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level: Social Learning Explanation of Gender Development

Questions and Answers List

level questions: Social Learning Explanation of Gender Development

QuestionAnswer
What does SLT suggest?learning occurs through experience and is learnt either directly (through operant or classical conditioning) or indirectly (through vicarious reinforcement)
What does SLT suggest in terms of reinforcement?Reinforcement increases the likelihood that the observed behaviours will be imitated, whilst punishment decreases this likelihood.
What is differential reinforcement?Children are specifically rewarded by their parents for displaying gender-appropriate behaviours e.g. girls being calm and affectionate towards others. This reinforces gender stereotypes and contributes to the child’s gender identity.
How can learning occur indirectly?Through vicarious reinforcement. A child sees another same-sex child being rewarded for displaying gender-appropriate behaviours, who is considered to be a role model. The observer then imitates this modeled behaviour in hopes to get a similar reward. This is helped by the 4 mediational (cognitive) processes which are attention, retention, motor reproduction and motivation.
What is strength of SLT?Bandura's research on observational learning show that children imitate the behaviour of same-sex role models, particularly when these behaviors are reinforced. This aligns with SLT’s view that gender roles are learned through observation, imitation, and reinforcement.
What is a limitation of SLTSLT downplays innate biological factors (e.g., hormones, genetics) that influence gender behavior such as the effects of testosterone on aggression or sex-linked brain differences.
What is the study for social learning theory?The researchers observed 32 mothers playing with a 6-month-old baby.The mothers were misled about the baby's gender—some were told the baby was a boy, others were told it was a girl. The babies were dressed in gender-neutral clothing. When mothers believed the baby was a boy they were more likely to offer "masculine" toys, like the squeaky hammer and encouraged active and vigorous play. When they thought the baby was a girl, they offered "feminine" toys, like a doll and encouraged gentler and more nurturing play. Shows adults use differential reinforcement based on the stereotypes of gender appropriate behaviour from infancy
Things to remember?what SLT suggests, Reinforcement- vicarious and differential reinforcement, Study for social learning theory