Cognitive explanations: KOHLBERG

    Cards (14)

    • Gender identity
      A child recognises that they are a boy or a girl and possesses the ability to label others as such
    • Gender identity is acquired (according to Kohlberg's theory)
      Around age 2 years
    • Gender stability
      A child understands that their own gender is fixed and they will be a man or a woman when they are older
    • Gender stability happens
      Around age 4 years
    • Gender constancy
      A child realises that gender remains the same over time and situations. They begin to identify with people of their own gender and start to behave in stereotypically gender-appropriate ways
    • Gender constancy is reached
      Usually reached by age 6 or 7 years
    • cognitive explanations - Kohlbergs stages of development
      • child's understanding of gender becomes more sophisticated with age
      • as a result of biological maturation
      • understanding of gender runs parallel to intellectual development as child matures biological
      • 3 stages
    • cognitive explanations - Kohlbergs stages of development
      1. gender identity
      2. gender stability
      3. gender constancy
    • cognitive explanations - Kohlberg stage 1: Gender identity
      • around 2 years = children are able to identify themselves as a boy or girl - gender idenitity
      • 3 years = children identify other people as boys/men or girls/women
      • simple labelling
      • don't view gender as fixed
    • cognitive explanations - Kohlberg stage 2: gender stability
      • 4 years
      • realisation they will always stay the same gender
      • cannot apply this logic to other people in other situations
      • confused by external changes in appearance
      • people change gender if they engage in activities that are more associated with a different gender
    • cognitive explanations - Kohlberg stage 3: gender constancy
      • final stage
      • 6 years
      • gender remains constant across time and situations - applied to other peoples gender and their own
      • still think non stereotypical appearances are unusual but gender is fixed
      • seek out gender appropriate role models to identify with and imitate
      • tendency towards gender stereotyping emerges
    • AO3 - Kohlberg cog. explanation - strength
      P: research support - gender stereotyping does emerge at 6 as predicted
      E: Damon - told children story about a boy who liked to play with dolls and asked to comment on the story
      4 yrs - said it was fine to play with dolls
      6 yrs - wrong to play with dolls
      E: developed rules about what different genders ought to do - gender stereotyping
      L: reinforces kohlbergs prediction that children who have achieved constancy have rigid gender stereotypes
    • AO3 - Kohlberg cog. explanation - limitation
      P: research - unsatisfactory methods to access gender constancy
      E: Bem - criticised the methodology used in studies
      • test of gender constancy is whether a child understands that gender stays the same despite external changes
      • younger children would be confused by this - this is how we determine gender
      • best way = physical differences (genitalia)
      E: 40% of children aged 3-5 were able to demonstrate gender constancy if shown a naked photo before showing the act
      L: typical way of testing gender constancy may misrepresent what younger children know
    • AO3 - Kohlberg cog. explanation - limitation
      P: other researchers have suggested there may be different degrees of gender constancy
      E: Martin - exactly when and how this understanding affects children's gender-related behaviour remains unclear - different degrees
      • one degree may orient children to the importance of gender in choosing freiends/seeking info - before 6
      • a second degree may heighten children's responsiveness to gender norms
      L: acquisition of constancy may be a gradual process - may have been earlier
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