PRIMARY AGENTS Primary agents include parents and family, peers, schools, religion and media. Parents and families are one of the most powerful.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Gender & Education. Gender differences in attainment In the past, boys used to achieve far more in education than girls In the past, boys used to achieve.
Advertisements

Career Development Interventions in the Elementary Schools
The 4 major agents of socialization
Agents of Socialisation
SOCIALISATION. Socialisation Part of every society Different in each society Each has own values, attitudes and beliefs.
SOCIALISATION Part of every society, but the process is different in each society because each has its own values, attitudes and beliefs. Learning.
What is Socialization?.
Chapter 3 Socialization.
Child, Family, School, and Community Socialization and Support 6 th ed. Chapter 12 SOCIAL/BEHAVIORAL SOCIALIZATION OUTCOMES.
Socialization Chapter 3 Henslin’s Sociology: A Down to Earth Approach
SOCIALIZATION. Learning Goals:  Define and understand the process of Socialization  Identify the Agents of Socialization  Reflect on how the Agents.
Understanding Healthy Sexual Development in Children © 2013, Saskatchewan Prevention Institute.
Chapter Three Gender and Families
Gender Inequality.
Socialization: Gender Identity
Chapter 5 Socialization and Interaction Copyright 2012, SAGE Publications, Inc.
Sec. 4 Gender Roles. Sex and Gender Sex refers to the biological characteristics with which we are born. Gender refers to the learned attitudes and behaviors.
Gender identity and subject choice
SOCIALIZATION: TEXTBOOK ASSIGNMENT
Chapter 3: Socialization
Gender and Socialization
 First group to have impact  Lays down basic sense of self  Establishes initial values and beliefs  Sociologists observe family interactions in public.
UNDERSTANDING GENDER 1.GENDER FORMATION –developing a sense of who you are as boys or girls through everyday interactions with family, friends, media,
Socialization.
Socialization, Social Groups, and Stratification.
Gender and Social Development. Answer the following questions from your childhood from the ages 12 and under: What were your five favorite TV shows? What.
Socialization Initial personality development The social self
Socialization and the Construction of Reality Chapter 4 Have you been properly socialized?? How does someone become a racist? A sexist? A homophobic person?
How the Family Influences Gender Gender is socially constructed – whether you are masculine or feminine. Whereas sex is biologically constructed- whether.
 Your family, friends, teachers and the media affect the way you see yourself.  Gender is directly linked to your identity.
Theoretical Perspectives
Essentials of Sociology Fifth Edition Chapter Three Socialization This multimedia product and its contents are protected under copyright law. The following.
1 Shift in ownership Working with boys and men as partners Syed Saghir Bukhari- Senior Programme Coordinator UN Women Pakistan 13 th April 2012.
Talking About Acceptance. Similarities and Differences.
Instructor name Class Title, Term/Semester, Year Institution © 2011 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Introductory Psychology Concepts Gender.
Chapter 14: Gender and Development Module 14.1 Gender Stereotypes Module 14.2 Differences Related to Gender Module 14.3 Gender Identity Module 14.4 Gender.
GENDER & STEREOTYPES Dr Riffat Haque SEX  BIOLOGICAL:  MALE OR FEMALE: Physical category, Natural, Born with.  CANNOT BE CHANGED GENDER.
Sex role or gender stereotypes. Sex role stereotype This is defined as: – An organised belief about the behaviour, attitudes and characteristics expected.
DEFINITIONS. SOCIALISATION “the process by which individuals learn to modify their behaviour to conform to what is considered ‘acceptable’ in their.
Chapter 10 Sex and Gender Sex: The Biological Dimension Gender: The Cultural Dimension Gender Stratification in Historical and Contemporary Perspective.
: Think back over the stages in your life from childhood to the present. Which were the best and worst? Why? Warm up.
List differences between women and men and consider:
STRATEGIES FOR EQUAL GENDER PARTICIPATION. Social norms formed about sport and physical activity are the result of a complex interaction of sociological.
Agents of Socialization Madiha Anas Lecturer Department of Applied Psychology School of Social Sciences Beaconhouse National University.
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings Carl P. Gabbard PowerPoint ® Lecture Slide Presentation revised by Alberto Cordova,
What makes you you? NATURE VS. NURTURE: Are you the product of your GENETIC INHERITANCE (Nature) or your ENVIRONMENT (Nurture)? SOCIOBIOLOGISTS: Biology.
Sociology. Notable Sociologists  Auguste Comte He is seen as the father of Sociology He coined the term Sociology in reference to the new science of.
Look at the following fonts. Are they masculine or feminine? GENDER.
STRATEGIES FOR EQUAL GENDER PARTICIPATION. Social norms formed about sport and physical activity are the result of a complex interaction of sociological.
Social and Behavior Change Communication Summit Addis Ababa February 8 – 10, 2016 Harnessing the power of communication to realize girl’s education in.
 By expecting different behaviors from people because they are male or female, society nudges boys and girls into separate directions from an early age.
LEARNING THE WAYS OF SOCIETY. Process by which people learn… basic skills values beliefs behavior patterns of a society Stages of Socialization Childhood.
WHY IS IT IMPORTANT?. Socialization is the process of social interaction It is lifelong It is through socialization that individuals acquire a self-identity.
AdolescenceAdolescence Adolescence means the period of time between being a child and an adult.
WHICH COLOR IS FOR YOU???? PINK OR BLUE. SOCIALIZATION THROUGH GENDER AND LIFE COURSE There are not guided notes for this, but it is “short and sweet”…
Agents of Socialization …how we are influenced or guided to behave in a certain way by external forces.
WJEC Sociology: SY1.  The aim of the lesson is you to develop an awareness of how youth culture has developed since the 1950’s.  By the end of the lesson,
Socialization b Process by which humans become participating members of society b 1. The transmission of cultural values, attitudes, and norms b 2. The.
© 2009 Cengage Learning, Inc. 1 HN144: Human Behavior and the Social Environment.
Socialization. What is Socialization Enables people to learn culture and become functioning members of society Purpose 1.Establishes social identity -
Chapter 11 Sex and Gender Sex: The Biological Dimension
Socialization and the Construction of Reality
Social and Cultural Constraints in Motor Development
Chapter 4, Socialization
Chapter 4 Socialization
SOCIALIZATION.
THE LIFE CYCLE SOCIALIZATION
Agents of Society.
Social and Emotional Changes
Socialisation 5 Methods.
Presentation transcript:

PRIMARY AGENTS Primary agents include parents and family, peers, schools, religion and media. Parents and families are one of the most powerful influences on socialisation. Parents usually treat boys and girls differently from the time they are born in the way that they talk to them, treat them and expectations of them (Boy’s rooms are blue and their presents include guns, footballs and bats and girl’s rooms are pink and their presents include dolls, tea - sets and books). Gender roles are well established and readily observable by school age. At this stage, the peer group becomes an increasingly important socialising agent. Sporting ability has a very high status among the adolescent male, so strong recognition and admiration are achieved through success in sporting contests (thus the competitive nature of boys). Success for girls is often overlooked or achievements are downplayed. Arguably, the most powerful socialising agent is the mass media because they reinforce societal attitudes, beliefs and values, including those relating to sport. Female media coverage is often ‘inadequate, superficial or inappropriate’. An unfair majority of air - time advertising male sports, female sports are left in the dark as ‘second grade’. Male sportsmen also receive larger pay, prize money and sponsorship deals than their female counterparts.

PRIMARY AGENTS “are the persons, groups, or institutions that teach us what we need to know in order to participate in society and include family, peers, school, and the mass media. These basic attitudes and values tend to be formed early in childhood and tend to be relatively consistent throughout life” (termpaperwarehouse.com).termpaperwarehouse.com “the groups and institutions which contribute to the basic attitudes and values are known as the agents of socialization and include such groups as family, peers, mass media, religion, education, existing laws, and their own gender” (imej.wfu.edu).imej.wfu.edu “are people and/or groups such as family, school, peers, mass media and religion that influence self concepts, emotions, attitudes and behavior” (Henslin, 1999).