Type a new keyword(s) and press Enter to search

Gender Stereotypes

 

            Human beings are deeply influenced by and involved with other people. Through socialization people adapt and learn to modify their behaviour, thoughts, feelings and attitudes according to the requirements of their culture and society. Through socialization gender roles are learned and developed. Gender roles greatly influence how we think and behave. According to traditional stereotypes men are strong and dominant, whereas females are submissive. Gender stereotypes disadvantage and discriminate women in the workplace, at home and in society as a whole. Gender stereotypes create bias and prejudices against women, which in turn, can create tokenism. Gender stereotypes mainly constrain women in that in society there is an underlying belief that a woman has to be "masculine" to succeed in a male world.
             People are adaptable and learn to modify their behaviour, thoughts, feelings, and attitudes according to the requirements of their culture. Every society trains its young to function within its own view of the world and according to the rules and regulations that control that world. Every society tries to raise its young so that they will accept the ideas and values of that society (Romer, 1981, p.15). The name given to this process that insures the next generation's adherence to the society's ideas and values is socialization. .
             Most people eagerly participate in the process of socialization: they want to fit in, to be like other people in their social world (Romer, 1981, p.15). This is especially true of children who are constantly trying to make sense of the world around them. Most children do not cast judgements on their socialization experiences as much as they willingly accept them. It does not take long for people to grow accustomed to the society into which they are born and to monitor their own behaviour, thoughts and feelings so as to be in harmony with their surroundings (Romer, 1981, p.


Essays Related to Gender Stereotypes