Books shape how children learn about society and social norms, in part through the representation of different characters. To better understand the messages children encounter in books, this study introduces new artificial intelligence methods for systematically converting images into data. The authors apply these image tools, along with established text analysis methods, to measure the representation of race, gender, and age in children’s books commonly found in US schools and homes over the last century.
The authors find that more characters with darker skin color appear over time, but "mainstream" award-winning books, which are twice as likely to be checked out from libraries, persistently depict more lighter-skinned characters even after conditioning on perceived race. Across all books, children are depicted with lighter skin than adults. Over time, females are increasingly present but are more represented in images than in text, suggesting greater symbolic inclusion in pictures than substantive inclusion in stories.
Relative to their growing share of the US population, Black and Latinx people are underrepresented in the mainstream collection; males, particularly White males, are persistently overrepresented.
This data provides a view into the "black box" of education through children’s books in US schools and homes, highlighting what has changed and what has endured.
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