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Summary 1.5 Changing man: Gender differences tables

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Tables of Problem 3, Geneder differences of course 1.5 Developmental Psychology (changing man)

Voorbeeld van de inhoud

Problem 7: Boyd, Leman
Are there gender differences in development? Why?
Is gender identity biologically or socially determined?
How does it develop?

Developmental patterns in gender and sex roles
Gender concept: the cognitive understanding that gender is constant and permanent, unchanged by appearance

Gender typing: means by which children acquire the values, motives and behaviours viewed as appropriate for males or
females

 Influenced by gender stereotypes: the beliefs the members of an entire culture hold about the attitudes and
behaviours acceptable and appropriate for each sex (way M/F should act/be)
 Gender role: composites of the behaviours actually exhibited by a typical male or female in a given culture;
the reflection of a gender stereotype in everyday life

Early in life child develops a gender identity: perception of themselves as either masculine or feminine

Sex-typed behaviour (“gender appropriate”): behaviour that matches a culturally defined sex role. Consistent across
cultures. Not “desirable” so much as typical and socially normative.

 Male role is to control and manipulate the environment: independent, assertive, dominant, competitive
 Female role: emotionally support the family – passive, loving, sensitive, supportive

Developmental patterns of sex role concepts and stereotypes
 Stereotyped ideas about sex roles develop early
o Age 2: associate certain tasks and possessions with men and women
o Age 3-4: children can associate stereotypical occupations, toys and activities to each gender
o Age 5: children associate certain personality traits with each gender (knowledge well known by age 8 or 9)
 Damon expt: is it okay for little boys play with dolls? At age 4: yes. Age 6: not okay. Age 9: no rule against it, but its
uncommon.
 Recent evidence: 5-6 year olds, having figured out they are permanently a boy or girl, are searching for a rule about
how boys and girls behave
o Child picks up information from watching adults, from watching TV hearing evaluations of different activities
o Initially rules are treated as absolute moral rules
o Later they understand that these are social conventions  here sex-role concepts become more flexible
 Similarly, 5-6 year olds have very defined sense of “like me” and “not like me”
o Preferences for people like them
o Highly stereotyped (often negative) ideas about people not like them (eg- against obese children)
o These fixed, biased ideas about people decline into older childhood and adolescence
 Entire stereotyping process seems to be totally normal part of the child’s attempt to create rules and order, to find
patterns that guide his understanding/behaviour
o Children’s beliefs to the extent to which they “fit in” with same-sex peers may be an important component of
healthy psychological adjustment during elementary school years
o 6-7 years: overgeneralizes gender rules, believing them to be built-in along with biological gender differences
o Age 9: understand that some differences between boys and girls are the result of training or experience

Sex role stereotypes across cultures
 Sex-role stereotypes remarkably similar across cultures
o Men: aggression, adventurousness, cruelty, coarseness
o Women: weakness, gentleness, appreciativeness, softheartedness
o Eg- North America and Europe, the workplace remains typically gendered (mechanic vs nurse)
 Ethnic differences
o Middle eastern and Taiwanese cultures adhere to more rigid stereotypes for M/F
o Can vary across ethnicity (African Americans less strict in boy-girl gender-role distinctions; Mexican-
American gender-role socialization standards are more clearly differentiated)
 Mother’s education level can influence
 Male sex-role stereotype and sex-role concept seem to develop earlier – children assign more prestige to a job if they
think it is being performed by a male and not a female (although children do not attribute higher status to boys)

, Problem 7: Boyd, Leman
Sex-role behaviour
 Surprising finding: children’s behaviour is sex-typed earlier than are their ideas about sex roles or stereotypes
o 18-24 months: children show a preference for sex-stereotyped toys (dolls, or cars)  some months before they
can identify their own gender
o Long before age 3: children show a preference for same-sex playmates – much more sociable with playmates
of the same sex (before they have a concept of gender stability)
o School age: peer relationships are almost exclusively same-sex  instruction and modelling of sex-appropriate
behaviour

Sex-roles and adolescent identity development:
 Mid-teens: abandonment of assumption that what one’s gender does is automatically better or preferable
 Many girls participate in both female and male pursuits during childhood  @ puberty there is a move back to strict
gender-typing (parental pressure, increasing interest in romantic relationships)

Gender differences – real or myth?
 Moderate gender differences in abilities but also many similarities
 Boys tend to be more skilled that girls at manipulating objects, constructing 3D forms, mentally manipulating complex
figures and pictures

Proven gender differences

Physical, motor and  Females – higher life expectancy
sensory development  At birth girls more physically and neurologically advanced
 Girls walk earlier and attain puberty earlier
 Boys have more mature muscular development and larger heart/lungs and birth
 With age, boys superior in activities involving strength and gross motor skills
 Male foetuses more vulnerable to miscarriage, boys have higher rate of mortality; more
vulnerable to mental and physical disorders (ADHD, schizophrenia, tourettes etc)
Educational  Infancy to early school: girls display superior verbal abilities (vocab, comprehension,
achievement verbal creativity)
 Age 4: boys display greater visual-spatial ability (reading maps, target aim etc)
 Age 12 onwards: boys excel in some mathematical tasks – esp geometry
 Girls tend to perform better on exams throughout school
Social and emotional  Boys: from early, aggressors and victims of aggression  girls use more indirect forms of
development aggression (exclusion)
 Girls more likely to comply with parental/adult demands (boys more variable)
 Gender differences in compliance with peers not consistent
 Girls more nurturant towards younger children
 Boys more risk-taking; girls likely to show anger and other emotions
Atypical development  Boys more likely to have genetic defects, physical disabilities, mental retardation, reading
disabilities, speech defects, school and emotional problems


Disproven or complicated gender differences

Sociability  Boys and girls equally social. No gender difference in the need for love and attachment
 Equally capable of nurturance (although girls/women actually care for children more)
Suggestibility and  No difference in suggestibility or tendency to conform to standards of a peer group, or
conformity imitate responses of others. Obedience equal.
Learning style  Equally good at rote learning and simple repetitive tasks
 Equally responsive to visual and auditory stimuli
Self-esteem  No difference in overall self esteem
Verbal aggressiveness  Girls and boys engage equally in verbal aggression (although styles differ: girls tend to
and hostility gossip and exclude; boys are more directly verbally assaultive)

Explaining sex role development
Role of hormones
 Prenatal hormones can organise foetus’ biological and physical predispositions towards predisposition of being male or
female.
o Surge in hormones at puberty activates these early predispositions

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