Preview Extract
Instructor Resource
Bosson, The Psychology of Sex and Gender 1e
SAGE Publishing, 2018
Chapter 2: Studying Sex and Gender
Test Bank
Multiple Choice
1. Which of the following is FALSE about sex and math ability?
A. Girls tend to have higher math anxiety than boys.
B. Girls would likely score higher than boys on math tests if not for math anxiety.
C. Math performance is predicted less by sex than by socioeconomic status.
D. Large-scale reviews show no overall sex differences in math performance.
Ans: B
Learning Objective: 2-1: Evaluate the meaning of sex differences.
Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: Studying Sex and Gender
Difficulty Level: Easy
2. Which of the following is FALSE regarding common beliefs about sex differences?
A. Young girls have been found to be slightly more talkative than young boys.
B. Part of the reason women are reluctant to engage in casual sex is because they do
not expect it to be pleasurable.
C. Adult women tend to use more verbose language than adult men.
D. Women and men perform similarly on tests of math ability.
Ans: C
Learning Objective: 2-1: Evaluate the meaning of sex differences.
Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: Studying Sex and Gender
Difficulty Level: Easy
3. Imagine Mark is studying sex differences in emotional expression. His study contains
measures for seven different types of emotional expression. He finds that women score
higher on one of these and men score higher on another one. He interprets his findings
as suggesting largely different styles of emotional expression across men and women.
Markโs interpretation indicates a ______ approach.
A. biological
B. cross-cultural
C. minimalist
D. maximalist
Ans: D
Learning Objective: 2-1: Evaluate the meaning of sex differences.
Cognitive Domain: Application
Answer Location: What Is the Meaning of Difference?
Difficulty Level: Hard
Instructor Resource
Bosson, The Psychology of Sex and Gender 1e
SAGE Publishing, 2018
4. When psychologists report discovering sex differences on some variable (e.g.,
optimism) what do they typically mean by this?
A. that these differences emerge from distinct biological sex categories
B. that the difference between sexes has a large effect size
C. that the difference has a practical level of significance
D. that the observed difference is unlikely to have occurred due to chance
Ans: D
Learning Objective: 2-1: Evaluate the meaning of sex differences.
Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: What Is the Meaning of Difference?
Difficulty Level: Medium
5. Some gender researchers argue that a maximalist approach is problematic because
______.
A. it ignores important sex differences
B. it perpetuates overgeneralized beliefs about the sexes
C. it prioritizes the effects of culture too strongly over biology
D. research on sex differences cannot be objective
Ans: B
Learning Objective: 2-1: Evaluate the meaning of sex differences.
Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: What Is the Meaning of Difference?
Difficulty Level: Medium
6. Which of the following does NOT accurately describe science?
A. It most heavily emphasizes evidence that is consistent with theory.
B. It is defined more by its methods than by its contents.
C. Repeating experiments over again is a key step in conducting science.
D. Scientific research often relies on evidence that is probabilistic.
Ans: A
Learning Objective: 2-2: Explain the scientific method and specific quantitative and
qualitative methods used in the study of sex and gender.
Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: What Is Science?
Difficulty Level: Medium
7. Which of the following is typically the first step in the scientific method?
A. study design
B. replication
C. hypothesis generation
D. data collection
Ans: C
Learning Objective: 2-2: Explain the scientific method and specific quantitative and
qualitative methods used in the study of sex and gender.
Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Instructor Resource
Bosson, The Psychology of Sex and Gender 1e
SAGE Publishing, 2018
Answer Location: The Scientific Method
Difficulty Level: Easy
8. Which of the following is the best example of a hypothesis?
A. An observation that men tend to walk faster in pairs than when alone.
B. The idea that judgments are driven more by emotion than by conscious reasoning.
C. The belief that people rationalize unfairness in order to avoid cognitive dissonance.
D. A prediction that women will score higher on a test of verbal ability than men.
Ans: D
Learning Objective: 2-2: Explain the scientific method and specific quantitative and
qualitative methods used in the study of sex and gender.
Cognitive Domain: Application
Answer Location: The Scientific Method
Difficulty Level: Hard
9. A testable prediction regarding the outcome of a study is called a(n) ______.
A. theory
B. hypothesis
C. replication
D. boundary condition
Ans: B
Learning Objective: 2-2: Explain the scientific method and specific quantitative and
qualitative methods used in the study of sex and gender.
Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: The Scientific Method
Difficulty Level: Easy
10. Which of the following best represents the order of the scientific process?
A. generate hypothesis โ replicate โ collection and analysis โ study design
B. generate hypothesis โ study design โ collection and analysis โ disseminate
results
C. study design โ generate hypothesis โ disseminate results โ collection and
analysis
D. study design โ collection and analysis โ generate hypothesis โ disseminate
results
Ans: B
Learning Objective: 2-2: Explain the scientific method and specific quantitative and
qualitative methods used in the study of sex and gender.
Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: The Scientific Method
Difficulty Level: Medium
11. ______ methods allow researchers to turn their variables of interest into numbers.
A. Quantitative
Instructor Resource
Bosson, The Psychology of Sex and Gender 1e
SAGE Publishing, 2018
B. Qualitative
C. Experimental
D. Correlational
Ans: A
Learning Objective: 2-2: Explain the scientific method and specific quantitative and
qualitative methods used in the study of sex and gender.
Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer location: Quantitative Research Methods
Difficulty Level: Easy
12. Researchers manipulate the ______ variable and observe changes in the______.
A. mediator; moderator
B. moderator; independent
C. dependent; mediator
D. independent; dependent
Ans: D
Learning Objective: 2-2: Explain the scientific method and specific quantitative and
qualitative methods used in the study of sex and gender.
Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: Experimental Designs
Difficulty Level: Easy
13. Which of the following is NOT crucial to making causal inferences from a study?
A. random assignment
B. manipulation
C. a representative sample
D. holding other variables constant
Ans: C
Learning Objective: 2-2: Explain the scientific method and specific quantitative and
qualitative methods used in the study of sex and gender.
Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: Experimental Designs
Difficulty Level: Easy
14. Experimental methods in gender research can be especially challenging because
______.
A. the independent and dependent variables are difficult to operationalize
B. sex and gender identity cannot be easily or ethically manipulated
C. self-report measures of gender identity are especially unreliable
D. the field is more prone to bias than other social science research
Ans: B
Learning Objective: 2-2: Explain the scientific method and specific quantitative and
qualitative methods used in the study of sex and gender.
Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Experimental Designs
Difficulty Level: Medium
Instructor Resource
Bosson, The Psychology of Sex and Gender 1e
SAGE Publishing, 2018
15. Consider a research study that brings participants into the laboratory one at a time
where they have a brief social interaction with an accomplice. Researchers measure the
amount of time each participant spends making eye contact during the interaction. They
then compare eye contact duration of male and female participants. Which design best
describes the above study?
A. experiment
B. ex post facto
C. qualitative
D. person-by-treatment
Ans: B
Learning Objective: 2-2: Explain the scientific method and specific quantitative and
qualitative methods used in the study of sex and gender.
Cognitive Domain: Application
Answer Location: Experimental Designs
Difficulty Level: Hard
16. Tracy examines sex differences in verbal ability by comparing Scrabble scores
across hundreds of male and female participants. She predicts female participants will
score higher on average than male participants; however, the results reveal no
difference. This is called a ______ result.
A. significant
B. mediating
C. null
D. negative
Ans: C
Learning Objective: 2-2: Explain the scientific method and specific quantitative and
qualitative methods used in the study of sex and gender.
Cognitive Domain: Application
Answer Location: Experimental Designs
Difficulty Level: Hard
17. Naturally occurring features of research participants that are measured instead of
manipulated are called ______ variables.
A. dependent
B. participant
C. mediating
D. observational
Ans: B
Learning Objective: 2-2: Explain the scientific method and specific quantitative and
qualitative methods used in the study of sex and gender.
Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: Ex Post Facto Designs
Difficulty Level: Easy
Instructor Resource
Bosson, The Psychology of Sex and Gender 1e
SAGE Publishing, 2018
18. ______ refer to instances when the strength or direction of the association between
an independent and dependent variable differ as a function of another variable.
A. Bivariate correlations
B. Mediation effects
C. Interaction effects
D. Third variable problems
Ans: C
Learning Objective: 2-2: Explain the scientific method and specific quantitative and
qualitative methods used in the study of sex and gender.
Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: Quasi-Experimental
Difficulty Level: Easy
19. The value of a correlation coefficient describes both ______ and______.
A. reliability; significance
B. reliability; strength
C. significance; direction
D. strength; direction
Ans: D
Learning Objective: 2-2: Explain the scientific method and specific quantitative and
qualitative methods used in the study of sex and gender.
Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: Correlational Designs
Difficulty Level: Easy
20. One limitation of correlational designs is ______.
A. small sample sizes
B. the third variable problem
C. dependence upon self-report measures
D. lack of external validity or generalizability
Ans: B
Learning Objective: 2-2: Explain the scientific method and specific quantitative and
qualitative methods used in the study of sex and gender.
Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: Correlational Designs
Difficulty Level: Easy
21. A key difference between cross-sectional and longitudinal designs is that ______.
A. cross-sectional designs are experimental and longitudinal are correlational
B. longitudinal designs are immune to third variable problems
C. longitudinal designs can reduce causal ambiguity
D. cross-sectional designs produce more generalizable results
Ans: C
Learning Objective: 2-2: Explain the scientific method and specific quantitative and
qualitative methods used in the study of sex and gender.
Instructor Resource
Bosson, The Psychology of Sex and Gender 1e
SAGE Publishing, 2018
Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Correlational Designs
Difficulty Level: Medium
22. Imagine Sandy is conducting a longitudinal study on exposure to violent
pornography and hostile attitudes towards women. She finds that exposure to violent
photography at time 1 predicts hostile attitudes towards women at time 2. But she also
finds that hostile attitudes at time 1 predict exposure to violent pornography at time 2.
Which of the following is the BEST interpretation of Sandyโs findings?
A. Exposure to violent pornography causes hostile attitudes towards women.
B. Hostile attitudes towards women cause people to watch violent pornography.
C. The causal relationship between violent pornography and hostile attitudes likely
works in both directions.
D. There is no causal relationship between violent pornography and hostile attitudes
towards women.
Ans: C
Learning Objective: 2-2: Explain the scientific method and specific quantitative and
qualitative methods used in the study of sex and gender.
Cognitive Domain: Application
Answer Location: Correlational Designs
Difficulty Level: Hard
23. Which of the following is TRUE of qualitative research methods?
A. They are the most popular method in psychology.
B. They rely upon inferential statistics.
C. They are more concerned with trends in large populations over contextualized
experiences.
D. They emphasize depth over breadth and subjective interpretations over objective
reality.
Ans: D
Learning Objective: 2-2: Explain the scientific method and specific quantitative and
qualitative methods used in the study of sex and gender.
Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Qualitative Research Methods
Difficulty Level: Medium
24. Which of the following is NOT an example of a qualitative method?
A. conducting one-on-one interviews with victims of cyber bullying
B. examining arresting court records, personal histories, and media releases for
perpetrators of domestic terrorism
C. administering the Big Five personality inventory to a group with ADHD
D. conducting group sessions with victims of domestic abuse
Ans: C
Learning Objective: 2-2: Explain the scientific method and specific quantitative and
qualitative methods used in the study of sex and gender.
Cognitive Domain: Application
Instructor Resource
Bosson, The Psychology of Sex and Gender 1e
SAGE Publishing, 2018
Answer Location: Qualitative Research Methods
Difficulty Level: Hard
25. The qualitative method in which researchers conduct an in-depth investigation of a
single entity, usually a person, providing great detail but lacking generalizability is
referred to as ______.
A. an interview
B. a focus group
C. ethnography
D. a case study
Ans: D
Learning Objective: 2-2: Explain the scientific method and specific quantitative and
qualitative methods used in the study of sex and gender.
Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer location: Qualitative Research Methods
Difficulty Level: Easy
26. Crawford and Kaufman (2008) conducted interview with 20 girls rescued from sex
trafficking in Nepal and then statistically summarized the main themes in the case. This
type of research is best characterized as ______.
A. mixed method
B. qualitative
C. quantitative
D. quasi-experimental
Ans: A
Learning Objective: 2-2: Explain the scientific method and specific quantitative and
qualitative methods used in the study of sex and gender.
Cognitive Domain: Application
Answer Location: Mixed Methods
Difficulty Level: Hard
27. Pushes towards qualitative methods in psychology have gained momentum for each
of the following reasons EXCEPT ______.
A. an effort to include voices and perspectives of marginalized groups
B. quantitative research viewing womenโs experiences as deviations from the male
norm
C. the misleading implication of objectivity or value-neutrality in quantitative research
D. problems with the internal validity of inferential statistics
Ans: D
Learning Objective: 2-2: Explain the scientific method and specific quantitative and
qualitative methods used in the study of sex and gender.
Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: Mixed Methods
Difficulty Level: Easy
28. In meta-analyses the most typical unit of analysis is a(n) ______.
Instructor Resource
Bosson, The Psychology of Sex and Gender 1e
SAGE Publishing, 2018
A. effect size
B. group average
C. p-value
D. confidence interval
Ans: A
Learning Objective: 2-3: Describe meta-analyses and how to interpret effect sizes of
different magnitudes.
Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: What Do Meta-Analyses and Effect Sizes Tell Us About Sex
Differences?
Difficulty Level: Easy
29. A(n) ______ is a quantitative technique for analyzing the aggregate results from a
set of individual studies.
A. literature review
B. meta-analysis
C. archival analysis
D. regression
Ans: B
Learning Objective: 2-3: Describe meta-analyses and how to interpret effect sizes of
different magnitudes.
Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: What Do Meta-Analyses and Effect Sizes Tell Us About Sex
Differences?
Difficulty Level: Easy
30. Which of the following is represented by the d statistic?
A. the likelihood that an observed difference between two groups is due to chance
B. the direction and strength of a relationship between two variables in unstandardized
units
C. the amount of spread, or deviations around the mean, in a variable
D. the difference between two groups in standardized units
Ans: D
Learning Objective: 2-3: Describe meta-analyses and how to interpret effect sizes of
different magnitudes.
Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: Effect Sizes
Difficulty Level: Easy
31. Why do researchers standardize variables or express them in standard deviation
units?
A. to increase the reliability of measurement scales
B. to make meaningful comparisons across different scales
C. to make distributions less skewed
D. to decrease the variability and spread of the data
Instructor Resource
Bosson, The Psychology of Sex and Gender 1e
SAGE Publishing, 2018
Ans: B
Learning Objective: 2-3: Describe meta-analyses and how to interpret effect sizes of
different magnitudes.
Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Effect Sizes
Difficulty Level: Medium
32. Standard deviation is a measure of ______.
A. variability
B. reliability
C. mean difference
D. association
Ans: A
Learning Objective: 2-3: Describe meta-analyses and how to interpret effect sizes of
different magnitudes.
Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: Effect Sizes
Difficulty Level: Easy
33. All of the following contribute to a larger effect size EXCEPT ______.
A. an increased difference between two means
B. high between-group variance
C. low within-group variance
D. large sample size
Ans: D
Learning Objective: 2-3: Describe meta-analyses and how to interpret effect sizes of
different magnitudes.
Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Effect Sizes
Difficulty Level: Medium
34. What do researchers mean when they describe a difference as statistically
significant?
A. that the variance in one variable is significantly greater than the variance in other
B. that there is a 95% chance that one variable caused a change in another
C. that the effect size is large
D. that it is very unlikely that the observed difference resulted merely from chance
Ans: D
Learning Objective: 2-3: Describe meta-analyses and how to interpret effect sizes of
different magnitudes.
Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Effect Sizes
Difficulty Level: Medium
35. Laura is studying the effect size of sex differences in vertical jumps and finds a d of
.87. She concludes the effect size is ______.
Instructor Resource
Bosson, The Psychology of Sex and Gender 1e
SAGE Publishing, 2018
A. large
B. medium
C. small
D. null
Ans: A
Learning Objective: 2-3: Describe meta-analyses and how to interpret effect sizes of
different magnitudes.
Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: Effect Sizes
Difficulty Level: Easy
36. Which of the following refers to the difference between the average values for each
group?
A. the within-group variance
B. the between-group variance
C. standard deviation
D. the inter-group effect
Ans: B
Learning Objective: 2-3: Describe meta-analyses and how to interpret effect sizes of
different magnitudes.
Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer location: Effect Sizes
Difficulty Level: Easy
37. What best describes Alice Eagly and colleaguesโ findings from a meta-analysis on
sex differences in leadership effectiveness?
A. They found no sex differences in leadership effectiveness.
B. Overall, men are better leaders than women.
C. Overall, women are better leaders than men.
D. Men are more effective in male-dominated contexts, and women are more effective
in context less dominated by males.
Ans: D
Learning Objective: 2-3: Describe meta-analyses and how to interpret effect sizes of
different magnitudes.
Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Beyond Overall Effect Sizes
Difficulty Level: Medium
38. Anderson and Leaperโs (1998) discovery that studies with female first authors found
larger sex differences in interruptions (favoring men) and studies with mail first authors
might be an example of ______.
A. researcher bias
B. participant bias
C. demand characteristics
D. social desirability
Ans: A
Instructor Resource
Bosson, The Psychology of Sex and Gender 1e
SAGE Publishing, 2018
Learning Objective: 2-4: Analyze methodological challenges and biases in sex and
gender research.
Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: What Are Some Biases Common in Sex and Gender Research?
Difficulty Level: Medium
39. Sam conducts a study of 1000 male participants examining how candidate attitudes,
age, and education affect voting behavior. He finds a positive association between
education and likelihood of voting, from which he concludes that overall, more educated
people are more likely to vote. Based on the above information alone, at which stage of
the research process might Samโs study be biased?
A. study design
B. sampling strategy
C. identifying the question
D. disseminating the results
Ans: B
Learning Objective: 2-4: Analyze methodological challenges and biases in sex and
gender research.
Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: What Are Some Biases Common in Sex and Gender Research?
Difficulty Level: Medium
40. Which of the following best illustrates a type of question a researcher operating from
the female deficit model might ask?
A. Do girls lack math abilities compared to boys?
B. What factors might cause girls to underperform in math relative to boys?
C. Under what conditions do boys and girls perform differently on math exams?
D. What is the effect of stereotypes upon math anxiety among boys and girls?
Ans: A
Learning Objective: 2-4: Analyze methodological challenges and biases in sex and
gender research.
Cognitive Domain: Application
Answer Location: Identifying the Research Question
Difficulty Level: Hard
41. Bias at which stage of the research process most directly affects the generalizability
of the findings?
A. Data collection/sampling
B. Identifying the research question
C. Designing the study
D. Interpreting the findings
Ans: A
Learning Objective: 2-4: Analyze methodological challenges and biases in sex and
gender research.
Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Instructor Resource
Bosson, The Psychology of Sex and Gender 1e
SAGE Publishing, 2018
Answer Location: What Are Some Biases Common in Sex and Gender Research?
Difficulty Level: Easy
42. Stephen is studying sex differences in helping behavior but he only measures heroic
or chivalrous types of helping behaviors. He concludes that men are far more likely to
help than women. What is one possible critique of Stephenโs study?
A. He did not collect a representative sample.
B. He only measured male gendered types of helping behavior.
C. The dependent measures he chose are irrelevant to every day helping.
D. He did not randomly assign participants to different types of helping contexts.
Ans: B
Learning Objective: 2-4: Analyze methodological challenges and biases in sex and
gender research.
Cognitive Domain: Application
Answer Location: Designing the Studying Collecting Data
Difficulty Level: Hard
43. Androcentric thinking refers to a bias ______.
A. that frames men or male typed traits as the default
B. favoring feminine traits over masculine traits
C. in research towards interpreting results in a way that paints men in a more negative
light
D. centering on sex differences rather than similarity
Ans: A
Learning Objective: 2-4: Analyze methodological challenges and biases in sex and
gender research.
Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: What Are Some Biases Common in Sex and Gender Research?
Difficulty Level: Easy
44. Meta-analyses examining the size of all sex differences examined by researchers
have found which of the following?
A. Over three quarters of the effect sizes examined have been in the small to near-zero
range.
B. Most effect sizes tend to fall in the media.
C. Approximately 20% of effect examined are large in size.
D. There are no meaningful sex differences after accounting for publication bias.
Ans: A
Learning Objective: 2-4: Analyze methodological challenges and biases in sex and
gender research.
Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: Interpreting and Communicating the Results
Difficulty Level: Easy
Instructor Resource
Bosson, The Psychology of Sex and Gender 1e
SAGE Publishing, 2018
45. Which best illustrates the meaning of postpositivism?
A. Objective and value free knowledge can be attained through empirical investigation.
B. Science is a useful but flawed process that is heavily influenced by the values of
researchers.
C. Empiricism is inherently patriarchal and skewed towards favoring men.
D. Science is better described as a tool for social change than knowledge acquisition.
Ans: B
Learning Objective: 2-5: Discuss the principles of gender-fair research design and the
issues of diversity in sex and gender research.
Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: How Do We Address the Challenges in Sex and Gender Research?
Difficulty Level: Easy
46. Which of the following is NOT true of postpositivism?
A. Cultural context influences what evidence is accepted as valid.
B. Science is never free of bias.
C. Science is a cumulative process susceptible to shifting conclusions.
D. Empirical investigation is an inferior method towards studying politically charged
questions.
Ans: D
Learning Objective: 2-5: Discuss the principles of gender-fair research design and the
issues of diversity in sex and gender research.
Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: How Do We Address the Challenges in Sex and Gender Research?
Difficulty Level: Easy
47. Given the recorded biases in gender research, which of the following might NOT be
an appropriate strategy to reduce bias?
A. avoid using androcentric research materials
B. refrain from generalizing findings from single-sex samples to all people
C. publish more research focusing on sex differences rather than sex similarities
D. always report effect sizes when publishing research
Ans: C
Learning Objective: 2-5: Discuss the principles of gender-fair research design and the
issues of diversity in sex and gender research.
Cognitive Domain: Application
Answer Location: Guidelines for Gender-Fair Research Design
Difficulty Level: Hard
48. Which of the following is key to avoiding exaggerating the magnitude of sex
differences.
A. communicating the distinction between statistical and practical significance
B. emphasizing statistical significance of a result over its effect size
C. taking a maximalist approach to research
D. using primarily experimental methods
Ans: A
Instructor Resource
Bosson, The Psychology of Sex and Gender 1e
SAGE Publishing, 2018
Learning Objective: 2-5: Discuss the principles of gender-fair research design and the
issues of diversity in sex and gender research.
Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Guidelines for Gender-Fair Research Design
Difficulty Level: Medium
49. All of the following are strategies that psychologists might use to address issues of
intersectionality EXCEPT ______.
A. encouraging more diversity among professional ranks
B. diversifying research samples
C. expanding the number of demographic questions in studies
D. always reporting effect sizes
Ans: D
Learning Objective: 2-5: Discuss the principles of gender-fair research design and the
issues of diversity in sex and gender research.
Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Diversity Issues in the Study of Sex and Gender
Difficulty Level: Medium
50. Proponents of intersexuality might offer which of the following critiques of how
samples are typically collected in psychological studies in the United States?
A. They are too small in size and lacking in statistical power.
B. They are largely composed of White, middle class participants–ignoring the
individual differences that exist within sex.
C. They often offer extra credit or other confounding incentives for participation.
D. They arenโt truly random samples. People choose voluntarily whether or not to
participate.
Ans: B
Learning Objective: 2-5: Discuss the principles of gender-fair research design and the
issues of diversity in sex and gender research.
Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Diversity Issues in the Study of Sex and Gender
Difficulty Level: Medium
True/False
1. Someone with a minimalist approach might envision that girls and boys have largely
overlapping distributions of math anxiety scores.
Ans: T
Learning Objective: 2-1: Evaluate the meaning of sex differences.
Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: What Is the Meaning of Difference?
Difficulty Level: Easy
Instructor Resource
Bosson, The Psychology of Sex and Gender 1e
SAGE Publishing, 2018
2. Of all the stages of the scientific method, replication or repeating an experiment that
someone has already conducted, is the least important.
Ans: F
Learning Objective: 2-2: Explain the scientific method and specific quantitative and
qualitative methods used in the study of sex and gender.
Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: The Scientific Method
Difficulty Level: Medium
3. Qualitative research is less scientifically valid than quantitative research.
Ans: F
Learning Objective: 2-2: Explain the scientific method and specific quantitative and
qualitative methods used in the study of sex and gender.
Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: What Are the Primary Methods Used in Sex and Gender Research?
Difficulty Level: Easy
4. One of the advantages of longitudinal studies is that they are not susceptible to third
variable problems.
Ans: F
Learning Objective: 2-2: Explain the scientific method and specific quantitative and
qualitative methods used in the study of sex and gender.
Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Correlational Research
Difficulty Level: Medium
5. A well conducted experiment allows researchers to make causal inferences.
Ans: T
Learning Objective: 2-2: Explain the scientific method and specific quantitative and
qualitative methods used in the study of sex and gender.
Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: Experimental Designs
Difficulty Level: Easy
6. Qualitative methods emphasizes individual experiences and subjective interpretations
over the idea of objective reality.
Ans: T
Learning Objective: 2-2: Explain the scientific method and specific quantitative and
qualitative methods used in the study of sex and gender.
Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: Qualitative Research Methods
Difficulty Level: Easy
7. The presence of a statistically significant difference tells you that there is a large
effect size.
Ans: F
Instructor Resource
Bosson, The Psychology of Sex and Gender 1e
SAGE Publishing, 2018
Learning Objective: 2-3: Describe meta-analyses and how to interpret effect sizes of
different magnitudes.
Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Effect Sizes
Difficulty Level: Medium
8. When there is a great deal of variability within groups then effect sizes tend to be
smaller.
Ans: T
Learning Objective: 2-3: Describe meta-analyses and how to interpret effect sizes of
different magnitudes.
Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Overlap and Variance
Difficulty Level: Medium
9. A d of โ1.12 is small effect size.
Ans: F
Learning Objective: 2-3: Describe meta-analyses and how to interpret effect sizes of
different magnitudes.
Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: Effect Sizes
Difficulty Level: Easy
10. Scientific positivism is the philosophical position that objective and value free
knowledge can be attained through empirical investigation.
Ans: T
Learning Objective: 2-4: Analyze methodological challenges and biases in sex and
gender research.
Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: How Do We Address the Challenges in Sex and Gender Research?
Difficulty Level: Easy
11. Asking how negative stereotypes about womenโs math abilities can artificially lower
their math performance is a good example of someone operating from the female deficit
model.
Ans: F
Learning Objective: 2-4: Analyze methodological challenges and biases in sex and
gender research.
Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Identifying the Research Question
Difficulty Level: Medium
12. Generalizing results from a sample composed entirely of men to all people is an
example of androcentrism.
Ans: T
Instructor Resource
Bosson, The Psychology of Sex and Gender 1e
SAGE Publishing, 2018
Learning Objective: 2-4: Analyze methodological challenges and biases in sex and
gender research.
Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Designing the Study and Collecting Data
Difficulty Level: Medium
13. Over three quarters of effect sizes associated with sex differences in cognitive,
social, and motor variables fall in the small or close to zero range.
Ans: T
Learning Objective: 2-4: Analyze methodological challenges and biases in sex and
gender research.
Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: Interpreting and Communicating the Results
Difficulty Level: Easy
14. Emphasizing studies that focus on sex differences rather than similarities is an
effective guideline for gender fair research.
Ans: F
Learning Objective: 2-5: Discuss the principles of gender-fair research design and the
issues of diversity in sex and gender research.
Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: Guidelines for Gender-Fair Research Design
Difficulty Level: Easy
15. Proponents of intersectionality argue that it is not meaningful to make comparisons
between women and men without taking other identities such as race, class, or sexual
orientation into consideration.
Ans: T
Learning Objective: 2-5: Discuss the principles of gender-fair research design and the
issues of diversity in sex and gender research.
Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: Diversity Issues in the Study of Sex and Gender
Difficulty Level: Easy
Short Answer
1. What is the difference between a maximalist and a minimalist approach to
interpreting sex differences?
Ans: A maximalist approach emphasizes differences between sex groups and a
minimalist approach emphasizes similarity.
Learning Objective: 2-1: Evaluate the meaning of sex differences.
Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: What Is the Meaning of Difference
Difficulty Level: Easy
Instructor Resource
Bosson, The Psychology of Sex and Gender 1e
SAGE Publishing, 2018
2. Name five steps in the scientific method in the order in which they typically occur.
Ans: Hypothesis generation, study design, data collection and analysis, results
dissemination, and replication.
Learning Objective: 2-2: Explain the scientific method and specific quantitative and
qualitative methods used in the study of sex and gender.
Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: The Scientific Method
Difficulty Level: Easy
3. Describe the difference between statistical and practical significance.
Ans: Statistical significance means that the observed result is unlikely to have occurred
from chance alone. Practical significance refers to whether the effect is large enough to
have any practical or meaningful implications.
Learning Objective: 2-3: Describe meta-analyses and how to interpret effect sizes of
different magnitudes.
Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Effect Sizes
Difficulty Level: Medium
4. What two types of variance are especially relevant to the degree of overlap between
two distributions? For each of these types of variance, do higher or lower degrees of
variance contribute to a larger effect size?
Ans: Low within group-variance and high between group-variance contribute to a larger
effect size.
Learning Objective: 2-3: Describe meta-analyses and how to interpret effect sizes of
different magnitudes.
Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Overlap and Variance
Difficulty Level: Medium
5. What is meant by researcher bias and participant bias?
Ans: Researcher bias refers to how researchers behave in subtle ways that influence
the outcome of a study. Participant bias refers to how participantsโ behaviors or
responses may be influenced by what they think the researcher expects.
Learning Objective: 2-4: Analyze methodological challenges and biases in sex and
gender research.
Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: What Are Some Biases Common in Sex and Gender Research?
Difficulty Level: Easy
6. Briefly describe postpositivismโs critique of scientific positivism.
Ans: Scientific positivism asserts that empirical investigation can provide value free
knowledge. Postpositivism argues that all empirical investigation is inherently flawed
and subject to researcher bias.
Learning Objective: 2-5: Discuss the principles of gender-fair research design and the
issues of diversity in sex and gender research.
Instructor Resource
Bosson, The Psychology of Sex and Gender 1e
SAGE Publishing, 2018
Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: How Do We Address the Challenges in Sex and Gender Research?
Difficulty Level: Easy
Essay
1. Callie is interested in whether men are more likely to make eye contact with a male
conversation partner than a female partner. She is also interested in whether the topic
of conversation (masculine topic vs feminine topic) affects the amount of eye contact
men make with their conversation partner. She randomly assigns 200 male participants
to interact with either a male or female conversation partner (played by a research
assistant) and to either discuss a masculine (sports) or feminine (childcare) topic for 5
mins. Research assistants then time eye contact duration for each participant over the 5
min window. Identify each of the following: The general method used by the researcher,
the independent and dependent variables, the number of conditions or study groups,
and whether or not Callie can make causal inferences from her results. Why or why not
can Callie infer causality from this design? Are there any possible interaction effects and
how do you know?
Ans: This is a true experiment because the researcher manipulates and has
experimental control over the independent variables while randomly assigning
participants to one of four conditions. The IVs are the sex of the interaction partner and
the topic of conversation. The DV is eye contact duration. Callie can make causal
inferences because this is a true experiment with manipulation, control, and random
assignment. There is a possible interaction effect between the sex of the conversation
partner and the topic of conversation.
Learning Objective: 2-2: Explain the scientific method and specific quantitative and
qualitative methods used in the study of sex and gender.
Cognitive Domain: Analysis
Answer Location: Studying Sex and Gender
Difficulty Level: Medium
2. What are the pros and cons of quantitative versus qualitative research designs? How
do mixed method approaches incorporate the advantages of both approaches?
Ans: Varies. Quantitative designs allow researchers to translate observations into
numeric variables that can be analyzed to determine whether the strength of
relationships is greater than one would expect from chance alone. They also allow
researchers to establish cause and effect relationships. However, quantitative results
lack context and an in-depth understanding of how participants thought about the
questions and concepts relevant to the study. Qualitative methods provide data on
peopleโs subjective experiences and can be used to better represent the experiences of
marginalized groups by better communicating their voices. Mixed methods approaches
allow researchers to take advantage of the contextual detail of qualitative data to shape
their research questions and designs while using quantitative methods to numerically
describe relationships between variables and to determine causality.
Learning Objective: 2-2: Explain the scientific method and specific quantitative and
qualitative methods used in the study of sex and gender.
Instructor Resource
Bosson, The Psychology of Sex and Gender 1e
SAGE Publishing, 2018
Cognitive Domain: Analysis
Answer Location: What Are the Primary Methods Used in Sex and Gender Research?
Difficulty Level: Medium
3. Describe three stages of the scientific process that are vulnerable to bias. Describe
an example for each.
Ans: Examples will vary. Identifying the research question: gender differences in social
roles may prompt researchers to focus more on how mothers balance work and family
obligations without asking the same of fathers. Designing studying data: androcentrism
may prompt researchers to make generalizations to all people from samples consisting
entirely of men. Interpreting and communicating the results: maximalist approaches may
prompt researchers to overly emphasize sex differences that actually consist of small
effect sizes and largely overlapping distributions.
Learning Objective: 2-4: Analyze methodological challenges and biases in sex and
gender research.
Cognitive Domain: Analysis
Answer Location: Our (Interdisciplinary) Psychological Approach
Difficulty Level: Medium
4. Describe three possible guidelines for encouraging gender fair research design.
Ans: Varies. Student answers might include (1) researchers should work to eliminate
sex bias from sampling and always report the demographic characteristics of the
sample. They should not generalize from single-sex samples and be diligent in
recording demographic characteristics (2) researchers should use precise, non-gender
biased terminology when describing the participants and findings. They should avoid
androcentric terms and avoid interpreting findings within a female deficit model. (3)
researchers should not exaggerate the prevalence and magnitude of sex differences.
Journals should place equal emphasis on publishing research on sex similarities rather
than privileging studies showing sex differences. Researchers should clarify the
difference between statistical and practical significance and report effect sizes. (4)
researchers should not imply or state that sex differences are due to biological causes
when biological factors have not been properly tested.
Learning Objective: 2-5: Discuss the principles of gender-fair research design and the
issues of diversity in sex and gender research.
Cognitive Domain: Analysis
Answer Location: Guidelines for Gender-Fair Research Design
Difficulty Level: Medium
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