Gender and Culture

Cards (7)

  • Gender Bias - Alpha Bias:
    :( scientific justification for gender stereotypes
    > evolutionary psychologists suggest there are innate differences between males and females
    > feminist psychologists argue this can be used against women to maintain male power, such as denying women opportunities within employment
    > alpha bias may impact females' life prospects, and negatively impact the economy due to a lack of women in the workforce
  • Gender Bias:
    :( emphasised by research process
    > psychology is dominated by male psychologists researching male issues, using lab experiments and standardised procedures
    > assumes that men and women will receive equal treatment by the research and respond in the same ways to the situation - could create differences that do not exist or mask real ones
    > there should be more female psychologists using qualitative methods to enable more equality in research = more valid understanding of female behaviour
  • Gender Bias - Androcentrism:
    :) androcentrism does not always mean gender bias
    > e.g. Milgram's research used a male only sample, but this was relevant to his aim of understanding Nazi soldiers' behaviour (all male)
    > this recognition is important in scrutinising whether there is gender bias within research
  • Culture Bias - Ethnocentrism:
    :) IQ tests
    > clear example of ethnocentric bias - developed and tested in Western cultures, based on Western views of intelligence, so are not suitable for other cultures - been misused to reinforce superiority of Western culture e.g. led to discrimination in immigration policy
    > when using culturally relative IQ tests, differences in scores do not exist
  • Culture Bias - Ethnocentrism:
    :( outdated concept
    > viewing cultures as Western or non-Western is a lazy generalisation - there are many similarities between culture due to globalisation and shared media influences
    > e.g. Van Ijzendoorn found greater variation within cultures than between in attachment types, suggesting the concept of culture may lack validity
  • Culture Bias - Cultural Relativism:
    :( research in psychology
    > much research can be criticised for lacking cultural relativism e.g. deviation from social norms - different cultures have different social norms e.g. messages from spirits (symptom of schizophrenia or spiritual gift)
    > due to culture bias, it may not be appropriate to use Western manuals to diagnose mental health conditions in non-Western cultures
  • Culture Bias - Cultural Relativism:
    :) cultural relativism and universality
    > while some behaviours may be culturally relative, it would be inappropriate to assume there is not some universality
    > e.g. Ainsworth's research found secure attachment to be the most common across all cultures, but difference in insecure attachment types in different cultures
    > to fully understand human behaviour, it is essential to consider the contributions of cultural relativism and universality