Ingalhalikar - belief that women are better at multitasking. Mapped out male and female brains using MRI and found that women have better connections across both hemispheres whilst men have more intense activity within a specific hemisphere
Rubin - looked at stereotyping in the first 24 hours of life. New parents were asked to describe their new born baby 24 hours after birth. Girls described as soft and delicate whilst boys described as strong and alert. Shows stereotype occurs early on
Batista boys - "penis at 14". 4 boys from Dom Rep born with ambiguous genitalia - looked more female so raised as female BUT… during puberty they developed a penis. Their sex was XY. They socialised fine, married and had children
Bruce/Brenda - at 8 months old Bruce's penis was burned off. Dr Money believes in the "theory of neutrality". At 22 months, Bruce became Brenda, his testes were removed and female genitals were constructed. His parents would socialise him as a girl. Growing up Brenda was forced to wear dresses and play with dolls but she was socially isolated, had no friends and was bullied. At 15 Brenda found out she was biologically a male and underwent reconstructive surgery to change back to male and become David. This case demonstrates NATURE OVERRIDES NURTURE
Tricker - prisoners with higher levels of testosterone were more likely to have committed violent offences. Testosterone is linked to aggressive behaviour
Animal studies - biological approach usually tests on animals, hard to generalise as human hormones change rapidly due to the environment. Therefore behaviour can be explained by SLT rather than biological approach. In addition, humans have higher order thinking therefore caution should be taken when generalising data to humans
XXY, Affects 1 in 750 males, Extra X chromosome, Not noticeable, identified during routine medical checks, Physical: Reduced body hair, Long gangly limbs, Breast development, Psychological: Poor reading skills, Passive and shy, Poor language skills
Interactionist: nature - born with ability to make schemas, Nurture - schemas develop through experience, Stage theory: intellectual development runs parallel to gender understanding, this is GRADUAL, Egocentrism: inability to view the world from another point of view
Gender identity (2-3 years old): Relies on physical appearance, Doesn't understand gender is permanent, Can label self as boy/girl, By 3 they know if others are boy/girl
Gender stability (3-4 years old): Knows their gender stays the same, Cannot apply this info to other people or situations
Gender constancy (6 years old): Complete understanding of gender for self and others across time and situations, Have biological understanding of males and females, Now look for role models to confirm knowledge
Ken doll exp - a ken doll was shown to a 2, 4 and 6 year old. In phase A ken is wearing shorts and a shirt, phase B ken now has a skirt on and phase C ken has a skirt and long hair. Children state the gender. 2 years old: boy, girl, girl. 4 years old: boy, girl, girl. 6 years old: boy, boy, boy. Backs up Kohlberg's stages
Slaby and Fray showed pictures to children of females and males doing the same tasks. Children in the constancy stage looked longer at the picture - demonstrating understanding develops with age
Gender knowledge runs parallel to intellectual development, As we get older our understanding of gender develops, Children develop their understanding of gender by activity structuring their own learning through schemas, Gender schema is a generalised representation of everything we know about gender and gender appropriate behaviour, They organise our knowledge eg girls are seen as gentle, caring and like the colour pink whereas boys are seen as aggressive, strong and like the colour blue, By 3, they begin to actively search their environment to further develop their schemas, By 6, children have a fixed and stereotypical view about each gender and its appropriate behaviours, They disregard anything that does not fit in their existing schemas eg a boy wearing pink, Children identify to their in-group (same sex, pay more attention to, boosts self esteem) and pay less attention to their outgroup (opposite sex), By 8, children have a good understanding of both genders and develop elaborate schemas which lead to negative evaluations of outgroups
Martin and Halverson - found that children under 6 years remembered more photographs of gender consistent behaviour than of gender inconsistent behaviour after one week. They would change the behaviour of the person carrying out the inconsistent task
Martin and Little - found that children under 4 years demonstrated strongly sex-typed behaviours and attitudes. These studies suggest that gender understanding develops a lot earlier than Kohlberg suggested (7 yrs)
The gender schema theory overlooks social factors, therefore it does not explain WHY gender schemas develop and take the form they do. Therefore it is weak as it cannot explain gender development
Many studies show that boys show more extreme gender-typed behaviour and a greater resistance to opposite-sex activities than girls. GST doesn't explain why males have a more fixed understanding of their gender then females, SLT can through operant conditioning
All happens in the UNCONSCIOUS, Structure of personality: ID - the "pleasure principle" that demands immediate gratification, EGO - mediates between ID and SUPEREGO, SUPEREGO - the "morality principle"
Boys desire their mum, they see their dad as a competitor for their mum's love. They notice not everyone has a penis. Boy develops CASTRATION ANXIETY (fear of dad chopping off their penis). They CHOOSE to give up their love for their mother and ACTIVELY identify with their dad. In doing so they take on their dads SUPEREGO (morals and values) and the male identity
Girls desire their fathers as he has a penis, develop PENIS ENVY, blame their mum for lack of penis, give up their love for their dad, PASSIVELY accept female gender identity, channels their energy into PENIS BABY PROJECT, identifies with mum and takes on her SUPEREGO