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Gender and Sexuality in Middle Adolescence (page 2)

By L.B. Blume|M.J. Zembar
Pearson Allyn Bacon Prentice Hall

For example, most children recognize that social expectations for the activities of boys and girls are stereotyped by sex (e.g., boys are football players, girls are cheerleaders). In addition, most school-age children conform to gender boundaries for self-presentation (e.g., dress, hairstyle) that are strictly enforced by peer culture (Martin, Ruble, & Szkrybalo, 2002; Thorne, 1993). By adolescence, most children can recognize that gender-role stereotypes are social conventions. However, most still choose the “safe” alternative of behaving in sex-stereotypic ways (O’Brien, 1992).

But how accurate are stereotypes about sex differences between males and females? Researchers have examined previous research findings using a technique called meta-analysis. In meta-analyses of social behaviors, sex differences in aggression appeared fairly reliably across different studies but tended to be smaller in more recent studies. Overall results of meta-analyses indicate that sex differences decrease with age and that only about 5% of the difference is due to gender (Hyde, 1984).

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