Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byRandall Hall Modified over 8 years ago
1
Gender Parenting Maltreatment Socioemotional Development in Early Childhood
2
What is Gender? Sex Gender
3
Sexual Differentiation 3 Male fetus exposed to testosterones (because of Y chromosome): leads to the development of male genitalia. Low levels of testosterones released-- result is a female fetus High levels in females:
4
Gender-Stereotyped Beliefs and Behaviors Children acquire at young age in terms of activities and behaviors. Preschoolers associate common objects, occupations, and colors with gender. Gender beliefs strengthen in early childhood.
5
Influences on Gender Typing Genetic Evolutionary adaptiveness Hormones Environmental Family Teachers Peers Broader social environment Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. All Rights Reserved. © Gengberg | Dreamstime.comGengbergDreamstime.com
6
Social Influences on Gender Parental Influences First models of gender behavior Treat sons and daughters differently, especially which parent? Raising a “genderless” baby? Siblings serve as role models Peers “gender school” Media School and Teachers Girls comply, boys defy Classroom biases; learning environment biases
7
Traditional Gender Roles “Boys should grow up to be masculine” “Girls should grow up to be feminine”
8
Gender Roles 8 Gender roles — expectations of how men and women are supposed to behave (cultural). Gender Identity — how a person views himself or herself in terms of gender; typically know by age 3 if you’re a boy or girl Gender Constancy– develops around age 7; understanding you will always be a male/female.
9
Gender Roles… Even babies (even newborns!), who show no gender differences at all, are described with these terms; baby “Avery”
10
Androgyny 'Intersexual' and 'hermaphrodite' refer to people intermediate in sex, 'androgyne' to people intermediate in gender.sexgender
11
Psychological Androgyny Presence of a high degree of desirable “masculine” and “feminine” characteristics.
12
Theories of Gender Identity in Early Childhood Social Learning Theory Gender-typing behavior leads to gender identity. Cognitive- Developmental Theory Self-perceptions (gender constancy) come before behavior. Gender Schema Theory Combines social learning and cognitive-developmental theories Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
13
Cognitive Pathways for Gender-Schematic and Gender-Aschematic Children Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Figure 10.6
14
Reducing Gender Stereotyping In Young Children Delay exposure to gender- stereotyping. Model nontraditional roles. Encourage mixed-gender activities. Point out exceptions. Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. All Rights Reserved. © Rmarmion | Dreamstime.comRmarmionDreamstime.com
15
Gender Roles: Theories 15 1.Gender Schema Theory: suggests that we learn a cultural “recipe” of how to be a male or a female, which influences our gender based perceptions and behaviors
16
Gender Roles: Theories 16 Social Learning Theory: Proposes we learn gender behavior like any other behavior — reinforcement, punishment and observation. Eg: a little boy wants to build houses like dad Eg:
17
Gender Stereotypes Broad categories that reflect our impressions and societal beliefs about females and males. Big boys don’t… A lady doesn’t…
18
Child-Rearing Styles Authoritative Authoritarian Permissive Uninvolved ©Rohit Seth/Dreamstime.com Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
19
Characteristics of Child-Rearing Styles AcceptanceInvolvementControlAutonomy Authoritative high adaptiveappropriate Authoritarian low highlow Permissive high too low or too high lowhigh Uninvolved low indifference Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
20
Discipline: Related to Parenting Style? Induction Power Assertion Love Withdrawal
21
Cultural Variations in Child Rearing Some ethnic-minority families have distinct child-rearing beliefs: Chinese parents often more controlling. Hispanic, Asian Pacific Islander, and Caribbean families combine high respect for authority with high parental warmth. Low-SES African-American parents tend to insist on immediate obedience.
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.