G - Sex-role stereotypes and androgyny Flashcards

1
Q

What is the development of gender due to?

A

In part to biology (nature) and in part to life experiences (nurture).

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2
Q

Androgyny

A

Formed from the two words ‘andr’, meaning male, and ‘gyny’, meaning female. The word means a combination of male and female characteristics.

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3
Q

Gender

A

A person’s sense of maleness or femaleness, a psychological/social construct.

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4
Q

Sex

A

Being genetically male (XY) or female (XX).

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5
Q

Sex-role stereotypes

A

A set of shared expectations within a social group about what men and women should do and think.

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6
Q

Stereotypes

A

A fixed belief about a particular group of people.

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7
Q

From when/where is a sex-role stereotype learned?

A

From birth as children are exposed to the attitudes of their parents and other in their society who tell them ‘Little boys don’t cry’ or ‘Little girls don’t like climbing trees’.

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8
Q

Is learning about sex-role stereotypes implicit or explicit?

A

Both implicit (through internalisation - schema building) and explicit (through modelling the behaviour of individuals of the same sex - SLT).

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9
Q

What does implicit mean?

A

Not directly expressed.

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10
Q

What does explicit mean?

A

Expressed.

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11
Q

Who introduced the concept of psychological androgyny?

A

Sandra Bem in the 1970’s.

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12
Q

What did Bem introduce the concept of in the 1970’s?

A

The concept of psychological androgyny , proposing that a person can be both masculine and feminine.

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13
Q

What did Bem’s view contrast with?

A

The traditional view that masculine and feminine behaviours are two separate clusters.

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14
Q

What did Bem argue?

A

That the traditional view was that rigid sex roles were important for mental health, whereas her view was that the opposite was true - that it was actually psychologically more healthy to avoid fixed sex-role stereotypes.

She instead argued that men and women should feel free to adopt a variety of masculine and feminine type behaviours as suits their personality.

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15
Q

What cost can stifling personality have according to Bem?

A

A psychological cost which can lead to mental disorder.

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16
Q

What did Bem claim?

A

You could not reliably tell someone’s gender by a list of their behaviours alone; most people perform some non-stereotypical behaviours.

17
Q

What did Bem say that stereotypes in modern society could cause?

A

Psychological and social harm by artificially restricting behaviour - reinforcing fixed (musturbatory) distinctions could result in lower self-worth.

18
Q

How did Bem say androgyny could be measured?

A

Using the Bem Sex Role Inventory (BSRI) - a psychological test.

19
Q

How was the BSRI developed/how does it work?

A

By asking 100 American undergraduates which personality traits they thought were desirable for men or women. The original list of 200 items was narrowed down to 40 (20 masculine and 20 feminine traits), and 20 neutral items were added as distractors.

Each person rates themselves on a 7-point Likert scale ranging from never or almost never true to almost always true. Numerical scores for all masculine items are added up and the same for all feminine items, and then a person is given a score for femininity, masculinity and androgyny.

20
Q

Why did Bem design the BSRI?

A

To make it possible to test for masculinity and femininity independently rather than setting them against each other. In traditional tests, of you selected a masculine item you couldn’t select a feminine one.

21
Q

What was wrong about traditional androgyny tests which made Bem introduce the BSRI?

A

In traditional tests, of you selected a masculine item you couldn’t select a feminine one.

22
Q

How were you determined as masculine/feminine/androgynous in the original BSRI?

A

Using the original scoring method, individuals were categorised as masculine (high masculine score, low feminine), feminine (low masculine score, high feminine) and androgynous (high ratio of masculine to feminine traits).

23
Q

When were you categorised as feminine in the BSRI?

A

low masculine score, high feminine

24
Q

When were you categorised as masculine in the BSRI?

A

high masculine score, low feminine

25
Q

When were you categorised as androgynous in the BSRI?

A

high ratio of masculine to feminine traits

26
Q

What was changed/added to the BSRI?

A

A fourth category of undifferentiated (low scores for both masculine and feminine).

27
Q

Why was a fourth category of undifferentiated added to the BSRI?

A

After criticisms by Spence et al. (1975), who pointed out that Bem had not distinguished between persons who are androgynous (high in both masculine and feminine traits) and a different kind of androgyny, where a person is neither masculine nor feminine (low in both). This is the undifferentiated type.

28
Q

When were you categorised as undifferentiated in the BSRI?

A

neither masculine nor feminine (low in both)

29
Q

What are the two kinds of androgyny that were proposed by Bem and Spence et al. at different times?

A

Bem - high in both masculine and feminine traits.

Spence et al. - neither masculine nor feminine (low in both).

30
Q

What theory did Bem give in 1983?

A

Gender schema theory

31
Q

What did gender schema theory suggest?

A
  • Everyone acts according to their dominant schema for a given situation.
  • Some people have a wider repertoire of schematic references than others (they’re androgynous) so they respond independently of any gender concepts when faced with a decision as to how to behave in a particular situation.
  • Some have learned very specific schematic (they’re strongly masculine or feminine).
  • The difference between an androgynous and a traditionally sex-typed person is one of cognitive style.
32
Q

What has the fourth type - undifferentiated - been criticised for?

A

A lack of construct validity because are there enough items/range in the neutral category to fully describe someone???

33
Q

What was Bem’s argument in gender schema theory?

A

It was that a person who has a ‘freer’ cognitive style will be psychologically healthier.

34
Q

Who did Bem argue would be psychologically healthier in gender schema theory?

A

A person who has a ‘freer’ cognitive style will be psychologically healthier.