Home » ExchangeEveryDay » Delusions of Gender



ExchangeEveryDay Past Issues


<< Previous Issue | View Past Issues | | Next Issue >> ExchangeEveryDay
Delusions of Gender
January 24, 2011
We cannot live only for ourselves. A thousand fibers connect us with our fellow men.
-Herman Melville, 1819-1892, author
In her new book, Delusions of Gender: How Our Minds, Society, and Neurosexism Create Difference, Cordelia Fine argues that, far from supporting the existence of vastly different male and female brains, much of the research on the topic is not only deeply flawed, but dangerously misleading. Women aren't worse at math, and girls' preference for girlish toys probably has more to do with social expectations than what's in their skulls. The web site Salon recently interviewed Fine and here are a few excerpts:

Why are people so intent on misrepresenting the differences between the male and female brain?
We look around in our society, and we want to explain whatever state of sex inequality we have. It's more comfortable to attribute it to some internal difference between men and women than the idea that there must be something very unjust about our society. As long as there has been brain science, there have been misguided explanations and justification for sex and inequality — that women's skulls are the wrong shape, that their brains are too small, that their heads are too unspecialized. It was once very cutting-edge to put a brain on a scale, and now we have cutting-edge research that is genuinely sophisticated and exciting, but we're still very much at the beginning of our journey of understanding how our brain creates the mind.

So women aren't really more receptive than men to other people's emotions?
There is a very common social perception that women are better at understanding other people's thoughts and feelings. When you look at one of the most realistic tests of mind reading, you find that men and women are just as good at getting what their interaction partners were thinking and feeling. It even surprised the researchers. They went on to discover that once you make gender salient, when you test these abilities [like having subjects check a box identifying their sex before a test], you have this self-fulfilling effect. The idea that women are better at mind reading might be true in the sense that our environments often remind women they should be good at it and remind men they should be bad at it. But that doesn't mean that men are worse at this kind of ability.

Parents who try to raise children in gender-neutral environments are often horrified when, despite their best intentions, their daughters are drawn to Barbies and their sons are drawn to violent toys. If there are no hard-wired differences between the sexes, why does this happen?
I spend a lot of time with parents, and you see egalitarian-minded parents try hard to rear their children in a non-gendered way. Then you see their children defy them. The fact is, babies are born into a world in which sex is the most important and obvious social division. It's constantly emphasized through segregation, through dress, and so forth. Babies are born to parents who have a host of assumptions and expectations about gender, whether or not they consciously endorse those expectations. Studies have shown that parents have a tendency to see boys as more boyish and girls as more girlish than they actually are.

Once the children reach the age of 2, the age they discover which side of this gender divide they're on, all bets are off. Parents may prefer that girls not play with Barbies and boys not play with guns, but by that age children know what tribe they belong to, and will want to be part of it.





Mind in the Making
The Seven Essential Life Skills Every Child Needs

Ellen Galinsky provides research-based advice for parents and teachers on how to raise their children to be well rounded and achieve their full potential — learning to take on life’s challenges, communicating well with others, and remaining committed to learning.

ExchangeEveryDay

Delivered five days a week containing news, success stories, solutions, trend reports, and much more.

What is ExchangeEveryDay?

ExchangeEveryDay is the official electronic newsletter for Exchange Press. It is delivered five days a week containing news stories, success stories, solutions, trend reports, and much more.

Introducing Scholastic Big Day for PreK a new, comprehensive program that embraces children’s natural curiosity and prepares children for success in school and life! Based on the most current research, Big Day for PreK provides everything teachers need to create a purposeful and fun learning environment.


Join 25,000 other child care centers just like yours that now operate more efficiently than ever before using our software & check-in solutions.

Procare Software


Comments (5)

Displaying All 5 Comments
Nirmal Kumar Ghosh · February 15, 2011
Shishu Vikash Kendra
Kolkata, West Bengal, India


No I don't beleive in gender difference . A parent and a caregiver can share everything equally between a girl and a boy .

Judy · January 26, 2011
United States


One might want to consider the fact that studies which confirm that gender does play a role in differences between girls and boys are not any more flawed than any other study. It is a known fact that all studies have flaws. Anyone who has worked with children for any length of time should be able to determine that these differences exist no matter how children are nurtured.

Our duty as early childhood professionals is to value children's differences and encourge them to pursue their interest with passion. It seems to be a huge waste of time to attempt to make everyone the same!

Heidi · January 24, 2011
Portland, Oregon, United States


What a great article for EVERYONE to read; whether they work with kids or not. Is there anyway to post these articles on Facebook?

Judi Pack · January 24, 2011
United States


YES!

Andrew · January 24, 2011
United States


The one fact that debunks the theory that nurture fosters gender differences is that most young boys in our society are only exposed to nurture by women. In some parts of our society, men are almost entirely absent from the lives of young boys. If male aggression is so undesirable by women, they should be able to extinguish it through nurture.

The other argument against nurture being paramount in sexual differences is that roughly 10% of both men and women are homosexual. If nurture were stronger than nature, there would be virtually no homosexuality.

While technology is advancing, there is still a vast amount of what goes on in the development of the human brain that is not known or understood.



Post a Comment

Have an account? to submit your comment.


required

Your e-mail address will not be visible to other website visitors.
required
required
required

Check the box below, to help verify that you are not a bot. Doing so helps prevent automated programs from abusing this form.



Disclaimer: Exchange reserves the right to remove any comments at its discretion or reprint posted comments in other Exchange materials.