1 / 37

Chapter 13 – Sex Differences

Chapter 13 – Sex Differences. Sex Stereotypes = general beliefs based on sex Masculine stereotype - Instrumental behavior - the active provider. Feminine stereotype - Expressive behavior - the nurturer. Maintenance of stereotypes 2 biases. Confirmatory bias

Download Presentation

Chapter 13 – Sex Differences

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 13 – Sex Differences • Sex Stereotypes = general beliefs based on sex Masculine stereotype - Instrumental behavior - the active provider

  2. Feminine stereotype - Expressive behavior - the nurturer

  3. Maintenance of stereotypes2 biases • Confirmatory bias Note examples of stereotype & view as proof • Selective inattention Inconsistencies ignored/explained

  4. Sex stereotypes are schemas that organize our thinking • Can distort thinking & memory - easy to remember confirming examples - hard to remember contradictory ones

  5. Impact of stereotypes • Evaluate people more positively if consistent with stereotype • Evaluate harshly if violate stereotype

  6. Men seen as able, women as giving effort for same male-typed achievement • Women still earn less for same job

  7. Origins of Stereotypes • Home - parents treat kids differently from birth

  8. School: Teachers respond differentially - boys: success = ability failure = lack of effort - girls: success = effort & neatness failure = lack of ability

  9. Peers - children intolerant of sex-inconsistent behavior • Media - extremes of sex-typed behavior - more sex-typed than real life - children’s programming is the most sex-typed

  10. Cross-cultural results 110 non-industrialized societies consistent effects of sex stereotyping in socialization

  11. % Societies where pressure greater AttributeFor BoysFor Girls Nurturance 0 82 Obedience 3 35 Responsibility 11 61 Achievement 87 3 Self-reliance 85 0

  12. First goal is for all children to behave • Second goal is to socialize child to conform to sex stereotype

  13. Actual Sex Differences • Physical differences - Sex characteristics - Size, strength

  14. Abilities • Verbal abilities - girls

  15. Math abilities - girls in elementary school - boys during adolescence • Visual-spatial abilities - boys

  16. Psychological/Behavioral Differences • Aggression - boys • Activity Level - boys

  17. Fear, timidity, & (lower) risk-taking - girls • Developmental vulnerability - boys

  18. Emotional sensitivity & nurturance - girls & boys • Compliance - girls

  19. Nature & size of the group differences - large overlap between groups - differences are consistent but small - differences smaller than 20 years ago - almost all differences are qualified - individual variability

  20. Reasons for differences - innate, biological differences - socialization

  21. Sum: differences exist • BUT sexes are more alike than different - more unlike individuals of own sex than average member of other sex - cannot make predictions about individuals

  22. Sex TypingIdentification with own sex • Gender/sex identity - knowledge of one’s sex and its permanence

  23. Initially categorize on superficial characteristics • By age 3 categorize self accurately - but do not realize sex is permanent • By 5-7 know sex is unchanging & have stable identity based on sex

  24. Sex/gender roles - beliefs about what the sexes are supposed to be like & do Knowledge • by 2.5, some • by 10, complete

  25. Adherence to stereotypes • in preschool, some flexibility • by 6, no deviation allowed • by 10, more flexible again • 12-15 = intolerance • young adults = more flexible • middle age = less sex-typed

  26. Transition times = more rigid => more rigid at times when sex identification is more relevant

  27. Sex-Typed Behavior Favor activities typed for own sex • By 14-22 months, prefer sex-typed toys • 18-24 mo = no opposite-sex toys • By 2 years for girls & 3 for boys, prefer same-sex playmates • Maccoby & children’s play styles

  28. Sex differences - boys adopt sex-typed behavior & preferences quicker - girls more likely to retain cross-sex interests • Boys = more pressure to conform

  29. Stability of sex-typing - fairly stable from childhood to adulthood - but some flexibility

  30. Theories of Sex Role Development • Psychoanalytic Theory (Freud) - social & biological factors - everyone is bisexual at birth - sexual identity = identification with same-sex parent

  31. Biosocial Theory (Money & Ehrhardt) - biology channels development - via child’s & others’ reactions

  32. Social Learning Theory (Bandura, Mischel) - parents influence sex development by: 1. direct instruction - reinforcement & punishment - encourage sex-typed behavior by age 2 - dads/peers

  33. 2. observational learning - imitate same-sex models - reinforced for this imitation BUT - doesn’t address children’s own motivation

  34. Cognitive-Developmental Theory (Kohlberg) - sex-role development depends on cognitive development - children actively socialize themselves - 1st establish stable gender identity - then seek models & information

  35. - Role of developing cognitive abilities & child’s motivation - encourage sex-role development at 6+ years - BUT children show sex-typed behavior before they have stable identity

  36. Gender-Schema Theory — cognitive(Martin & Halverson) - children motivated to be consistent - self-socialize as soon as have basic gender identity (age 2-3) - role of gender schemas

  37. Integration - biosocial, social learning & cognitive • Biosocial - biology leads people to label children by sex & treat differentially • Social learning - early (0-3) sex-typing from others’ teaching & encouragement • Cognitive - cognitive milestones & child’s own desires aid sex-typing (age 2-3+)

More Related