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Published byWilfred Robinson Modified over 8 years ago
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Sex Differences Real or Imagined?
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Traditionally, we documented and remember the differences 4 Religious writings 4 Plato’s wandering uterus 4 Germanic soldiers and system of fines 4 Mythology 4 Studies of brain differences
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Yes, there are some sex and gender differences Are they due to nature or nurture????
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3 broad areas of differences 4 Biological 4 Cognitive 4 Personality
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Biological- Physical Attributes 4 Genes - chromosomes, sex-linked traits 4 Hormonal differences 4 Physical features - height, strength, % body fat, hemoglobin, temperature regulation,bones, iron deficiency 4 Health
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Cognitive Abilities 4 Until recently, thought there were 3 areas of big differences - verbal, spatial, mathematics Today new research casts doubt 4 General Intelligence 4 Brain & Cognitive Processing
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Cognitive Abilities 4 Verbal 4 Quantitative and Spatial 4 Mathematics –math abilities –attitudes about math
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So what does this info say/mean? 4 There may not be glaring male/female differences 4 differences in attitude (anxiety,self- confidence, attribution for success) may be different for men and women 4 stereotypic beliefs still exist for some parents, teachers, others
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Eccles’ Expectation X Model Examines the variables that affect/ determine whether girls take math courses in high school
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So here’s the BIG question: 4 If women don’t have some genetic inferiority regarding math and math- related occupations, why are females less likely to choose advanced math classes? 4 Think about how earlier choices in math courses affect college major choice and career options
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We need to look not only at genetic abilities but at the influences of society, stereotypes, unconscious assumptions and attitudes
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Sex Differences Real or Imagined?
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Physical/Personality Differences 4 Body Space 4 Body Posture 4 Touch 4 Facial Expressions –Smiling –Eye Contact
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Personality Differences/Similarities 4 Sociability 4 Nurturance, Helping behavior 4 Self-Esteem 4 Emotionality –sadness, tears, joy, etc. –aggression
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What causes aggression and the differences between m & f?? 4 As a small group - design a graphic model to shows the factors that contribute to aggression 4 Then we’ll share different models on the blackboard
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Why do we see ‘mixed’ findings? 4 Behavior is situation specific 4 Hawthorne effect - people act differently when being observed 4 Difficult to measure subtleties - we use stereotypes to fill in gaps 4 Social situations reward people differently toys, childhood experiences, practice to performance,self-esteem, individual motivation, power differential 4 Wide variations & overlap between men & women
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So-- are gender differences due to nature or nurture?
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