Enculturation Flashcards

1
Q

Enculturation definition

A

the processes, beginning in early childhood, by which particular cultural values, ideas, beliefs, and behavioural patterns are adopted by the members in society

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2
Q

Explain enculturation

A
  • a significant part of the development of our personal identity is the learning & maintenance of the behaviours & norms of our own culture
  • babies are not born w a ‘culture’, they develop an understanding of the language, values & expectations of the culture through interacting with individuals who are a part of that culture
  • It is a constant process that reinforces an individuals identity as a member of their culture.
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3
Q

Effect of enculturation on cognition and behaviour

A
  • refers to attitudes about social relationships, gender roles, time orientation, beliefs about health & illnesses, & beliefs about mortality
  • also referred to as cultural norms
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4
Q

How enculturation happens

A
  • Enculturation can occur through direct tuition: individual is told what they are supposed to do
    • Social cog (observational learning) plays a role in this development: we learn behaviour from models in our society through observational learning and vicarious reinforcement
  • participatory learning is also important: individuals actively engage in the learning process and apply that learning to other situations.
  • cultural transmission: The passing down of cultural norms from one generation to another.
    • the mechanism of enculturation is cultural transmission
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5
Q

Fagot aim

A

to investigate the role that parents may play in gender-role development

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6
Q

Fagot method

A

an overt naturalistic observation & interviews in which she found that parents may communicate information to their children about appropriate gender role behaviour without being aware of what they are doing

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7
Q

Fagot procedure

A

Observers used an observation checklist of 46 child behaviours & 19 reactions by parents.
were five 60-min observations completed for each family over a 5-week period.
observer used time sampling, making note of the child’s behaviour every 60 secs & then noting the parents’ response.
2 observers were used
The agreement between the two observers on the child’s behavior was 0.93 & for parents’ reaction 0.83.
After, each parent was asked to rate the 46 behaviours as more appropriate for girls, for boys or neutral.
Each parent also filled out a questionnaire on the socialization of sex roles.

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8
Q

Fagot results

A

Boys were more likely to be left alone by their parents than girls.
• Parents gave boys more positive responses when they played with blocks than they did girls.
• Parents gave girls more negative responses when they manipulated an object than they did boys.
• Parents gave more positive responses to girls than boys for playing with dolls and more negative responses to boys.
• Parents criticized girls more when they participated in large motor activities – e.g. running and jumping.
• Parents gave more positive responses to girls than boys when they asked for help and a more negative response to boys.
• Fathers were more concerned with appropriate sex-typing than mothers and both parents found more behaviours appropriate for girls only than for boys only.

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9
Q

studies

A

smith & Lloyd

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10
Q

S L aim

A

to investigate how gender labelling would affect toy choice of mothers for children

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11
Q

S L participants

A

32 mothers

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12
Q

S L procedure

A
  • mothers were asked to play with a 6-month old baby
    • baby was cross-dressed. if it was a boy, dressed as a girl, had a girl’s name, and vice versa
  • The mother and the child were put into a room that had a collection of “gendered” toys – like a football (male) and stuffed animals (female).
  • interactions between the woman and the child were filmed
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13
Q

S L results

A
  • mothers chose toys that matched their perception of the gender of the child.
  • more active with the child when they thought it was a boy - encouraged to interact physically with their environment
  • only babies dressed as girls given dolls, only babies dressed as boys given hammers
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14
Q

S L conclusion

A

The way that parents interact with a child may play a role in enculturation, teaching the child what is appropriate behaviour in their culture. In this case, which toys they should play with and the accepted level of physical activity.

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