gender development Flashcards

1
Q

what is gender?

A
  • Gender: the individual’s subjective sense of belonging to the male or female category or indeed neither of the two
  • the primary category by which individuals identify themselves as well as being identified by others
  • may determine self concept
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2
Q

Briefly describe the milestones of gender development from infancy to elementary school years.

A

–infancy

-toddlers: labeling oneself as a “boy” or “girl” can begin as early as age 18 months; begin to exhibit gender-specific behavior

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3
Q

how do infants and young children perceive gender? Can you provide relevant research examples?

A

—infancy: btw males and females by months; activity matching in 2nd yr (EX: baby makes connection that the voice matches either to the woman or the man)

-preschool & kindergarten: toy and play preferences (EX: Jacklin & Maccoby= by 2 1/2 children prefer playing with children of their own gender)

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4
Q

How do gendered behaviors emerge?

A

–children prefer to play with toys that match their gender

-consciousness awareness of the biological basis of gender

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5
Q

What is the essentialist bias?

A

–Children in middle childhood believe Chris would act like a typical girl (be stereotypically feminine)

–Children over 8 believe Chris would act like a girl but understand that the environment might influence her behavior and make her act more masculine

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6
Q

What are the basic principles of the biological accounts of gender development?

A
  • -chromosomal differences
  • sexual differentiation
  • hormonal differences
  • behavioral differences: girls that produce too much androgen, behaved more stereotypically masculine
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7
Q

What are the basic principles of the social learning theories?

A
  • -observational learning
  • children imitate same-sex models more
  • children imitate models engaged in “gender-appropriate” activities
  • parents reinforce gender-appropriate behavior in young children
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8
Q

What role does the family play in gender development? Discuss findings by Rust et al. (2000).

A

-boys with an older brother or without their older brother showed a slight edge for showing male stereotypical behaviors

—if a boy has an older sister in the household, their male stereotype behaviors shown is lower

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9
Q

What are the cognitive theories of gender development?

A
  • Kohlberg claims that ‘gender’ is a concept

- the child first learns of the concept ‘girl’ or ‘boy’ in the same way s/he learns about other concepts

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10
Q

What are Kohlberg’s three stages of gender development?

A
  • gender identity
  • gender stability: Children think that gender is consistent over time, but not across situations. Appearance plays a factor
  • gender constancy/ consistency: This involves a kind of conservation. The child understands that gender remains the same despite changes in other characteristics, e.g. age, size, hairstyle, clothes etc.
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11
Q

What do we mean with gender schema theory? How do children learn about gender according to this theory?

A

-gender schema: • Mental structure that incorporate what children know about gender and associations which guide our behavior
• They emerge with gender identity

-children learn by categorizing objects as being for boys and girls based on stereotypes will show behaviors that match more their gender and show more gender stereotyped behaviors

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12
Q

How has the field’s perception of gender identity in transgender children changed?

A
  • PAST: these children were diagnose as confused or delayed in the gender development and should be treated
  • NOW: transgender is a normal variant of gender identity, children are expressing their true identity
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13
Q

How are transgender children compared to cisgender children and siblings?

A
  • people who were born with one sex, and transition to another gender, showed stereotypical behaviors that matched their new gender
  • EX: girl transitions to a boy, will show stereotypical boy behaviors and beliefs like boy being born a boy instead of a girl
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14
Q

what to tell studies to tell us so far?

A
  • both transgender children and siblings understand the fluidity of gender,
  • transgender children believe that their gender at birth did not match their true gender
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15
Q

Why is sex different from gender ?

A
  • Sex: means biological maleness/femaleness

- determined by chromosomes

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