Title: Sex Differences and Gender-Role Development
1Sex Differences and Gender-Role Development
2Definitions
- Sex biological identity
- Gender social and cultural identity as
male/female - Gender-role standard a behavior, value, or
motive that society deems more appropriate for
males/females
3SOME FACTS AND FICTIONS ABOUT SEX DIFFERENCES
- Actual Psychological Differences Between the
Sexes - Verbal Ability girls are superior
- Visual/Spatial Abilities boys are superior
- Evident by 4, persists across life span
- Mathematical Abilities
- In adolescence, boys better at arithmetic
reasoning - Girls better at computational skills
4SOME FACTS AND FICTIONS ABOUT SEX DIFFERENCES
- Aggression
- Boys ? physically and verbally
- Girls ? covert
5SOME FACTS AND FICTIONS ABOUT SEX DIFFERENCES
- Other Sex Differences
- Activity level boys are more physically active
(even before birth) - Fear, timidity, and risk-taking girls are more
fearful, timid, and take fewer risks - No difference in cognitive impulsivity
- Developmental vulnerability boys are more
vulnerable to prenatal and perinatal hazards and
disease
6SOME FACTS AND FICTIONS ABOUT SEX DIFFERENCES
- Conclusions
- Differences reflect group averages
- Differences are small
- Differences are most apparent at the extremes
- Males and females are much more psychologically
similar than they are different
7SOME FACTS AND FICTIONS ABOUT SEX DIFFERENCES
- Emotional expressivity / sensitivity
- Beginning in toddlerhood
- Boys ? anger
- Girls ? other emotions
- Compliance girls are more compliant
8Gender Differences in Social Behavior
- Gender segregation
- Play styles
- Social Influence Styles
- Charlesworth
- 4 children, playing with movie viewer designed so
only one child could watch at a time
9Gender Differences in Social Behavior
- Forms of Verbal Influence
- Social Interaction
- Jacklin Maccoby
- Pairs of neutrally dressed, unacquainted 33 m/o
brought to playroom - Group Structure
10THEORIES OF GENDER-TYPING AND GENDER ROLE
DEVELOPMENT
- Evolutionary Theory
- Males and females face different evolutionary
pressures
11THEORIES OF GENDER-TYPING AND GENDER ROLE
DEVELOPMENT
- Criticisms of the Evolutionary Approach
- Applies to differences that apply
cross-culturally - Ignores differences limited to cultures or
historical periods - Social roles hypothesis
- Cultures assign roles based on gender
- Socialization practices
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13THEORIES OF GENDER-TYPING AND GENDER ROLE
DEVELOPMENT
- Evidence for Social-Labeling Influences
- Cultural influences
- Meads study of tribal societies
- Arapesh both males and females were taught to
be expressive - Mundugumor both genders were taught to be
masculine - Tchambuli from Western standards, males more
feminine, females more masculine
14THEORIES OF GENDER-TYPING AND GENDER ROLE
DEVELOPMENT
- Evidence for Social-Labeling Influences
- Condry Condry
- Saw film of 9 m/o presented with jack-in-the-box
- Half told male, half told female
- boy was described as angry
- girl was described as afraid
15THEORIES OF GENDER-TYPING AND GENDER ROLE
DEVELOPMENT
- A psychobiosocial viewpoint
- Freuds Psychoanalytic Theory
- Social Learning Theory
- Direct tuition/reinforcement
- Observational learning
16THEORIES OF GENDER-TYPING AND GENDER ROLE
DEVELOPMENT
- Kohlbergs Cognitive-Developmental Theory
- Basic gender identity
- Gender stability
- Gender consistency
- Gender Schema Theory (Martin Halverson)
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18THEORIES OF GENDER-TYPING AND GENDER ROLE
DEVELOPMENT
- Martin Halverson
- Show 5-6 y/o pictures
- Boy engaging in traditional masculine activity
- Girl engaging in traditional masculine activity
- Boy engaging in traditional feminine activity
- Girl engaging in traditional feminine activity
- One week later, show pictures
19THEORIES OF GENDER-TYPING AND GENDER ROLE
DEVELOPMENT
- Martin
- 4-10 y/o told story
- Character in story was either a boy or girl
- Description was neutral, stereotyped, or
counterstereotyped
20THEORIES OF GENDER-TYPING AND GENDER ROLE
DEVELOPMENT
- An Integrative Theory
- Biological theories account for major biological
developments - Social-theories account for differential
reinforcement processes - Cognitive development explains the growth of
categorization skills - Gender schemas are also important as are models
as children age
21Androgyny Bem
- Historically, masculinity and femininity were at
opposite ends of a single dimension - Androgyny sees them as 2 separate dimensions,
allowing individuals to be high in both masculine
and feminine traits
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23Scoring for BEM
- Use the scoring guide to tally up scores for a
and b answers - A answers tally scores, divide by 20 (as long as
you didnt omit any a answers), place number in
the box at the bottom of your sheet labeled R.S.
and a. - B answers tally scores, divide by 20 (as long
as you didnt omit any b answers), place number
in box labeled R.S. and b.
24- Do Androgynous People Really Exist?
- In a college student sample
- 33 were masculine men or feminine women
- 30 were androgynous
- 37 undifferentiated or gender-type reversed
25- Are There Advantages to Being Androgynous?
- More highly adaptable to the situation
- Higher self-esteem
- More likeable
- Perceived as better adjusted
- The masculine traits are more important for
adjustment - Advantages may differ across lifespan