We handed out 60 surveys, using convenience sampling, in the cafeteria at Marianopolis College. We got back 50 surveys. 23 of the respondents were male and 27 female. The results we found supported our hypothesis. Females seemed to have a negative body-image where as the males perceived their bodies positively. Through-out the first part of our survey, questions 1 to 11, we noticed the same trend.
The males answered almost systematically never to all the questions where as the females tended to answer mostly sometimes and often. When we asked “I find it hard to shop for clothes because I think things look fat on me” 73. 9% of the males and 18. 5% of the females answered never. Just by these two figures we can easily see the different perception that each gender has about their body. Females are far more complex than the males, and envisage themselves as being fat.
Males are confident about their body and perceive it positively. Also 22. 2% of the females answered always to this question. This number is very significant, it clearly illustrates the females high insecurity level towards their body. To the question “I think my body is unattractive” 52. 2% of the males and 11.
1% of the females answered never. Once again we notice the males positive perception compared to females negative one. Males seem to be less preoccupied than the females about what their body looks like. This could explain why the males have such a positive view of their body. Females on the other hand seem to always worry about what their body looks likes and what the other people think about them.
The Essay on Sex In Religion Sexual Female Male
Sex in Religion The ways in which the sexual body and sexual pleasure are viewed have changed drastically over time. This is due in large part to the teachings and interpretations of Saint Augustine and the Christian Church. Today and for the greater part of the last thousand years, the woman s body is constantly degraded through the use of slang terms, its depiction in movies, books, and ...
70. 4% of the females sometimes feel that other people must think their body is unattractive. This explains their insecurity level as well as their complexity. In the second part of our survey the findings are more interesting. The males are consistent in what they think their current body looks like, what they consider attractive and what they regard an idea body, corresponds to #4 on the scale. The females on the other-hand are very inconsistent.
What they consider ideal (#2), attractive (#3) and current (#4) are very different. This consistency reflects the genders body-image. The males, contrary to the females, seem to proud and confident about what they look like. The females insecurity is clearly reflected here. Our survey was well structured and helped us support our hypothesis. Yet it had its flaws and limits.
First of all we would reconstruct the second part of our survey to make it more comprehensible. None of our respondents clearly understood what they where asked to do. We would also try to make our survey less bias. In the future we will hand out more surveys and escape the boundaries of Marianopolis College to get a more valid and reliable sample. We will also integrate an extra independent variable to our survey to get more interesting results. In conclusion, the findings supported that gender influences the perception of body-image.
The males, unlike the females seemed to perceive their bodies positively.