Gender Vs Nurture Essay

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Although sex and gender are often confused to be the same, the terms greatly differ in meaning. While sex refers to the biological organs of a man or a woman and their physiological characteristics, gender refers to a person’s behavior such as masculine, feminine or androgynous. The development of sex is purely biological. At seven weeks, in the mother’s womb, the fetus receives an X chromosome from the mother making the fetus a girl and receives another chromosome from the father. If the chromosome received from the father is a Y chromosome, the fetus becomes a boy. In the development of sex, nurture (environmental effects) has no effect. However, the development of gender is a topic up for debate. Is gender a product of nature or nurture? …show more content…

The social learning theory states that all behavior, including gender, is learned (Bandura, 1977). Bandura claimed there are two ways gender is learned; through direct tuition and observational learning. Direct tuition is when the parent encourages a certain gender type. For example, in order to encourage a girl to be feminine and follow her gender type, parents would give the girl dolls and cooking sets to encourage those traits, while boys would get trains and cars. Apart from the use of toys, words are also used as encouragement such as “boys don’t wear that”, “girls do not play with that”. Observational learning is when a child learns their gender identity by observing themselves. When a child observes a certain same sex figure in their life, they begin to imitate their behavior. This imitation can develop into their gender. An example is that girls may copy their mothers and help them in the kitchen while boys would help their fathers wash the car to imitate what the father does. This shows the child the acceptable behavior for their sex and thus, they follow it to fit into the norm. The social learning theory is reinforced by the praise or punishment the parents then give to the child. Each time the child is praised for a gender appropriate behavior, they are likely to repeat it and then, fall into the typical gender type. Each time the child is penalized for not acting like their gender, they are less likely to repeat the behavior. This penalizing shows the child that this behavior is not acceptable even if it’s not wrong, such as a boy wearing girl

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