the biological differences between males and females including chromosomes, hormones and anatomy
gender
the psychological, social and cultural differences between boys/mean and girls/women including attitudes, behaviours and social roles
sex-role stereotypes
a set of beliefs and preconceived ideas about what is expected or appropriate for men and women in a given society or social group
chromosomes
XX - female
XY - male
chromosomes:
influence hormonal differences as well as differences in anatomy - reproductive organs, body shape, hair growth
sex = innate - nature
gender = partly environmental - nurture
gender
social construct
not fixed - flued
depends on socialcontext they are in
gender dysphoria
biological prescribed sex does not reflect the way they feel inside and the gender they identify themselves as being
may choose to have gender reassignment surgery to bring their sexual identity in line with their gender identity
sex-role stereotypes
shared set of expectations that people within society hold
communicated or transmitted throughout society
reinforced by parents, peers, the media
may lead to sexist assumptions - over emotional women cannot work high positions
research into sex-role stereotypes - Ingalhalikar
study into neurological brain activity supported the stereotype that women are better at multi-tasking than men
scanned brains 949 men and women
hi-tech diffusion MRI imaging to map connections
women's brains have much better connections between the left and right sides of the brain
men's brain - intense activity within the brains individual parts
female brain hardwired to cope better with several tasks
sex-role stereotypes throughout life
A) handled
B) sensitivity
C) gender
D) specific
E) dolls
F) aggressively
G) non-stereotypical
H) hostility
I) gender specific
J) nursing
K) engineering
androgyny
displaying a balance of masculine and feminine characteristics in one's personality
Bem sex role inventory
the first systematic attempt to measure androgyny using a rating scale of 60 traits to produce scores across 2 dimensions: masculinity-feminity and androgynous-undifferentiated
androgyny
e.g man or woman who is competitive and aggressive at work, but a caring and sensitive parent
Bem - high androgyny is associated with psychological well-being
individuals who are both masculine and feminine in roughly equal measure are better equipped to adapt to a range of situations
Bem sex role inventory
20 characteristic - masculine
20 characteristic - feminine
20 characteristic - neutral
respondents rate themselves on a 7-point rating scale for each item
high masc, low fem = masculine
high fem, low masc = feminine
high masc, low fem = androgynous
low fem, low masc = undifferentiated
AO3 BSRI - strength
P: at the time it was developed it appeared valid and reliable
E: The scale was developed by asking 50 male and 50 female judges to rate 200 traits in terms of how traits represented male or female - highest rated became the traits of the scale
piloted with 1000 students
follow up study involved a smaller sample of the same students - similar scores - test-retest reliability
L: the test was both valid and reliable
AO3 BSRI - counterpoint
P: the BSRI may not be a suitable measure of gender identity today
E: BSRI developed over 40 years ago and behaviours that are regarded as typical in relation of gender have changed - made up of stereotypical ideas in the context of the time and the US
E: Showing it could be outdated and notions of maleness and femaleness in US may not be shared across cultures
L: may lack temporal validity and generalizability so we should not use it as a measure
AO3 BSRI - limitation
P: people may not have insight into their degree of masculinity, femininity or androgyny
E: Asking people to rate themselves on a questionnaire relies on people having an understanding of their personality and behaviour that they may not necessarily have
E: gender is social construct which may be open to interpretation - questionnaire scoring system is subjective and people's interpretation of the 7-point scale differs
L: may not be an objective, scientific way of assessing masculinity, feminity or androgyny