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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
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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 stereotypes2 biases • Confirmatory bias Note examples of stereotype & view as proof • Selective inattention Inconsistencies ignored/explained
Sex stereotypes are schemas that organize our thinking • Can distort thinking & memory - easy to remember confirming examples - hard to remember contradictory ones
Impact of stereotypes • Evaluate people more positively if consistent with stereotype • Evaluate harshly if violate stereotype
Men seen as able, women as giving effort for same male-typed achievement • Women still earn less for same job
Origins of Stereotypes • Home - parents treat kids differently from birth
School: Teachers respond differentially - boys: success = ability failure = lack of effort - girls: success = effort & neatness failure = lack of ability
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
Cross-cultural results 110 non-industrialized societies consistent effects of sex stereotyping in socialization
% Societies where pressure greater AttributeFor BoysFor Girls Nurturance 0 82 Obedience 3 35 Responsibility 11 61 Achievement 87 3 Self-reliance 85 0
First goal is for all children to behave • Second goal is to socialize child to conform to sex stereotype
Actual Sex Differences • Physical differences - Sex characteristics - Size, strength
Abilities • Verbal abilities - girls
Math abilities - girls in elementary school - boys during adolescence • Visual-spatial abilities - boys
Psychological/Behavioral Differences • Aggression - boys • Activity Level - boys
Fear, timidity, & (lower) risk-taking - girls • Developmental vulnerability - boys
Emotional sensitivity & nurturance - girls & boys • Compliance - girls
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
Reasons for differences - innate, biological differences - socialization
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
Sex TypingIdentification with own sex • Gender/sex identity - knowledge of one’s sex and its permanence
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
Sex/gender roles - beliefs about what the sexes are supposed to be like & do Knowledge • by 2.5, some • by 10, complete
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
Transition times = more rigid => more rigid at times when sex identification is more relevant
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
Sex differences - boys adopt sex-typed behavior & preferences quicker - girls more likely to retain cross-sex interests • Boys = more pressure to conform
Stability of sex-typing - fairly stable from childhood to adulthood - but some flexibility
Theories of Sex Role Development • Psychoanalytic Theory (Freud) - social & biological factors - everyone is bisexual at birth - sexual identity = identification with same-sex parent
Biosocial Theory (Money & Ehrhardt) - biology channels development - via child’s & others’ reactions
Social Learning Theory (Bandura, Mischel) - parents influence sex development by: 1. direct instruction - reinforcement & punishment - encourage sex-typed behavior by age 2 - dads/peers
2. observational learning - imitate same-sex models - reinforced for this imitation BUT - doesn’t address children’s own motivation
Cognitive-Developmental Theory (Kohlberg) - sex-role development depends on cognitive development - children actively socialize themselves - 1st establish stable gender identity - then seek models & information
- 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
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
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+)