sex and gender

    Cards (19)

    • sex
      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 social context 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
    • Bem sex role inventory characteristicsMasculine
      • aggressive
      • ambitious
      • independent
      • dominant
      Feminine
      • affectionate
      • loyal
      • tender
      • sympathetic
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