social learning explanation of gender development Flashcards

1
Q

explain direct reinforcement?

A
  • children likely to be praised for displaying gender appropriate behaviour eg. boys encouraged for sports, punished for being emotional= differential reinforcement
  • through this a child learns gender identity
  • child will imitate behaviour that has been reinforced
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2
Q

indirect (vicarious) reinforcement?

A
  • if another persons actions= good consequence=likely to be imitated
  • consequence is bad= less likely to be imitated
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3
Q

evaluate supporting evidence for (direct) reinforcement?

A
  • STRENGTH
  • Smith and Lloyd
  • study with 4-6 month babies who dressed in boys clothes for half the time and girls clothes for the other half
  • babies assumed to be boys were given a hammer shaped rattle= encouraged to be active
  • girls given cuddly toys=told they were pretty
  • gender appropriate behaviour stamped at an early age
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4
Q

explain identification and modelling?

A

-child attaches themselves to a person they want to be and poses qualities child sees as rewarding = role model
tends to be attractive

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5
Q

explain mediational processes?

A
  • 4 mediational processes that are central to the learning of gender behaviour
    1. attention- the extent the learner notices behaviour
    2. retention- how well behaviour is remembered
    3. motor repro- ability of observer to reproduce
    4. skills- ability to perform depending on situation
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6
Q

evaluate not a developmental theory for meditational processes?

A
  • doesn’t provide an adequate explanation of how learning processes change w/age e.g.. meditational processes
  • Andrew Dublin suggests that although a chid takes note of behaviour, imitation of gender role behaviour doesn’t come until later
  • consistent of Kholberg’s theory that children don’t become gender active before they reach gender constancy
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7
Q

evaluate explains gender roles in western society?

A
  • there are less distinctions between fem/masc stereotypical behaviour in society today than there were in the 1950’s
  • explained by shift in social expectations over years=new acceptance of gender behaviour
  • this is better explained by the social learning theory rather than the biological
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