practical Flashcards
aim
to investigate gender stereotypical behaviour in boys and girls
null hypothesis
there will be no difference in gender stereotyped behaviour of boys and girls
any differences found will be due to chance
alternative hypothesis
boys will display gender stereotyped behaviour for boys and girls will display gender stereotyped behaviour for girls
research method
an observation
independant variable
sex of the child
dependent variable
gender stereotyped behaviour being displayed
sample
four children - 2 boys and 2 girls
sample was gathered by opportunity sampling following gaining parental consent
all four children attended a local private school nursery
procedure
- Written parental consent gained for nursery school children and from the nursery manager.
- Two boys and two girls selected on the observation day (Monday 10am)
- A one minute 30 second recording of free play of the four children playing together. The video player was hidden from view.
- Video recording analysed using time sampling every 10 seconds – the time bar was used to pause the video on a media player.
- Qualitative observational data gathered for thematic analysis.
- This qualitative data was then event sampled for quantitative analysis of gender stereotypical behaviour.
apparatus
Video (1.30 mins) of 4 children engaged in free play.
Television to record observed behaviour.
Coding sheet to record quantitative data.
controls
- children were videod to make sure no behaviours were missed as the video can be rewatched
- the children were studied in their nursery because it increases ecological validity because the children are in a normal environment so will display their normal behaviour
- the list of gender stereotyped behaviour was drawn up before viewing the video to increase objectivity
- the video was positioned where the children couldn’t see it so they could not act up or act differently
ethical issues
- parental consent - gained before the study
- right to withdraw - given to the parents after the study had taken place
- protection of participants - no distress was caused so the participants were protected throughout the study
- confidentiality and privacy - name of nursery and children was protected
conclusion of thematic analysis
it can be concluded that boys tend to show aggressive and controlling behaviour but the girls showed gender stereotyped behaviour
calculation of chi squared - stats statement
the calculated value of Chi-Squared = 2.53 is less than the critical value of 2.71 for a one tailed test at P=0.05 with df = 1
therefore, the result is not statistically significant and the null hypothesis can be supported which states that there will be no difference in gender stereotyped behaviour of boys and girls and any differences found will be due to chance
comparing thematic analysis and chi-squared
the thematic analysis showed that boys show stereotyped behaviour for boys and girls show gender stereotyped behaviour for girls but the chi-squared value calculated was not significant
application of findings to social learning theory
the girls use females as their role models so copy their behaviour
the boys use males as their role models so copy their behaviour
application of findings to operant conditioning
our results are consistent with gender stereotyped behaviour, they receive positive reinforcement for showing gender stereotyped behaviour
strength - validity
- high ecological validity
- because the study was done in a natural environment so they will play normally
- this makes the findings reliable as we can be sure they are due to real behaviour not what they are behaving like because they are in a study so behave in a different way, as they think they are meant to behave
strength - reliability
- the results can be checked again and again
- because the study was recorded
- this means that we can be sure the findings are reliable and correct
improving reliability
- only i wrote down what i thought so it is my opinion of the children’s behaviour, someone else may have a different opinion
- this makes the study subjective
- to improve this, more than one observer could view the same video using the same codes and compare data to increase inter-rater reliability
strength - generalisability
- only 4 children observed, all from the same nursery
- this means that generalisability is low
- we cannot be sure that other children and the wider population will show gender stereotyped behaviour
improving generalisability
- increase the number of children in the sample
- and use children from different nurseries too
- to see whether other children show gender stereotyped behaviour in the same way as the children did in our observation