Photo Credit:
1. http://ndla.no/en/node/62856
2. http://www.uniglobetravel.com/315/destination-guides/country/Netherlands/
1. http://ndla.no/en/node/62856
2. http://www.uniglobetravel.com/315/destination-guides/country/Netherlands/
Task #2:
In the United States, masculine and feminine roles are typically stereotypical. Males are usually associated with words such as strong, dominant and aggressive while females are associated with nurture, independent and weak. These roles are taught from birth through society and socialization. To this day, infant boys are put in the colors blue and green while girls are put in pink and purple. The clothes act as labels for the children and emphasize their gender. American society allows for some flexibility when it comes to gender roles.
In the Netherlands, society teaches social powers to encourage equality between men and women. The government believes that all parents who work are entitled to sixteen months of paid leave for each of their children. To get more parent involvement, at least two of those sixteens months the minority parent is required to be spent with their child. This helps both parents share an equal role as a caregiver to their children. European states work hard to promote quality between genders in professional lives and parenting children.
Task #3:
The United States is different from other countries in the way Sex Education is taught. In the US sex education is taught through school and through parenting. In other countries there is almost no sex education being taught. However teen birth rates are much lower than they are in the US. The US averages 42 births per 1,000 women of ages 15-19. Also, people in other countries are more open when talking about sex than those in the United States. Overall, sex education in the US
In the United States, masculine and feminine roles are typically stereotypical. Males are usually associated with words such as strong, dominant and aggressive while females are associated with nurture, independent and weak. These roles are taught from birth through society and socialization. To this day, infant boys are put in the colors blue and green while girls are put in pink and purple. The clothes act as labels for the children and emphasize their gender. American society allows for some flexibility when it comes to gender roles.
In the Netherlands, society teaches social powers to encourage equality between men and women. The government believes that all parents who work are entitled to sixteen months of paid leave for each of their children. To get more parent involvement, at least two of those sixteens months the minority parent is required to be spent with their child. This helps both parents share an equal role as a caregiver to their children. European states work hard to promote quality between genders in professional lives and parenting children.
Task #3:
The United States is different from other countries in the way Sex Education is taught. In the US sex education is taught through school and through parenting. In other countries there is almost no sex education being taught. However teen birth rates are much lower than they are in the US. The US averages 42 births per 1,000 women of ages 15-19. Also, people in other countries are more open when talking about sex than those in the United States. Overall, sex education in the US