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Gender

Gender. Samuel R. Mathews, Ph.D. Psychology of Adolescence. Understanding Gender. Early Perspectives: Psychoanalytic (e.g. Freud) Essentialist Perspective: knowing one’s biological sex allowed others to make broad generalizations Females were seen as fundamentally different from males

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Gender

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  1. Gender Samuel R. Mathews, Ph.D. Psychology of Adolescence

  2. Understanding Gender • Early Perspectives: Psychoanalytic (e.g. Freud) • Essentialist Perspective: knowing one’s biological sex allowed others to make broad generalizations • Females were seen as fundamentally different from males • Contemporary Perspectives: Social/Cognitive (e.g. Bussey & Bandura, 2004) • Understanding gender is grounded in biological, socio-cultural, and individual experiences • Females and males share many common attributes, potentials, and abilities

  3. Developing Gender within Cultural Boundaries • Gender is a product of socialization • Self regulation • Role preparation • Sources of meaning • Socialization can lead to individualistic or collectivistic orientation • Broad Socialization: many choices left to the individual • Narrow Socialization: few choices typically controlled by tradition, culture, religion, generational status

  4. Developing Gender within Cultural Boundaries • Gender differences and Traditional Cultures • Females and Narrow Socialization • Typically have limited contact with peers • Linked to tasks related to child care & homemaking • Little freedom for free exploration beyond the home • Linked to value of “purity & domestic arts” • Males and Broad Socialization • Typically less contact with family and more with peers • Linked to tasks for providing, protecting, and procreating • Greater freedom for exploring adult male roles • Linked to individual decision-making

  5. Developing Gender within Cultural Boundaries • Risks for transgression of traditional gender roles: • Females: isolation, injury, death • Males: isolation, ridicule, injury, death • Risks not necessarily limited to so called traditional cultures • E.g. Matthew Sheppard case • Marriage is frequently arranged formally or informally by parents/brokers

  6. Adolescents, Gender and early U.S. History • Gender roles and socialization based on many of the traditional and essentialist beliefs: • Women were weaker • Women were to comply with narrow socialization of purity and piety • Women were to comply with male ideals of attractiveness • Civil rights grounded in a patriarchical system • Socialization based on narrow rules and restricted social organization grounded in those narrow rules

  7. Adolescents, Gender and early U.S. History • Males’ gender role and social traditions have evolved across US history • Moved from a collectivist (communal manhood) to individualist view (passionate manhood) • Socialization has move from broad to more narrowly defined system in many domains • Characteristics of independence, assertiveness, and other characteristics associated with masculinity have persisted

  8. Socialization and Gender • Gender Intensification • Across late childhood and adolescence, perceived differences between masculinity and femininity become more pronounced due to increased pressure • Highest among those in so called traditional cultures • More recent research indicates that intensification is greater for males than females • Socialization toward traditional roles tends to increase gender intensification (e.g. family)

  9. Socialization and Gender • Sources of socialization: • Family (traditional/non-traditional parental models), • Peers (subtle cues, selected activities, etc), & • School (formal/informal curriculum, teachers’ subtle/intentional cues, rules/dress codes) • Broader cultural signals (prohibitions on roles based on sex/gender)

  10. Socialization and Gender • Sources of socialization • Media (magazines pg.132, MTV, internet) • Magazines focus on: • Physical appearance • How to “get a man” • Photos tend to focus on sexuality

  11. Gender Socialization and Problems • Problems typically associated with socialization forces: • Body imageExtreme dietary and exercise practices • Behaviors Boy’s Aggressiveness (protect, provide, procreate) • Gender-inappropriate behavior/appearance is typically met with ridicule, aggression, & isolation

  12. Age 4 or 5 Identify things as appropriate for either males or females Age 12 to 16 Perceptions of gender become more rigid – gender intensification Age 3 Understand themselves as being either male or female Age 6 to 10 Perceptions of gender become less rigid Cognition and GenderKolhberg’s Cognitive Developmental Theory of Gender • Gender is a fundamental way of organizing ideas about the world As adolescents become more capable of reflecting on these issues they become more concerned with compliance to gender norms for themselves and other.

  13. Cognition and Gender • Cognitive development from concrete through formal operations can account for some changes in gender understandings • Experience and development of a gender schema account for major parts of our gender understanding.

  14. Sandra Bem: Gender Roles • Bem: stereotypes and cultural practices reflect gender-specific attributes • Instrumental traits attributed to masculinity • Expressive traits attributed to femininity

  15. Sandra Bem: Gender Roles • Feminine expressive, collective • Masculine instrumental, individualistic • Androgynous balance of each • Adolescent females who are androgynous tend to have more peer acceptance and higher sense of self esteem/self efficacy • Adolescent males who are more masculine tend to fare better • WHY???????

  16. Gender Roles in Minority Groups • Impact of gender roles difficult to unravel from impact of minority status • Minority in light of political, economic, & social power • Differences in gender roles between minority and majority cultures likely due to the interaction of multiple factors • Beyond racial differences, what other minority groups might yield differences in gender roles?

  17. Gender Stereotypes in Emerging Adulthood • Stereotype: beliefs about others based on group membership rather than direct experience • Stereotypes can serve two functions: • Descriptive • Prescriptive

  18. Persistence of Gender Beliefs • …the more a nation believes in the stereotype of the scientific male (even unconsciously), the greater the gap in performance between boys and girls in both science and math. (Nosak, 2009)

  19. Understanding Sex Differences • Even when gender difference exist between males and females • the portion of the two bell curves that overlap is much • greater than the portion that is distinctive to • Even when gender difference exist between males and females the portion of the two bell curves that overlap is much greater than the portion that is distinctive to either gender and likely within test error

  20. Persistence of Gender Differences • Gender schemas tend to shape the way we notice, interpret and remember information according to our expectations about genders • Social roles for males and females enhance or suppress different capabilities (social roles theory) • Differential gender socialization leads males and females to develop different skills and attitudes which leads to different behaviours – the differences in behavior seem to confirm the appropriateness of the different roles

  21. Gender and Globalization • Adolescent girls today have opportunities that were unknown to women in previous eras of Western history • The proportion of females in fields such as medicine, business and law are considerably higher than 20 years ago • However, women tend to earn less money than men even when they are doing similar work

  22. Gender and Globalization • In countries outside the West, adolescent girls have much less in the way of educational and occupational opportunities • In most developing countries adolescent girls are considerably less likely than boys to go to a secondary school • As traditional cultures proceed toward economic development, they may offer more opportunities for girls • As economies become more developed and complex, brain matters more than brawn and men’s physical advantage ceases to matter in work – women may have more opportunity for different gender roles

  23. Examine the list of terms and phrases below and select 6 that you would use to describe an ideal person—make your list • In your groups, reach consensus on the 6 terms your group would agree for their ideal person

  24. Self-Reliant Compassionate Shy Analytical Dominant Ambitious Loyal Understanding Assertive Cheerful Affectionate Independent Aggressive Sympathetic Athletic Child-Like Tender Individualistic Competitive Gullible Gentle Forceful Sensitive to others Defends own beliefs Eager to soothe hurt feelings Has leadership abilities Yielding

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