Gender & Development (College Board AP® Psychology): Study Guide
Gender identity and socialization
Sex refers to the biological characteristics that distinguish males and females
This includes chromosomes, hormones, and reproductive anatomy
Gender refers to the psychological and social meaning attached to being male or female
This covers relationships between people as well as the norms, behaviours, and roles that come with being a girl, boy, woman, or man
Gender as a social construct differs from society to society and changes over time
Gender identity is a person's internal sense of their own gender
It may be binary (male or female), non-binary, or may not correspond to the biological sex assigned at birth
Children begin to develop gender identity from as early as age two to three
Gender roles are the behaviors, attitudes, and expectations that a culture associates with being male or female
Gender roles vary widely across cultures. A behavior considered masculine in one culture may be considered feminine or gender-neutral in another
Gender typing is the process through which children acquire the behaviors, attitudes, and preferences that their culture considers appropriate for their sex
This typically emerges between ages two and seven
Androgyny refers to the display of both stereotypically masculine and feminine characteristics
Sandra Bem (1974) developed the Bem Sex Role Inventory (BSRI), a self-report scale on which individuals rate themselves on masculine and feminine traits
Bem proposed that androgynous individuals are better able to adapt to a variety of social contexts than those who score exclusively high on one dimension
Social learning theory and gender development
Social learning theory proposes that gender roles are learned through observation, imitation, and reinforcement; they are not determined solely by biology
Children learn via:
Direct reinforcement: children receive positive reinforcement for gender-appropriate behavior and punishment for gender-inappropriate behavior
E.g. a boy is praised for helping his father with outdoor tasks, but is discouraged from playing with makeup. Over time he internalizes that these are gender-appropriate and gender-inappropriate behaviors respectively
Vicarious reinforcement: children observe others being rewarded or punished for gender-typed behavior and adjust their own behavior accordingly
E.g. a girl observes her older sister being praised for being nurturing and gentle. She learns that these are desirable feminine behaviors without having to experience the reinforcement directly
Modelling: children observe and imitate the behavior of same-sex role models, particularly those they admire
E.g. a boy who admires his father is more likely to imitate his father's gender-typed behavior than a boy who has a less close relationship with his father
Research support
Fagot & Leinbach (1995) found that four-year-olds in traditional families displayed more gender role stereotyping and used gender labels earlier than children in less traditional families
Traditional families were those where the father worked outside the home and the mother stayed home
This suggests that parents act as powerful gender role models and that the home environment shapes gender development through differential reinforcement
Gender schema theory
Gender schema theory proposes that children develop cognitive frameworks, or gender schemas, about what is associated with being male or female
Children use these schemas to organize their understanding of the world and guide their own behavior:
Gender schemas begin to develop between ages two and three
Children are socialized into a binary view of gender through toys, clothing, language, parental behavior, and media, which vary according to gender
By around age three, children have developed in-group schemas (associated with their own sex) and out-group schemas (associated with the opposite sex):
In-group schemas motivate gender-consistent behavior, as children seek out and attend to information that matches their own gender
Out-group schemas are initially ignored, as children pay less attention to and are less likely to remember information inconsistent with their gender schema
Research support
Martin & Halverson (1983) found that children under six recalled more gender-consistent pictures (e.g. a male firefighter) than gender-inconsistent pictures (e.g. a female firefighter)
This supports the idea that gender schemas selectively influence memory
Gender schema theory explains why children act in gender-consistent ways before they fully understand the concept of gender
Gender identity alone is sufficient to motivate schema-consistent behavior
Cultural influences on gender development
If gender is learned through socialization, then the surrounding culture will shape what gender-typed behaviors are learned
This provides evidence that gender roles are at least partly socially constructed
Cross-cultural research demonstrates significant variation in gender roles:
Margaret Mead's (1935) research in Papua New Guinea found that gender roles and behaviors were not fixed but culturally bound
This challenges the assumption that gender differences are universal or biologically determined
In Sweden, many fathers take extended paternity leave to raise young children while their partners return to work
This provides children with a non-traditional model of male gender roles
Many non-Western cultures recognize gender identities beyond the binary
the Hijra in India are recognized as a third gender with a long cultural history
the Bugis people of South Sulawesi, Indonesia recognize multiple genders beyond the male/female binary
The existence of diverse gender identities across cultures provides evidence that gender roles and identities are shaped by social and cultural factors rather than determined solely by biology
Examiner Tips and Tricks
For Skill 2.C, gender research is almost entirely non-experimental
Researchers cannot randomly assign participants to a sex or gender, and most studies use observational, correlational, or cross-cultural designs
Be prepared to evaluate the limitations of non-experimental gender research, e.g. why causation cannot be established, and consider alternative explanations for observed gender differences
For Skill 2.C, the BSRI is a self-report measure
Ensure you can evaluate its limitations, e.g. self-report data is subjective, gender traits may have changed since the scale was developed in the 1970s using American university students, and the scale may not translate across cultures
Gender schema theory connects directly to schemas covered in the Perception and Thinking
If a question describes a child interpreting social information through a gender lens, identify this as gender schema theory and link it to the broader concept of schemas as cognitive frameworks (Skill 2.C)
Unlock more, it's free!
Was this revision note helpful?