unit 1: gender development

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UNIT 1: GENDER DEVELOPMENT

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Unit 1: Gender Development. The aims of this part of the unit are:. To demonstrate how key approaches can be applied to the development of gender. To demonstrate how psychology provides an understanding of human development. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Unit 1: Gender Development

UNIT 1: GENDER DEVELOPMENT

Page 2: Unit 1: Gender Development

The aims of this part of the unit are:

To demonstrate how key approaches can be applied to the development of gender.

To demonstrate how psychology provides an understanding of human development.

To develop an appreciation of how science works in relation to the investigation of gender development.

Page 3: Unit 1: Gender Development

By the end of the unit you should be able to:

explain concepts related to the development of gender;

understand and appreciate the biological, social learning, cognitive and psychodynamic explanations of gender development.

Page 4: Unit 1: Gender Development

Getting you thinking Using your whiteboards write down the

answers to these questions: What does it mean to be a boy? What does

it mean to be a girl? What makes us different? How are we alike?

Page 5: Unit 1: Gender Development

Sex and Gender SEX refers to biological status as either

male or female as defined by our chromosomes, hormones and anatomical differences.

GENDER is a psychosocial term and refers to expectations about roles, behaviours and attitudes of males and females in a given society. It is a SOCIAL CONSTRUCT – invented by society, so different depending on which society you belong to.

Page 6: Unit 1: Gender Development

Look at each picture and write down whether the person is male/female and then decide whether they are masculine or feminine in appearance.

Page 7: Unit 1: Gender Development

Masculinity and Femininity How masculine or feminine are you?

On the board mark on the line how masculine or feminine you perceive yourself to be.

What does it mean to be masculine/feminine? Write a description of someone who is masculine or feminine.

Now look at the worksheet and rate the pictures in terms of their masculinity and femininity.

Page 8: Unit 1: Gender Development

Measuring M/F ANDROGYNY – literally means

MANWOMAN (andro = man GYNY= woman)

The term ANDROGYNOUS refers to people whose characteristics are a balanced mixture of feminine and masculine traits.

The BEM SEX ROLE INVENTORY (BSRI) was developed to measure androgyny.

Page 9: Unit 1: Gender Development

Dr Sandra Lipsitz Bem invented the rex role inventory.

She introduced the idea of psychological androgyny for individuals who combined both masculine and feminine psychological traits.

Note: this is not the same as physical androgyny or intersex!

Page 10: Unit 1: Gender Development

She felt that it was best to be androgynous, as one could be more adaptable to the demands of modern life.

Page 11: Unit 1: Gender Development

For Bem, psychological androgyny means taking on whichever quality best fitted the situation – whether it was masculine or feminine. It is more adaptive than stereotyped gender identities.

Page 12: Unit 1: Gender Development

Scoring the BSRIMasculinity score

LOW

LOW

high

high

Femininity score

androgynous

masculine

feminine undifferentiated

Page 13: Unit 1: Gender Development

Review last lesson What is meant by the following key terms:

Gender Sex Androgyny

What characteristics does Bem say are the healthiest to have: A) mostly masculine characteristics B) mostly feminine characteristics C) a mixture of both?

Why?

Page 14: Unit 1: Gender Development

EVALUATION Bem’s scale has good TEST-RETEST reliability. This means

that it produces similar results if used on more than one occasion with the same people.

Bem suggested that people with higher androgyny scores are psychologically healthier than those who score high for male or female traits. BUT not all psychologists agree, others believe high masculine scores are more important.

Reducing the concepts of masculinity and femininity to a single score may be an oversimplification

The inventory is based on what American students assessed as desirable traits for men and women. This makes it ETHNOCENTRIC – focused on only one culture and means it lacks VALIDITY – does not measure masculinity and femininity in all societies and at all times.