Language, Thought & Individual Differences • Topic 2 of 4

Gender as a Social Construct

CTET draws a sharp line between sex and gender. Sex refers to the biological and physiological differences a child is born with. Gender refers to the roles, behaviours, expectations and identities that a society constructs and teaches as 'masculine' or 'feminine' - and because they are learned, they vary across cultures and change over time. Children absorb these through socialisation: family, peers, media and, crucially, school. Gender roles are the expected patterns of behaviour ('boys play cricket, girls cook'); gender stereotypes are over-generalised beliefs ('girls are weak at maths, boys cannot be gentle'). Schools quietly transmit gender bias through the hidden curriculum - textbook pictures showing only men as scientists and women in kitchens, teachers calling on boys more often for hard questions, steering girls away from physics or sport, segregated tasks (boys move furniture, girls decorate), and biased language. Gender-sensitive teaching counters all this: use gender-neutral and inclusive examples, give boys and girls equal turns, attention and leadership roles, challenge stereotypes openly, choose balanced learning materials, mix groups, and hold the same high expectations for every child. The exam's preferred answer is almost always the option that treats gender as learned and promotes equal, bias-free opportunity.

✅ Solved examples

1. A teacher says 'biological differences a child is born with are sex, but ideas about how boys and girls should behave are learned'. The learned part is called:
Gender - the socially constructed roles, behaviours and expectations a society teaches, as opposed to biological sex.
2. A textbook shows only men as pilots and scientists and only women cooking. This is an example of:
Gender bias / gender stereotyping in the curriculum, transmitted through the hidden curriculum - it should be corrected with balanced, inclusive materials.
3. A teacher always asks boys to lift and arrange furniture and girls to decorate the bulletin board. The best description of this practice is:
Reinforcing gender stereotypes through differentiated tasks - a gender-sensitive teacher would rotate roles regardless of gender.
4. Which classroom practice is most gender-sensitive?
Giving boys and girls equal opportunities, attention and leadership roles, and using examples and materials free of stereotypes - holding the same high expectations for all.

✏️ Practice — try these, take hints as needed

1. Which differences are biological - sex or gender?
Born with, not taught.
Physiological.
Sex
2. The belief that 'girls are naturally weak in mathematics' is an example of a:
Over-generalised fixed belief.
Not based on the individual child.
Gender stereotype
3. Because gender roles are taught by society, they:
Not fixed by biology.
Differ across cultures and eras.
Vary across cultures and change over time
4. Textbooks and teacher attention that quietly favour one gender operate through the:
Not the written syllabus.
The unwritten lessons of school.
Hidden curriculum
5. To reduce gender bias, a teacher should mainly:
Same opportunities for all.
Challenge, not reinforce, stereotypes.
Provide equal opportunities and use gender-neutral, stereotype-free materials

📝 Topic test — 8 questions

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