Abstract
The quality of the Bender-Gestalt performance of 72 normal class-six Sierra Leone, West African children, representing four sub-cultures with varying degrees of modernization, was investigated. The quality of the Bender reproductions of the most modernized sub-culture was significantly higher than that of the remaining three sub-cultures. Over-all, boys' Bender performances were of significantly higher quality than the girls' Bender performances. The interaction of gender and sub-culture was significant only for the two village sub-cultures, insofar as the girls produced poorer quality protocols than did the boys. This result parallels the gender division of labor in adulthood in village life.
Get full access to this article
View all access options for this article.
