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Sandra Bem

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Title: Sandra Bem


1
Sandra Bem
  • Lindsay Farrar
  • Rachel Wiedeman
  • Sam Lytal
  • Katie Richter

2
Overview
  • Family/Academics
  • Zeitgeist
  • Historical Antecedents
  • Personal Obstacles
  • Bem Sex-Role Inventory
  • Gender Schema Theory
  • The Lenses of Gender
  • An Unconventional Family

3
Family
  • Born June 22, 1944
  • Her father was a postal clerk and her mother was
    a secretary
  • Financial struggle
  • Parents always fighting
  • Mother emphasized the need to work outside the
    home.

4
Early Academics
  • Hillel Academy (kindergarten -8th grade)
  • Jewish school
  • Was not interested in what she studied here and
    did enough just to get by
  • Her ideas about gender began during her time here
  • Expulsion due to wearing pants

5
College Academics
  • Carnegie-Mellon University
  • Bachelors in psychology
  • Hypothesis testing
  • Developmental psychology
  • Daryl Bem (assistant professor)
  • Egalitarian marriage

6
College Academics
  • University of Michigan
  • Graduate school in child clinical psychology
  • Ph.D dissertation
  • The Role of Task Comprehension in Childrens
    Problem Solving

7
Professor Sandra Bem
  • Seminars on Daryl and Sandra Bems marriage life
  • An Unconventional Family
  • Career comes first for both units in the marriage
  • Equality of men and women
  • Carnegie-Mellon until 1971 (assistant prof)
  • Began to focus on ideas involving gender issues
    rather than the psychology of children
  • Stanford University until 1978 (assistant prof)
  • healthy person male female traits
  • sexually-biased job discrimination
  • The effects of gender-specific job advertisements
  • BSRI Bem Sex Role Inventory
  • Cornell University 1981 professor
  • Psychology
  • Director of Women Studies

8
Zeitgeist
  • Social Climate of the 20th Century
  • Women
  • Gender Issues
  • Inequality in the workforce

9
Historical Antecedents
  • Psychology during the mid-1900s to late-1900s
  • Behaviorism
  • Humanistic Psychology
  • Cognitive Psychology
  • Developmental Psychology

10
Historical Antecedents
  • Developmental Psychology
  • Majority of research during the time she was in
    grad school and after she graduated
  • She was not interested in this so she began to
    experiment on her own original ideas of gender.

11
Personal Obstacles
  • Family Problems
  • Financial Issues
  • Minority/Inequality Issues
  • Jewish
  • Very few women in Psychology programs
  • It took longer for her to become a professor in
    psychology than it would take a man.
  • She had her own ideas that she chose to study

12
Bem Sex-Role Inventory
  • Description
  • 60 personality characteristics
  • Likert scale 1-7
  • Three scores
  • Administration Rules
  • Male or female high school student or older
  • 10 to 15 minutes
  • Individual to large group

Bem, S. L. (1976). Bem sex-role inventory Bem,
S. L. (1974).
13
Scoring of BSR Inventory
  • Masculinity Score
  • Femininity Score
  • Androgyny Score
  • Difference between Masculinity Score and
    Femininity Score
  • Conversion factor 2.322

Bem, S. L. (1974) Bem, S. L. (1975).
14
Androgyny?
  • Meaning of Androgyny Score
  • Androgyny
  • Reflects the relative amount of masculinity and
    femininity that the person includes in his/her
    self-description.
  • Best characterizes the nature of the total sex
    role and sex identity of the individual.

Bem, S. L. (1975) Bem, S. L. (1977).
15
Strengths of the BSRI
  • Normative Data
  • Stanford Introduction to Psychology Course
  • 444 Males and 279 females
  • Foothill Junior College
  • 117 Males and 77 Females (paid volunteers)
  • These normative samples helped create the cut
    points for the data and the conversion factor to
    calculate the Androgyny Score
  • Large normative sample

Bem, S. L. (1976). Bem sex-role inventory Bem,
S. L. (1974).
16
More Strengths of the BSRI
  • Both Masculine and Feminine characteristics
    included and they are on different continuums.
  • Social Desirability Score
  • To verify that the androgynous score is valid
  • Applicability of the findings to other areas
  • Inventory is easy to complete and has short
    administration time.

Bem, S. L. (1974) Bem, S. L. (1975) Bem, S. L.
(1977).
17
Weaknesses of the BSRI
  • Face Valid
  • Self-Evaluation only
  • Created and Normed in 1970s

18
BSRI Influence on Future
  • Masculinity and Femininity should be
    conceptualized on separate continuum.
  • Androgyny research
  • metrosexual
  • Sex Typing Research
  • Children and parenting

Bem, S. L. (1976). Sex typing and the avoidance
of cross-sex behavior Andersen, S. M., Bem, S.
L. (1981) Bem, S. L. (1974).
19
Gender Schema Theory Overview
  • Conditioning
  • Results
  • Characteristics

20
Study 1 Gender Clustering in Free Recall
  • The BSRI
  • Experimental Phase Free Recall

21
Study 2 Gender-SchematicProcessing of the
Self-Concept
  • Basic Self Concept
  • Non-sex typed Self Concept

22
The Heterosexuality Subschema
  • Common experiences
  • Universal Symbolism
  • Phone Attraction

23
The Antecedents of Gender-Based Schematic
Processing Some Speculations
  • From the beginning children are taught two
    things
  • Associations
  • A Dichotomy

24
Strengths and Weaknesses
  • Strengths
  • Environment
  • Methods of assessment
  • Weaknesses
  • Nature Verses Nurture

25
Consequences for the Future
  • Consequences of gender typing

26
Lenses of Gender
  • 1) Androcentrism
  • 2) Biological Essentialism
  • 3) Gender Polarization
  • These 3 gender lenses provide the foundation for
    a theory of how biology, culture, and the
    individual psyche all interact in historical
    context to systematically reproduce male power.

27
Biological Essentialism
  • Definition
  • Division of labor
  • Not the only way for society to function
  • Differences should be considered, not devalued
  • Yes, women might turn out to be more
    biologically nurturant than men on the average,
    but that should make them psychiatrists, not
    secretaries

28
Androcentrism
  • Defines males (and male experience) as a standard
    or norm and females (and female experience) as a
    deviation from that norm.
  • 3 explanations
  • Judeo-Christian
  • Greek Philosophy
  • Freudian Psychoanalytic Theory

29
Gender Polarization
  • Superimposes male-female differences on virtually
    every aspect of human experience (from modes of
    dress and social roles to ways of expressing
    emotion and sexual desire.)

30
Bems suggestion
  • we need to sever all the culturally constructed
    connections that currently exist in our society
    between what sex a person is and virtually every
    other aspect of human experience

Bem, S. L. (1998). An Unconventional Family.
31
An Unconventional Family
  • Autobiographical account
  • If The Lenses of Gender is the statement of my
    theory, An Unconventional Family is the statement
    of my practice
  • Egalitarian Partners
  • Feminist Child-rearing
  • Interviews

Bem, S. L. (1998)
32
Summary
  • Influential in personality and gender research
    through her work with the BSRI, the Gender Schema
    Theory, and theories of societal gender roles.
  • Her writings influenced feminist thought and
    parenting beliefs.

33
Bibliography
  • Andersen, S. M., Bem, S. L. (1981). Sex typing
    and androgyny in dyadic interaction Individual
    differences in responsiveness to physical
    attraction. Journal of Personality and Social
    Psychology, 41, 74 86.
  • Bem, S. L. (1974). The measurement of
    psychological androgyny. Journal of Consulting
    and Clinical Psychology, 42, 155 162.
  • Bem, S. L. (1975). Sex role adaptability One
    consequence of psychological androgyny. Journal
    of Personality and Social Psychology, 31, 634
    643.
  • Bem, S. L. (1976). Bem sex-role inventory.
    Princeton, NJ Educational Testing Service.
  • Bem, S. L. (1976). Sex typing and the avoidance
    of cross-sex behavior. Journal of Personality
    and Social Psychology, 33, 48 54.
  • Bem, S. L. (1977). On the utility of alternative
    procedures for assessing psychological
    androgyny. Journal of Consulting and Clinical
    Psychology, 45, 196 205.

34
Bibliography continued
  • Bem, S. L. (1981). Gender schema theory A
    cognitive account of sex typing. Psychological
    Review, 88, 354 364.
  • Bem, S. L. (1993). The Lenses of Gender. New
    Haven, CT Yale University Press.
  • Bem, S. L. (1998). An Unconventional Family. New
    Haven, CT Yale University Press.
  • Bettis, N. (n.d.). Sandra Ruth Lipsitz Bem.
    Retrieved June 18, 2007, from http//www.psych.co
    rnell.edu/sec/pubpeo ple/s1b8/s1b6_vita.pdf
  • Koesterer, M.(n.d.). Dr. Sandra Lipsitz Bem An
    Unconventional Life. Retrieved June 18, 2007,
    from http//www.webster.edu/woolflm/sandrabem.ht
    ml
  • Synder, M., Tanke, E. D., Berscheid, E. (1977).
    Social perception and interpersonal behavior On
    the self- fulfilling nature of social
    stereotypes. Journal of Personality and Social
    Psychology, 35, 656 666.
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