Gender Roles

Gender roles are cultural and personal.

They determine how males and females should think, speak, dress, and interact within the context of society.

Learning plays a role in this process of shaping gender roles.

These gender schemas are deeply embedded cognitive frameworks regarding what defines masculine and feminine.

While various socializing agents—parents, teachers, peers, movies, television, music, books, and religion—teach and reinforce gender roles throughout the lifespan, parents probably exert the greatest influence, especially on their very young offspring.


As mentioned previously, sociologists know that adults perceive and treat female and male infants differently.

Parents probably do this in response to their having been recipients of gender expectations as young children.

Traditionally, fathers teach boys how to fix and build things; mothers teach girls how to cook, sew, and keep house.

Children then receive parental approval when they conform to gender expectations and adopt culturally accepted and conventional roles.

All of this is reinforced by additional socializing agents, such as the media.

In other words, learning gender roles always occurs within a social context, the values of the parents and society being passed along to the children of successive generations.

Gender roles adopted during childhood normally continue into adulthood.

At home, people have certain presumptions about decision‐making, child‐rearing practices, financial responsibilities, and so forth.

At work, people also have presumptions about power, the division of labor, and organizational structures.

None of this is meant to imply that gender roles, in and of themselves, are good or bad; they merely exist.

Gender roles are realities in almost everyone's life.

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