What is Gender Stereotyping?. Gender -masculine or feminine behaviors - features that are not...

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What is Gender Stereotyping?

Transcript of What is Gender Stereotyping?. Gender -masculine or feminine behaviors - features that are not...

Page 1: What is Gender Stereotyping?. Gender -masculine or feminine behaviors - features that are not assigned due to biological sex but social roles that men.

What is Gender Stereotyping?

Page 2: What is Gender Stereotyping?. Gender -masculine or feminine behaviors - features that are not assigned due to biological sex but social roles that men.

Gender -masculine or feminine behaviors- features that are not assigned due to biological sex but social roles that men and women hold.

Sex: biological and physical attributes

Page 3: What is Gender Stereotyping?. Gender -masculine or feminine behaviors - features that are not assigned due to biological sex but social roles that men.

What is the difference between GENDER and SEX?

Page 4: What is Gender Stereotyping?. Gender -masculine or feminine behaviors - features that are not assigned due to biological sex but social roles that men.

Pat is active, independent, competitive, and aggressive.

Is Pat male or female?

Page 5: What is Gender Stereotyping?. Gender -masculine or feminine behaviors - features that are not assigned due to biological sex but social roles that men.

Most people assume Pat is male.

Why?

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Although Pat is a common name for both males and females, the

adjectives used to describe Pat are commonly associated with men

rather than with women.

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Page 8: What is Gender Stereotyping?. Gender -masculine or feminine behaviors - features that are not assigned due to biological sex but social roles that men.

Stereotype• Set of beliefs about a certain

group of people.

Page 9: What is Gender Stereotyping?. Gender -masculine or feminine behaviors - features that are not assigned due to biological sex but social roles that men.

Stereotype

Page 10: What is Gender Stereotyping?. Gender -masculine or feminine behaviors - features that are not assigned due to biological sex but social roles that men.

Gender stereotyping• Beliefs humans hold about the characteristics

associated with males and females.

• People form ideas of what males and females should be, accumulating characteristics and assigning labels to those categories.

Page 11: What is Gender Stereotyping?. Gender -masculine or feminine behaviors - features that are not assigned due to biological sex but social roles that men.

Gentle, Soft-spoken, obedient person is a GIRL.

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Rough, Noisy person is a BOY.

Page 13: What is Gender Stereotyping?. Gender -masculine or feminine behaviors - features that are not assigned due to biological sex but social roles that men.

Problems exist

• Characteristics of gender have a negative image.• Unique individual is assumed to have

all the characteristics with his/her gender.

Page 14: What is Gender Stereotyping?. Gender -masculine or feminine behaviors - features that are not assigned due to biological sex but social roles that men.

One idea is that girls are more confident on classroom tests than on achievement tests. The achievement test questions are more novel than

classroom test questions. Because they are not as confident… they don’t do as well.

• Boys are more confident in their math skills and like the challenge of novel problems. Math is also a stereotypic male pursuit so girls tend to lack confidence in their math skills

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Problems exists• In a classroom, boys are more likely to have

a hard time sitting still than girls.• On a playground, boys more often play

vigorously and girls more often play quietly.

Page 16: What is Gender Stereotyping?. Gender -masculine or feminine behaviors - features that are not assigned due to biological sex but social roles that men.

Intellectual Ability• Females tend to have greater verbal ability

than males– Girls read, write, and spell better than boys– More boys have reading and other language-

related problems such as stuttering

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Gender ideologies

• Attitudes toward men’s and women’s roles.–Traditional gender ideology–Egalitarian gender ideology–Transitional gender ideology

Page 18: What is Gender Stereotyping?. Gender -masculine or feminine behaviors - features that are not assigned due to biological sex but social roles that men.

Traditional gender ideology

• Men’s sphere is work and women’s sphere is home.

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Egalitarian gender ideology

• Power distributed equally between men and women

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Transitional gender ideology

• Acceptable for women to devote energy to both work and family domains but more responsibility for the home.

• Men should focus propositionally more their energy on work.

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