it is psychologically healthy to avoid fixed sex-role stereotypes
androgynous hypothesis - androgyny is a positive and desirable condition
men and women should be free to adopt masculine and feminine type behaviours to suit their personality
explanations for androgyny
olds (1981) believed that androgyny is a higher developmental stage reached only by some
bem sex role inventory (BSRI)
created to measureandrogyny. developed by asking 100Americanundergraduates (1974) which personalitytraits they thought were desirable for men or women
20 masc, 20 fem, 20gender-neutral: selfreport measure, rating themselves on a 7 point Likert scale,
test revised in 1977 to create 4 categories of person: masculine, feminine, androgynous,undifferentiated.
ao3 - support of BSRI
bem (1974) used the BSRI to measure androgyny, finding 34% M and 27% Fto be androgynous
flaherty and dusek (1980) found androgynous individuals have a higherdegree of self-esteem and a better sense of emotional well-being
ao3 - BSRI lacks external validity
developed by asking 100Americanundergraduates in 1974 - culture and time could lower the external validity
ao3 - BSRI lacks temporal validity
hoffman and borders (2001) asked a group of 400undergraduates to rate the items of BSRI as masc or fem. results were only 2terms were still endorsed as masc or fem - all others failed to reach the 75% agreement level
ao3 - BSRI reductionist
over-simplifies gender types by reducing masc and fem down to single scores
may also be masculinebias in Western cultures, where independence and competitiveness are highly valued