Test Bank Answers Chapter 5 Gender And Communication - Psychology of Women and Gender 9e Test Bank by Nicole Quest. DOCX document preview.
Chapter 5: Gender and Communication
Test Bank
Multiple Choice
1. Robin Lakoff theorized that gender differences in communication stem from ______.
A. women and men’s innately different biology
B. the differences in women and men’s abilities to communicate
C. gender roles and the relative power those roles have
D. the differences in the values they hold
Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: Tentativeness
Difficulty Level: Easy
2. Which of the following is a pattern of tentative speech, according to Lakoff?
A. hedges
B. interruptions
C. evading
D. passiveness
Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: Tentativeness
Difficulty Level: Hard
3. Inferring that women using more tentative speech in communication is a negative quality rather than inferring that tentative speech reflects better interpersonal communication is an example of ______.
A. an underappreciation of women’s qualities
B. a female deficit interpretation
C. a male as the norm interpretation
D. an affiliative speech interpretation
Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Tentativeness
Difficulty Level: Medium
4. Tannen claimed that gender differences in communication stem from the different goals that men and women have when they communicate. Her position is called the ______.
A. gender cultures theory
B. difference in communication hypothesis
C. different cultures hypothesis
D. gender difference in conversation theory
Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: Affiliative Versus Assertive Speech
Difficulty Level: Hard
5. “I’ve felt that way, too,” is an example of what type of speech?
A. assertive speech
B. tentative speech
C. relational speech
D. affiliative speech
Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Affiliative Versus Assertive Speech
Difficulty Level: Medium
6. Based on the research regarding interruption, a feminist would infer that interruption in communication is related to ______.
A. androcentric culture
B. power and status
C. intersectionality
D. the persistence of traditional gender roles
Cognitive Domain: Analysis
Answer Location: Interruptions
Difficulty Level: Medium
7. Mulac (2006) conducted a series of studies in which the speech of men and women is transcribed, masked as the identity of the speaker, and then presented to college students to see whether they can tell whether the speaker was male or female. If Tannen’s hypothesis is correct, the task should be ______.
A. easy
B. moderately difficult
C. very difficult
D. impossible
Cognitive Domain: Application
Answer Location: The Gender-Linked Language Effect
Difficulty Level: Hard
8. In a study done by Thomson et al. (2001) in which participants corresponded with a fictitious netpal, researchers found that ______.
A. women expressed more emotion than men, regardless of the netpal’s responses
B. men responded with fewer emotions than women when the netpal was female
C. respondents shifted their e-talk to be similar to that of their netpal
D. women disclosed more personal information than men when the netpal was female
Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: Gender & Electronic Communication
Difficulty Level: Medium
9. Ogletree et al. (2014) found that ______ was more strongly linked to emoticon usage than ______.
A. gender; femininity
B. androgyny; gender
C. femininity; gender
D. gender; masculinity
Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: Electronic Communication
Difficulty Level: Medium
10. Meta-analysis tells us that women convey nonverbal messages or cues ______ men do.
A. less accurately than
B. more accurately than
C. the same as
D. more frequently than
Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: Encoding and Decoding Nonverbal Behavior
Difficulty Level: Medium
11. In an experiment by Deutsch et al. (1987), women who did not smile were rated ______ than women who did smile.
A. more negatively
B. as more competent
C. as more professional
D. as more serious
Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: Smiling
Difficulty Level: Medium
12. Research on interpersonal distance indicates that there is the smallest distance between ______.
A. male–male pairs
B. female–female pairs
C. homosexual pairs
D. female–male pairs
Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: Smiling
Difficulty Level: Easy
13. What do researchers' interpretations of interpersonal distance suggest?
A. Gender differences in interpersonal distance have more to do with gender than gender roles.
B. There are few gender differences in interpersonal distance.
C. Gender differences in interpersonal distance have more to do with gender roles than gender.
D. Our interpersonal distance depends on our gender more than the gender of the other person.
Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Interpersonal Distance
Difficulty Level: Medium
14. Dovidio’s experiment on gender differences in eye contact used various conditions that led to interesting results. In the control condition, men were more visually dominant, which meant ______.
A. women looked more while listening
B. men looked at their partners less while speaking
C. men looked more while listening
D. women look at their partners more while speaking
Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Eye Contact
Difficulty Level: Medium
15. What can you infer about Dovidio’s research on visual dominance?
A. When women are put in a powerful role in a mixed-gender dyad, men continue to show typical male patterns of visual dominance.
B. When women are put in a powerful role in a mixed-gender dyad, they tend to avert their eyes while speaking.
C. Dominant primates from many species, including humans, “stare down” subordinates.
D. When women are put in a powerful role in a mixed-gender dyad, they show the pattern of visual dominance usually characteristic of men.
Cognitive Domain: Analysis
Answer Location: Eye Contact
Difficulty Level: Hard
16. Men are more likely to use a(n) ______ posture and women are more likely to us a(n) ______ posture.
A. elongated; shortened
B. contractive; expansive
C. expansive; contractive
D. endogamous; exogamous
Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: Posture: Expansive or Contractive?
Difficulty Level: Medium
17. “Power posing” refers to ______.
A. men posing
B. expansive posture
C. women posing
D. contractive posture
Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: Posture: Expansive or Contractive?
Difficulty Level: Easy
18. Charlotte is a transwoman. Someone refers to her as “he.” This is an instance of ______.
A. sexism
B. misgendering
C. stereotyping
D. discrimination
Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Misgendering
Difficulty Level: Easy
19. What can you infer about people using more euphemisms for the word “woman” than for the word “man”?
A. The word “woman” is used less frequently and causes some discomfort.
B. The word “woman” implies low status and power, so it is used less frequently.
C. The word “woman” is intimidating to people.
D. The word “woman” is often associated with negative connotations.
Cognitive Domain: Analysis
Answer Location: Euphemisms
Difficulty Level: Hard
20. The words “chick,” “shorty,” “honey,” and “ho” are examples of ______.
A. euphemisms for transgender women
B. sexualizing women
C. euphemisms for the word “woman”
D. sexism and discrimination
Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Euphemisms
Difficulty Level: Medium
21. Use of terms such as “girl” or “baby” to refer to women is an example of ______.
A. androcentrism
B. the different language used by women
C. infantilizing
D. female deficit
Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Infantilizing
Difficulty Level: Easy
22. In language, compared with men, women typically ______.
A. use fewer intensifiers
B. are infantilized
C. interrupt more
D. are misgendered
Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: Infantilizing
Difficulty Level: Easy
23. Using masculine nouns and pronouns to refer to all people in a gender-neutral sense is called ______.
A. masculine generics
B. ethnocentrism
C. chauvinistic language
D. overgeneralization
Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: Male as Normative and Female as Exception
Difficulty Level: Easy
24. The infant typically begins to sit up around 6 months of age; he may begin crawling at about that same time. This sentence is an example of ______.
A. feminism
B. euphemisms
C. infantilizing
D. androcentrism
Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Male as Normative and Female as Exception
Difficulty Level: Medium
25. Federal officials referring to the governor of Louisiana, Kathleen Blanco, as the “female governor,” while referring to a male governor as “governor” is an example of ______.
A. euphemisms
B. female-as-the-exception
C. misgendering
D. ethnocentrism
Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Male as Normative and Female as Exception
Difficulty Level: Medium
26. What are the implications of genderless languages?
A. less gender equality
B. less limits on language
C. more gender equality
D. more confusion
Cognitive Domain: Analysis
Answer Location: Gendering of Language
Difficulty Level: Easy
27. Having a preference for social hierarchy and inequality of equality is known as ______.
A. system-justifying beliefs
B. social hierarchy orientation
C. social dominance orientation
D. systemic hierarchy beliefs
Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: Does Sexist Language Actually Matter?
Difficulty Level: Hard
28. In Hyde’s research on children’s responses to the gender-neutral occupation, “wudgemaker,” the results indicated that ______.
A. males preferred to be a wudgemaker when they grew up, but females preferred not to be
B. girls said they would like to be wudgemakers but felt incompetent to do so
C. children assumed wudgemakers were male
D. women were rated as significantly more competent at being wudgemakers when the wudgemaker was referred to as “she,” rather than “he”
Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Does Sexist Language Actually Matter?
Difficulty Level: Hard
29. Using the word “police officer” rather than “policeman” is an example of ______.
A. sexist language
B. nonsexist language
C. gendered language
D. male-as-the-normative language
Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Institutional Change
Difficulty Level: Easy
30. Research indicates that when a woman is speaking, ______ speech seems to work best when the audience is male and ______ speech seems to work best when the audience is female.
A. tentative; assertive
B. assertive; tentative
C. institutional; utilitarian
D. utilitarian; institutional
Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: Language and Careers
Difficulty Level: Hard
True/False
1. Campbell and Robnett (2011) conducted a meta-analysis to examine the evidence for gender differences in the four forms of tentative speech. Overall, they found large gender differences in three out of the four forms of tentative speech, with women using more tentative language than men.
Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: Tentativeness
Difficulty Level: Hard
2. Men are slightly more likely than women to use affiliative speech.
Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: Affiliative Versus Assertive Speech
Difficulty Level: Medium
3. Gender is constructed in social interactions and gender patterns depend heavily on social context.
Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: Gender & Electronic Communication
Difficulty Level: Easy
4. The gender difference in smiling is small, d = −.10.
Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: Smiling
Difficulty Level: Medium
5. Research shows that when women use expansive posture, they feel more powerful.
Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: Posture: Expansive or Contractive?
Difficulty Level: Easy
6. Misgendering a transgender person can threaten their sense of identity.
Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: Misgendering
Difficulty Level: Easy
7. Countries with grammatical gender languages tend to have more gender equality relative to countries with natural gender languages or genderless languages.
Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: Gendering of Language
Difficulty Level: Medium
8. Sexist language and sexist attitudes go hand in hand.
Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: Does Sexist Language Actually Matter?
Difficulty Level: Medium
9. According to a nonsexist language perspective, even if a person’s transgender or cisgender status is not relevant, it should be identified.
Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: Toward Nonsexist Language
Difficulty Level: Medium
10. The phrase “he or she” is considered to be gender-neutral language.
Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Language and Careers
Difficulty Level: Hard
Short Answer
1. Differentiate between intrusive interruptions and supportive interruptions. Then, explain why it is not entirely accurate to say that men interrupt more than women do and that this indicates men’s expression of dominance.
Cognitive Domain: Application and Analysis
Answer Location: Interruptions
Difficulty Level: Medium
2. Explain Mulac’s gender-linked language effect. What do Mulac’s findings demonstrate regarding his theory? (i.e., is the theory supported?)
Cognitive Domain: Application and Knowledge
Answer Location: The Gender-Linked Language Effect
Difficulty Level: Hard
3. Explain the clinical implications of gender differences in language. In other words, how are the gender-linked language effect and other gender differences in verbal communication relevant?
Cognitive Domain: Application
Answer Location: Clinical Applications
Difficulty Level: Hard
4. Explain why Dr. Karl Menninger’s book titled Man Against Himself is an example of masculine generics. What are the implications of using masculine generics in language?
Cognitive Domain: Application and Analysis
Answer Location: Male as Normative and Female as the Exception
Difficulty Level: Medium
5. Differentiate between natural gender languages, grammatical gender languages, and genderless languages. What does the research say about the connection between the type of gendered language and countries’ societal gender equality?
Cognitive Domain: Knowledge and Analysis
Answer Location: Gendering of Language
Difficulty Level: Hard
6. Rewrite the following sentences in order to eliminate the bias and sexist language:
a. Faculty and wives are invited to a reception at the President’s house.
b. Each student should turn off his cell phone before class begins.
c. Dr. Abramson is the chairman of the department.
d. The girls on the University volleyball team are really athletic.
Cognitive Domain: Application
Answer Location: Gendering of Language
Difficulty Level: Medium
7. Explain why titles such as Mr., Miss, Mrs., and Ms. can be problematic.
Cognitive Domain: Application
Answer Location: Toward Nonsexist Language
Difficulty Level: Medium
8.What does the research say regarding sexist language in job descriptions? What implications does this create for a company that is wanting to become more diverse?
Cognitive Domain: Knowledge and Application
Answer Location: Language and Careers
Difficulty Level: Medium
Essay
1. Feminists have objected to a number of features of the English language. Explain what these features are and why feminists object to them. Then describe any empirical psychological studies that have been done that could be used as evidence to back the feminist position.
Cognitive Domain: Knowledge, Application, and Analysis
Answer Location: How Women and Nonbinary People Are Treated in Language
Difficulty Level: Hard
2. Define the Whorfian hypothesis. What are the implications if this hypothesis is true? What would the Whorfian hypothesis predict about practices like the use of masculine generics on bias and inequality? Based on Hyde’s research, does this apply to adults only or does it apply to children as well? What does this say about the importance of the language we use? What is one way we can deal with this issue?
Cognitive Domain: Knowledge, Comprehension, Application, and Analysis
Answer Location: Does Sexist Language Actually Matter?
Difficulty Level: Hard