Gender Development Module 49. Key Terms Sex - the biological category of male or female; sexual intercourse Gender - cultural, social, and psychological.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Gender and Sexuality Dr Rhoda Wilkie SO 1004.
Advertisements

Gender Role Development
Chapter 12 Gender Roles and Sexuality
Gender Differences CHAPTER 13
Gender Roles and Development
The Development of Gender
Chapter Three Gender and Families
Transgender.
Gender psychosocial meaning of maleness, or femaleness (feeling of what you are) Gender Identity – psychological sense of being male or female Gender.
Psikologi Anak Pertemuan 7 The self, identity, and gender development
Sec. 4 Gender Roles. Sex and Gender Sex refers to the biological characteristics with which we are born. Gender refers to the learned attitudes and behaviors.
Gender Differences and Theories How do we acquire our sense of male and female behavior?
Contemporary Gender Roles
Gender and Socialization
Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Psychosocial Development in Early Childhood: Week 9 Lecture.
Chapter VII: Gender and Development
NATURE vs. NURTURE.
Slide 1 © 2007 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. LIFE-SPAN DEVELOPMENT 12 A Topical Approach to John W. Santrock Gender and Sexuality.
Gender Role Development. Girls and boys are treated differently from birth. Gender awareness emerges at a very early age. From about 18 months to the.
Explaining Gender Roles: Two Contemporary Theories.
Gender and Sexuality. Some Definitions Sex—the biological category of male or female; sexual intercourse Gender—cultural, social, and psychological meanings.
The Nature and Nurture of Behavior
4 th Edition Copyright Prentice Hall10-1 Sex and Gender Chapter 10.
Gender and Sexuality. Some Definitions Sex—the biological category of male or female; sexual intercourse Gender—cultural, social, and psychological meanings.
psychlotron.org.uk Warm Up #6- Greetings, earthlings. We have noticed that there are two sorts of human, women and men. How are they different? Follow.
Copyright Atomic Dog Publishing, 2004 Chapter Five Gender Diversity in Sexuality.
Gender Typing Any association of objects, activities, roles, or traits with one sex or the other in ways that conform to cultural stereotypes Even before.
Chapter 10 Gender and Sexuality. Sex (1)The biological category of male or female as defined by physical differences in genetic composition and in reproductive.
Guiding Children’s Social Development OBJECTIVES I will be able to…. Analyze some aspects of social development from toddler to school-age Explore the.
Instructor name Class Title, Term/Semester, Year Institution © 2011 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Introductory Psychology Concepts Gender.
Chapter 14: Gender and Development Module 14.1 Gender Stereotypes Module 14.2 Differences Related to Gender Module 14.3 Gender Identity Module 14.4 Gender.
psychlotron.org.uk Greetings, earthlings. We have noticed that there are two sorts of human, women and men. How are they different?
Gender Identities. SEX Characteristics of males and females attributable to biology: Sex includes the different chromosomal, hormonal, and anatomical.
Life-Span Human Development, Fifth Edition, Carol K. Sigelman and Elizabeth A. Rider Chapter 12 Chapter 12 Gender Roles and Sexuality.
List differences between women and men and consider:
Cog. & Socioemotinal Dev. in Early Child. The concept that certain basic properties of an object remain the same even when a transformation changes the.
Sex & Gender Chapter 4. Sex is made of 5 Biological Components 1. Chromosomes (DNA – Genes) – Sex Chromosomes – Female: XX – Male: XY 2. Gonads – Glands.
Unit 2 Chapter 4, Section 4 Gender Roles and Differences Mr. Young Psychology.
Myers PSYCHOLOGY Seventh Edition in Modules
Chapter 12 Gender ED502-Child and Adolescent Psychology By Terri Pardo.
Gender Development Pages Objectives Define Gender Identity and gender typing Compare and Contrast Biological, cognitive and environmental influence.
Chapter 16: Gender Roles GENDER ROLES 1. Chapter 16 2.
Gender Role Development Ch. 4 Sec.4. Gender and Sex Sex- physical and biological make up. (XX or XY chromosomes). –By age 2 or 3, most children can label.
On whiteboards Explain the role of genes in Sex and gender development using a diagram and pictures.
Gender Identity Boy? Who am I? Girl? Gender Role SEX.
Myers EXPLORING PSYCHOLOGY (6th Edition in Modules) Module 6 The Nurture of Behavior James A. McCubbin, PhD Clemson University Worth Publishers.
Gender Roles And Gender Differences. Gender-Role Standards and Stereotypes This social theory continues to be very controversial. This is a prime example.
Chapter 4 Nature/Nurture Evolution Behavior-Genetics.
THE NATURE NURTURE DEBATE. Todays main objectives. To understand the definitions and related concepts of “nature” and “nurture” in relation to both GENDER.
B.R. How would you define gender? Gender comprises the behavioral and psychological traits considered appropriate for men and woman. A person’s sex refers.
Outcome(s)  Assess the extent to which biological, cognitive, and sociocultural factors influence development  Evaluate psychological research relevant.
CHAPTER 10: SEXUALITY AND GENDER Section 2: The Psychological Side of Human Sexuality: Gender.
Maha S Younis Professor of Psychiatry
Chapter 2 Gender. Chapter Sections 2-1 Terminology of Gender Roles 2-2 Theories of Gender Role Development 2-3 Agents of Socialization 2-4 Consequences.
Psychology 101: General  Chapter 4 Gender and Sexuality Instructor: Mark Vachon.
Unit 4: Gender & Sexual Development AP Psychology.
Gender.
Chapter 14: Gender and Development
B.R. How would you define gender?
Gender and Sexuality Each person has a sex, a gender, and a gender identity. These are all aspects of your sexuality. They are all about who you are, and.
Unit 2: Nature v. nurture
Sex, Gender and Sexuality
Gender Development Module 49.
1. When do children develop their gender identity?
Environmental Influences on Behavior
Myers PSYCHOLOGY Seventh Edition in Modules
49.1 – Discuss gender similarities and differences in psychological traits.
Gender Roles Chapter 16.
Presentation transcript:

Gender Development Module 49

Key Terms Sex - the biological category of male or female; sexual intercourse Gender - cultural, social, and psychological meanings associated with masculinity or femininity –sex is a matter of the body, while gender occurs in the mind Gender Roles - behaviors, attitudes, and personality traits designated either masculine or feminine in a given culture Gender Identity - A person’s psychological sense of being male or female Gender Typing – acquiring the traditional male & female roles (argued to possibly be a natural process) Transgender – A person’s gender identity/expression is different from their birth sex Sexual Orientation - direction of a person's emotional and erotic attractions

Gender Related Differences Gender-roles – social expectations people hold about the characteristics and behaviors of each sex – Culture shapes gender role development – Gender roles differ over time & place The differences between men and women are average differences, not absolute differences. Knowing that a gender difference exists in no way explains what caused that difference. Differences do not mean deficiencies

Gender Differences FEMALE Less Aggressive More democratic in leadership role More interdependent (tend & befriend) Score higher on verbal, reading, and writing MALE More Aggressive More directive/autocratic in leadership role More independent (less empathetic, more domineering) Score higher on spatial skills - mentally rotating objects No significant differences between men and women on most characteristics By age 50, many gender differences or no longer noticeable

Gender Role Development 45 of the 46 chromosomes are unisex Culture shapes gender role development Girls and boys are treated differently from birth. Gender identity/awareness emerges at a very early age. From about 18 months to the age of 2 years, sex differences in behavior begin to emerge.

Gender Role Development Between ages 2-3 years, children can identify themselves and other children as boys or girls. Preschoolers start acquiring gender-role stereotypes for toys, clothing, household objects, games, and work. The concept of gender or sex, however is based more on outward characteristics such as clothing. After age 3 we see consistent gender differences in preferred toys and activities Toddler girls play more with soft toys and dolls, and ask for help from adults more Toddler boys play more with blocks and transportation toys (trucks and wagons), and play more actively

Gender Role Development Throughout the remainder of childhood, boys and girls play primarily with members of their own sex. Also, boys play in larger groups. Children (age 5-6) are far more rigid than adults in their beliefs in gender-role stereotypes As they grow older, girls grow more flexible in their gender role attitudes but boys become more rigid. In many ways, children’s behavior mirrors the gender-role stereotypes that are predominant in our culture. See an example of these stereotypes by clicking on the picture

Gender Stereotypes Male and female brains are much more alike than they are dissimilar Or are they?

Explaining Gender Roles: Two Contemporary Theories

A Quick Comparison Social Learning Theory – Children learn gender roles through observation of parents & through reinforcement. Gender Schema Theory – Children actively form mental categories (schemas) for masculinity & femininity, recognize their own gender role, and select activities that match that role.

Gender Schema Theory An example of how a child forms a schema associated with gender. A girl is offered a choice of 4 toys to play with. I am a girl Toy car Doll Orange Artichoke Approach object Who for? Is it relevant to me? Avoid/ Forget Assign to category and remember/ Approach Not for me For me Boys Girls

Gender Schemas… 1.Influence how people pay attention to, perceive, interpret, and remember gender-relevant behavior 2.Seem to lead children to perceive members of their own sex more favorably than members of the opposite sex 3.Include a broad range of qualities and attributes that are less concrete, such as associating “gentleness” with females and “toughness” with males

Transgender Identify emotionally and psychologically with the opposite sex than with their biological sex. For the first seven weeks after conception, male and female embryos are anatomically indistinguishable. Then, the genes activate biological sex, which is determined by the sex chromosomes (XX, female; XY, male). Production of testosterone begins in the male embryo in about the seventh week, and the external male sex organs begin to develop. Then in the fourth and fifth months, testosterone in the male and ovarian hormones in the female affect brain-wiring patterns.

People who want to live as a member of the opposite sex they were born with –people who transition from one sex to another Less than a year after gender reassignment as a man, Brad describes his experience of being biologically female but feeling emotionally and psychologically male, and his feelings of wholeness since his reassignment. Click HERE to view.HERE Transsexual