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GENDER. GENDER STEREOTYPES Sex classification of people as male and female based on biological characteristics. Gender social behaviors that define male.

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Presentation on theme: "GENDER. GENDER STEREOTYPES Sex classification of people as male and female based on biological characteristics. Gender social behaviors that define male."— Presentation transcript:

1 GENDER

2 GENDER STEREOTYPES

3 Sex classification of people as male and female based on biological characteristics. Gender social behaviors that define male or female. o This can be different than biological sex. SEX AND GENDER IDENTITY

4 Gender Roles expectations regarding the proper behavior, attitudes, and activities of males and females.  Masculine/Feminine Question to consider: Nature v. nurture

5 Gender Identity Disorder or transgender: is the formal diagnosis used by psychologists to describe people who experience significant (discontent) with the sex they were assigned at birth and/or the gender roles associated with that sex. Children- Therapy? 20/20 Children with GID Baby Storm

6  Society creates exaggerated male/female differences which leads to the definition of gender.  Gender and behavioral differences are culturally constructed because of socialization. SOCIAL CONSTRUCTION OF GENDER

7  Aggression- Females verbally aggress while men physically aggress.  Males are more confident than females, especially in academic areas such as math and science.  Communication- Men talk more than women, especially in public places.  Men test better spatially. Women are better at tracking specific objects (experiment)  Females are sensitive to people’s moods  Girls make more eye contact  Performance is based on testosterone  Women are more detail orientated- remember things well  Women are better at directions but men can read a map better BEHAVIORAL DIFFERENCES

8  Muscle-to-bone ratio, Fat storage, Reproductive organs  Men’s brain activity is tied to fighting.  Women’s brain activity is linked to more emotional expression.  Women tend to use both sides of the brain when performing a task (multi-tasking)  Men use only the left side of the brain when tasking  Women use both ears when listening, while men tend to only use the right ear. BIOLOGICAL DIFFERENCES

9 What influences our behavior?  Parents  Media  School  Friends  Religion GENDER SOCIALIZATION

10  Gender and family  Begins during pregnancy  “pink” or “blue” world  Sets expectations  Treatment of babies  Division of chores  Toys GENDER SOCIALIZATION

11  Gender and the media  TV characters portray gender stereotypes  Advertisements  Movies- Disney  Women are objects of sex- advertisements, music, etc.  “beauty myth” both men and women GENDER SOCIALIZATION

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13  Gender and school  Areas of study (courses reflect gender patterns)  Discipline (males tend to have more disciplinary issues than females)  Gender and Peers  Female peer groups promote interpersonal skills of communication  Male peer groups promote competitiveness and lack of communication  Sports  Females tend to play sports with no goal – cheerleading, dance,  Males play sports that are competitive- scoring goals, GENDER SOCIALIZATION

14 Functionalism:  The division of responsibilities between males and females survived because it benefited human survival  Historically, division of labor based on sex was efficient  Size and strength  Men are more expendable: women allow group to survive  Today, division of labor is no longer necessary THEORIES

15 Conflict Theory  It is to men’s advantage to prevent women from gaining access to political, economic, and social resources  Even today, men still have maintained power and dominance  Outdated in developed nations: women take on leadership roles, manual labor dingus occupations, marry later, and do not have children Glass Ceiling: women can rise in power and importance in business and society but can never reach the highest level because they are restricted by an invisible barrier THEORIES

16 Symbolic Interactionism:  Gender is acquired in large part from interaction with parents, teachers, and peers  Beauty Myth THEORIES

17 Sexism a set of beliefs, attitudes, norms, and values used to justify sexual inequality. THINK: Can you think of any institutions whose leadership positions are customarily held by men? Would they be different if they were run by women? INEQUALITIES IN GENDER

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19 Occupational Sex Segregation the concentration of women in lower status positions (Pink collar jobs: secretaries, clerks, etc.) Secretaries 96% Nurses91% Cashiers74% Elementary Teacher82% Librarians 89% INEQUALITIES IN GENDER

20 Sexual Harassment: Comments, gestures, or physical contacts of a sexual nature that are deliberate, repeated, and unwelcomed. Violence against women  304,720 aggravated assaults  169,370 rapes  College campus- high %  Globally INEQUALITIES IN GENDER

21  Population control policy  1979 was established in China to alleviate social, economic, and environmental problems.  Estimates between 1979-2009 the policy averted over 200 million births  Consequences: forced abortion, female infanticide, underreporting female births, China’s sex imbalance  Increase of twins using technology ONE CHILD POLICY

22  Genital mutilation most common in 27 countries, including sub-Saharan and north-east Africa  Removal or injury of female’s external organs for non-medial reasons  Birth-womanhood  Cultural ritual practiced by ethnic groups- women seen as unclean, dirty because it guarantees monogamy because the pain of sex is so harsh  Over 125 million women have been victims of the ritual MUTILATION

23  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HtytuVs-Kks PROM ACTIVITY


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