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Gender Role Development Gender Identity (knowledge) Gender Roles (roles that should be adopted and behaviors in those roles) –Gender Role Norms (social.

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Presentation on theme: "Gender Role Development Gender Identity (knowledge) Gender Roles (roles that should be adopted and behaviors in those roles) –Gender Role Norms (social."— Presentation transcript:

1 Gender Role Development Gender Identity (knowledge) Gender Roles (roles that should be adopted and behaviors in those roles) –Gender Role Norms (social expectations about how males and females should act, think, and feel) Communality Agency

2 Gender Role Development Gender Stereotypes (inaccurate, unsupported generalizations) Gender Typing (process by which we acquire appropriate behaviors, thoughts, and feelings) Socialization (teaching)

3 Theories of Gender Role Development Biosocial Theory (Money and Ehrhardt) –Biological Processes –Social labeling and differential treatment

4 Theories of Gender Role Development Psychoanalytic Theory (Freud) –Oedipus Complex –Electra Complex –Identification

5 Theories of Gender Role Development Social Learning Theory –Observational Learning –Differential Reinforcement

6 Theories of Gender Role Development Cognitive Theories –Kohlberg’s Cognitive Developmental Theory Stage 1 –Basic gender identity is established by age 2 or 3, when children can recognize and label themselves as males or females

7 Theories of Gender Role Development Cognitive Theories –Kohlberg’s Cognitive Developmental Theory Stage 2 –By age 4, children achieve gender stability (gender remains stable over time; boys become men, girls become women) Stage 3 –Between ages 5 and 7, gender consistency is achieved (gender is stable across all situations; dress, cross sex activities, etc)

8 Theories of Gender Role Development Cognitive Theories –Gender Schema Theory Children develop gender schema, about males and females that influence the kinds of information they will attend to and remember

9 Theories of Gender Role Development Cognitive Theories –Gender Schema Theory Do this by: –Developing an in-group, out-group schema to classify appropriate gender objects, behaviors and roles –Developing an own sex schema, by acquiring more detailed info about their sex role

10 Developing Social Cognition Theory of Mind –Best taught by parents sharing their emotions Role-Taking Skills –The ability to adopt another person’s perspective and their thoughts and feelings in relation to our own –Theory of mind in action –Requires outgrowing egocentrism

11 Developing Social Cognition Begins with Mutually responsive orientation –Associated with best family situation for development of social cognition –Children and caregivers are sensitive to and responsive to one another’s needs –Children want to comply to rules and learn self-regulation w/o external control Empathy –Vicarious experience of another's feelings –Promotes morality and pro-social behavior

12 Developing Morality Morality –Ability to distinquish between right and wrong –Three components: Affective –Feelings which surround right and wrong actions (moral affect) Cognitive –How we conceptualize right and wrong and make decisions Behavioral –How we behave when faced with moral dilemmas

13 Developing Morality Learn to distinguish between –Moral Rules Standards that focus on the welfare and basic rights of others –Social Conventional Rules Standards determined by social consensus about what is appropriate in particular social settings (rules of social etiquette) Around age 11 start to try to explain why other people do what they do based on descriptions of internal characteristics

14 Developing Morality Taught through discipline (Hoffman, 1970) –Love withdrawal Withholding attention, affection, or approval after a child misbehaves –Power assertion Using power to administer spankings, taking away privileges, and other punishment –Induction Explaining why behavior is wrong and how it affects other people

15 Kohlberg’s Theory of Moral Reasoning Development Preconventional –Based on consequences Conventional –Based on approval and acceptance of others –Internalizes societies rules Postconventional –Based on internalized personal moral code –Acquired through formal operational thought Invarient sequence Cognitive growth and social experiences most important influences

16 Eisenberg’s Levels of Prosocial Reasoning Stage 1: Hedonistic Orientation (up to age 7) –Self needs first Stage 2: Needs Oriented Orientation (7 – 11) –Consider needs of others w/o guilt if help not given

17 Eisenberg’s Levels of Prosocial Reasoning Stage 3: Approval-focused Orientation (11 – 14) –Will help if rewarded with praise and approval Stage 4: Empathetic Orientation (12 and over) –Considers needs of others and feels guilt if not given Stage 5: Internalized (16 and over) –Helping behavior based on strong, internalized beliefs and values

18 Developing Social Cognition Dodge’s Social Information Processing Model (pg 395) –Encoding of cues –Interpreting of cues –Clarification of goals –Response search –Response decision –Behavioral enactment


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