Gender and Family
Gender and Family
Gender and Family
Prepared by:
Ms. Ma. Catherine A. Bacor, RSW
Outline
Social institution
Socialization
Gender Socialization
Nature and Notion of Family
Needs to form a family
Characteristics of family
Functions of the family
Kinds of family patterns
Gender Roles Assignment in the Family
WHAT IS A SOCIAL INSTITUTION?
• Social institution is a group of social positions,
connected by social relations, performing a
social role.
• Any people or groups that you have social
interactions with. It is a major sphere of social
life organized to meet some human need.
Socialization determines
the person you will become.
Gender socialization is the process of learning the
social expectations and attitudes associated with
one's sex. Sometimes gender roles lead to inequality; for
example, women's social roles were once more restricted
regarding politics, and United States law prohibited
women from voting. Some researchers believe that
biological differences underlie some behavioural
differences between males and females; others disagree.
The most common agents of gender socialization—
in other words, the people who influence the
process—are parents, teachers, schools, and the
media. Through gender socialization, children begin
to develop their own beliefs about gender and
ultimately form their own gender identity.
FAMILY
Nature and Notion of Family
Family indeed is the most important universal institution. It
is the core of the social structure and fundamental unit of
the society because it is from which all other pertinent
institutions to make society works. In general, it consists of
father, mother and children. Family is the primary group
hence everyone is a member of this primary group.
Needs to form a family:
(1)Reproductive urge
(2) Biological needs
(3) Economic provision
Characteristics of Family
(General)
Sex relationship should be healthy-present between
husband and wife. Or making relationship or if this
relationship breaks then the family slowly breaks according
to Mac Iver.