Gender Flashcards

1
Q

3 stage model of gender development

A

Gender identity, 2-3yrs:

  • label gender based on external appearance
  • do not understand gender is fixed

Gender stability, 4-5yrs:

  • gender remains constant over time
  • based on appearance

Gender constancy, 6-7yrs:

  • knowledge gender is invariant despite changes in appearance, dress or activity
  • adopt gender typed behaviours consistently
  • same sex play mates
  • gender stereotyped behaviours and activities
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2
Q

Evolutionary

A

Traits facilitate survival, transmission of these traits favoured over generations
-increase chances of mating and survival

Men can’t give birth, multiple young (fertile) partners (maximise paternity), less resources in children
Women carry foetuses, invest in parenting, fewer sexual partners, long-term providers

Children’s play:

  • boys engage in physically active rough competitive play, dominance
  • girls establish close social relationships, avoid conflict
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3
Q

Evolutionary criticisms

A

X- can’t account for similarities or differences in general behaviour

X- do not specify mechanisms

X- descriptive and post hoc, lacks scientific rigour, do not acknowledge environmental pressures

X-self-report data

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4
Q

Hormone account

A

Role androgens play

  • hormones including testosterone affect physical development, present at higher levels in males
  • prenatal androgens= male genitalia
  • fluctuations influence behaviour

Transgender children- biological accounts of gender, used as evidence gender has biological component
-play and wear clothes, match their idea of gender

Androgen insensitivity syndrome (AIS):
-genetically male, external female genitalia
Cognenital adrenal hyperplasia (CAH):
-male genitalia in females, choose active play and play fighting

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5
Q

Hormone account criticisms

A

X- causal link between hormones and behaviour has not been established
-hormonal influences cannot be disentangled from social ones

X- lack of relationship between prenatal hormones and gender linked behaviours
-whether hormonal factors could be basis for gender-differentiated conduct

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6
Q

Cognitive Development Theory

Kohlberg (1966)

A

Develop concepts of gender from those around them- observation, inference and practice

Children don’t realise gender remains stable, 3yr think gender change of clothing does

Gender constancy:
-positively value their gender identity, behave congruently—> gratifying

Low constancy play with toy from both adverts
High constancy less likely to play with opposite gender toy

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7
Q

Cognitive development theory

Criticisms

A

X- Long before gender constancy children prefer to play with gender traditional toys

X-gender difference in colour present by 3 years

X- 2yr olds can sort pictures of stereotypical toys, clothing and appliances

X- constancy not prerequisite for gender typing and development

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8
Q

Gender schema theory

MARTIN & HALVERSON (1981)

A

Gender types behaviours begin when children can label others and their own gender

Develop gender schemas- include knowledge of activities and interests, personality and social attributes, scripts about gender-linked activities—> consistent with a schema

Martin & Ruble (2004):

  • 2- identify themselves
  • 3-4- learn about gender-related characteristics
  • 5-7- characteristics rigid and inflexible
  • 7-12- schemas more flexible
  • adolescence- schemas become rigid again
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9
Q

Gender schema theory criticisms

A

X- no evidence infants possess schemas, girls greater flexibility

-misremembered gender of child playing with toys

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10
Q

Social schema theory

BANDURA & BUSSEY (1999)

A

3 interacting causal factors:

  • personal- cognitive, motivational, biological processes
  • behavioural- engaging in gendered behaviours
  • environmental- social influences encountered in everyday life

Behaviour develops in 3 ways:

  • tuition- directly taught gendered behaviours
  • enactive experience- children learn to guide their behaviour by considering reactions from others—> conditioning with rewards
  • observational learning- seeing others behave and watching consequences
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11
Q

Gender differences

Mathematical thinking

A

Children view boys and girls as quail in ability, men as better than women

Parents estimate sons IQ to be higher than daughters

Differences emerge in secondary school, but difference is very small

Girls= higher maths anxiety, less confidence

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12
Q

Gender differences

Spatial skills

A

Comparing, manipulating, transforming mental pictures:

  • mental rotation- identifying model in different orientation
  • spatial perception- determining spatial relations of objects with respect to ones body
  • spatial visualisation- able to visualise spatially present information

Difference largest for rotation, then perception, then visualisation —> getting smaller

Boys get more experience interacting in spatially complex environments

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13
Q

Gender differences

Aggression

A

Physical aggression emerges 1st bday—> biting, hitting

5% male toddlers, 1% female

2 types:

  • direct aggression- verbal and physical acts
  • indirect- rational aggressive acts by manipulating peer relationships

Girls use indirect more

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14
Q

Male variability hypothesis

SHIELDS (2002)

A

Men greatly vary in their abilities, women assumed to be the same

Education less valuable for women, less likely to achieve as much as men
- should be confined to role of wife and mother

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15
Q

Gender similarity hypothesis

HYDE (2005)

A

Studies analysing evidence for gender differences:
-strength, moral reasoning, cheating, problem solving, self-esteem, leadership

78% report small/close to 0 effects

Medium effects in throwing speed and distance; sexuality and physical aggression

Makes and females alike on most psychological variables, differences within gender are larger

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