Chapter 15 - Gender Development Flashcards
Direct teaching (social learning theory)
- Parents do: buy gender appropriate toys (could be result of child’s pre-established preferences), are supporting of sex-appropriate play, talk differently to children (ie. About emotions)
- Parents don’t: display different in warmth, differ in # of interactions or responsiveness, restrict # of activities
Observational learning (social learning theory)
- Because of gender segregated play (kids playing together according to gender) they witness same sex activities more (children increase gender segregated play from pre-school to first grade)
- Children see and experience the roles of men and women in society, resulting in gender-typed activities
- Attend more to, and remember better, info about same sex activities/toys
Gender schema theory (theories of social cognition)
- Children develop gender schemas: mental representations incorporating everything they know (or believe) about gender
- Schemas lead to a confirmation bias (eg. A bias to attend to or remember info that “fits” with or confirms schema and distort or forget disconfirming info) -> Ex. Telling story about Johnny playing soccer and then doing ballet -> kids most likely to forget that he did ballet when they have to remember and recall the story a few hours later
- Gender self-socialization
- Self-fulfilling prophecies (eg. Stereotype threat)
- Gender stereotypes influenced by media (ex. More representation of males than females on TV, representation of both genders is stereotypical)
gender self-socialization
- The child determines what other info they learn about gender
- Perpetuating cycle (eg. Initial preference for trucks leads them to learn more about trucks over other things and that creates more opportunities eg. To meet others with common interests)
bioecological model (ethological and evolutionary)
- Children learn and are influenced by gender at
every level (all systems) - ex. occupations/genders of neighbors, media, belief systems of the culture, time period
evolutionary model and gendered behaviours
- Gender behaviors are genetically based to influence survival and mating
- E.g. physical activity, aggression in males due to “hunter” characteristics, need to compete for mates
- E.g. nurturance and emotional characteristics in females, playing with dolls is the ‘caregiver’ in females
evolutionary model and parental investment theory
- differences in relationships and roles due to different investment needs of males vs. females in offspring
- E.g. Males can have large numbers of offspring, females limited number and larger time commitment
- E.g. males emphasize attractiveness of mates (signs of youthfulness and health for increased reproductivity); females emphasize stability/resources (to support their more limited # of offspring)
evolutionary model and brain structure/function
- Male and female brains show some small differences in physical structure.
- The corpus callosum tends to be large and more dense in women than in men.
- When engaged in cognitive tasks, male brains tend to show more unilateral activation whereas female brains show more bilateral activation
sex-typed behaviour: biological explanations
- Female rats and monkeys treated with testosterone showed increased activity level, ‘rough and tumble’ play, and aggression
- Sensitive periods are different for different sex-typed
behavior (~8 weeks gestation – 6 months of age) - gender is a continuous variable (biologically)
biological explanations: hormones during pregnancy
- In humans, when androgen is reduced: Preference for more feminine clothing, less ‘Tomboyish’ behavior, score lower on spatial ability
- When androgen is increased: Males enter puberty much earlier; Females have ambiguous genitalia, more “masculine” physical traits, gender identity issues (e.g. less satisfaction with gender), more time with “male”
toys and male playmates, better spatial skills
integrating the theories
- Hormones and biological differences influence
gender identity and play styles - Play styles being more compatible leads to
gender segregation - Gender segregation leads to greater
opportunities to learn about gender typed behavior
and form gender schemas - Others beliefs get incorporated; e.g., peers,
adults media - All are influenced by cultural beliefs, time period
etc. (5 systems; bioecological)
effect size of gender differences
- Most average gender differences in cognitive abilities are in the small range
- similarities far outweigh differences on most attributes -> “gender similarity hypothesis”
documented gender differences
- verbal ability
- visual/spatial ability
- mathematical ability
- aggression
- activity level
- fear, timidity, risk-taking
- emotional expressivity
- compliance
- developmental vulnerability
verbal ability
girls develop this earlier; are slightly better than boys throughout childhood and adolescence
visual/spatial ability
from middle childhood on, boys outperform girls