cloud — March 29, 2012
[...] (Here’s a link to the catalogue entry for the telescopes, in case you don’t believe me.) [...]
Women in computing: live Q&A « Science Technology Informer — August 19, 2012
[...] (Here’s a link to the catalogue entry for the telescopes, in case you don’t believe me.) [...]
Christmas is coming - sexist toys encounter! — December 2, 2012
[...] previous year a girls’ toy microscope was less powerful than the boys’ model (report by Lisa Wade here) as if a girl who is interested in microscopes doesn’t need as much power as a boy -_- [...]
The Optimist: A Brief Look Back at 2012 | The Sequentialist — January 4, 2013
[...] – This. This. This. [...]
An Essay I wrote … about gendered toys and consequences | starfishskies — July 30, 2013
[...] http://thesocietypages.org/socimages/2009/12/29/girls-need-less-power/ [...]
School of Doubt | Pop Quiz: GIRLS! — November 20, 2013
[…] makers and engineers. Marketing STEM to girls has been a tricky subject in the past and range from lower-powered pink telescopes and microscopes, to the awful “Science, It’s a Girl Thing” video that was tried, and pulled, […]
Sadre — June 25, 2020
I'd place more blame with the manufacturers chatiw who researched the carbonite market and came up with the underpowered, overprettied devices. However, it seems likely