Take a look again at high school stereotypes through the short lived television series from the late 90’s, Freaks and Geeks. Based on the pilot episode of Freaks and Geeks, media techniques are used effectively to depict the different stereotypes in high school. The camera shots & movements are used adequately to show the power of the bullies and the weakness of the victims. For example, when Sam Weir is approached by Alan (the bully), at lunch, the camera is pointed upwards towards Alan’s face to make him seem bigger and scarier while the camera would be pointed down on Sam’s face making him seem smaller and inferior to Alan (Kasdan 1999). This example…
The film “The Breakfast Club” directed by John Hughes is a compelling film that illustrates the inner working of the teenage mind-set. A film quite literally opens your eyes to how teenagers work within different stereotypes. John Hughes is able to show how although each character may give the impression that everything is “OK” but really, on the inside their whole life is just constant stress. This stress, which numerous things, including their parents and peers brought on, effected them in a way in which throughout the film, we as the audience have more insight into their lives as teenagers. Many of the characters in this film are easily relatable; however, Hughes has been able to show the differences within the inner workings of their…
As members of a multicultural society we are exposed to our peers’ various values and customs on a daily basis. While it may be true that some characteristics may seem unfamiliar at first glance, the media inherently relies on oversimplified stereotypes in order to get the audience to connect with minorities. Even shows that deal with diversity as subject matter fall victims to the trope of using stereotypes as a humor device. Take Modern Family, a sitcom that airs on ABC, as an example. The show challenges the notion of a traditional family but it constantly depicts the characters as parodies of what they are supposed to represent. Gloria Pritchett played by Sofia Vergara is often overly sexualized and given a short-tempered demeanor. Vergara…
"The Proud Family" is a children 's program that runs daily on The Disney Channel and on Saturday mornings on ABC Kids. It is a TV-G rated program. The show is about an African-American family with the last name Proud. There is a mom, dad, three kids, and a grandmother. The main character of the show is the oldest daughter named Penny Proud who is probably in junior high. Also, some of Penny 's friends are in the show. All of the characters in this show are stereotyped by many things such as race and gender, including Penny.…
This paper is an analysis of five dissimilar teenagers representing a cross-section of middle class high school students in the suburbs. The students meet each other for the first time during a Saturday morning detention session. Each student arrived to the school by different means, which is a precursor to determining the type of individual each one is. The group is comprised of a "princess", an "athlete”, a "brain", a "criminal", and a "basket case". These are the roles the students play during the week. Because of typical stereotypes and status levels, at the onset, the students don’t want anything to do each other at the beginning of the detention session. However, once confronted by the controlling principal and…
For my paper 1, I analyzed an article called “I settled into a Traditional Gender Role, and I feel liberated” by Anne Kennedy Brady and a advertisement labeled “ Are you Man enough to be a nurse?”. The intended audience for the article was married females and the audience was for the advertisement was intended for males pursuing a career. The purpose of the article is to inform females that there is nothing wrong for a woman to enjoy taking on “wife” roles such as cooking and cleaning. The purpose for the advertisement is to challenge female dominance in the nursing career field and be able to recruit more men to work as a nurse. The purpose is shown by -placing a bunch of men in the front of the directly in the middle.…
I conducted a survey of 40 of my peers to find out their first impressions of me. I discovered that people thought I was nice but not naive, bizarre but in a cool and relaxed way, studious and outgoing but yet still laid back and chill, and I am happy to say good looking but (unfortunately) not in a movie star way. People also had the misconception that I was quiet, but by our second encounter, this quickly disappeared as they realized I was the complete opposite. All of my 40 peers now agree that I am an effortlessly loud presence. I would like to change this perception of shyness because it is not who I am. I lead the male portion of my chorus and blast out the solos, participate in class so much that it is almost like I am having a conversation…
We all have encountered some type of stereotype or prejudices. A stereotype that I had to face was age prejudice by me being so young sometimes people don't set the high expectations for you that other people would at an older age because they expect for you to make mistakes. At times my mindset isn't where most kids are at my age. I skipped pre k and I am supposed to be in the 8th grade. When I tell people my age they be like " OMG you are young to be the grade that you are in" this is a perfect example of what I am stating that people sometimes think that you have to be average and can't go over and beyond your years.…
Hearing Nurse John is not as common as hearing Nurse Betty or Nurse Jane. But recently more men have decided to take the nursing career path and become male nurses, also referred to as “murses.” The article “I Want Your Job, Lady” in Time states that “in a sour economy, men are flocking to nursing, child care and other ‘female’ professions” (Cullen et al., 2003). The nursing profession needs to take steps to erase completely the gender-bias that still exists because although nursing is less discriminatory than it has been in the past, for too long the stereotype that nursing is a career only for women, kept men from entering the profession, but with the current acute shortage of nurses, the profession needs everyone with a calling--regardless of gender; in fact, in specific settings such as a mental hospitals, male nurses because of their greater physical strength are in particularly high demand.…
Our society, wow, what a concept in itself. Can I tell you a quick story Prof. Hampton? I have had the opportunity to be associated with every class of people this country has to offer. Parents play such a huge role in determining what their kids are going to do in America. I have had wealthy lawyer, doctor friends and associates absolutely insist their children will go to the best colleges, earn well over $250,000 dollars a year and that is it. The son or daughter had no choice in the outcome of their own lives. I would usually shake my head in agreement and say good for you for being so proactive in your child’s life. At a later time, I would talk to the child and ask them what they wanted to do, and depending how brainwashed they were tell me the truth. Most had no desire to be a doctor or lawyer like their mother or father because they had to live without parents growing up because they were so consumed by their careers. When I would ask them what they wanted to do, they would say things like Interior Design, own a bakery, or learn heating and air conditioning. Family ego plays such a major role in the more affluent families.…
Although the number of men entering the nursing profession has increased word wide, (Madoka et al, 2006) and most western countries have men working in nursing jobs, they usually constitute a minority, (Streubert, 1994). This imbalance actually was due to historical and cultural rational. For example; Florence Nightingale believed that nursing was a natural extension of women and motherhood, and she believed that all women were nurses and men were not capable of being nurses and thus were not allowed to enroll in nursing education \ training, (Eswi El Sayed, 2011), therefore men were purposefully excluded from entering the profession, (Evans, 2004; Mackintosh, 1997).…
In American society it is a social norm for women to be delicate and vulnerable, they are seen as too weak to do the same things men do. This was especially true during the time period in which the stories “The Yellow Wallpaper,” “Jury of her peers,” and “Story of an Hour” were written in. The characteristics of gender roles, shown through in each individual story and hint at the stereotypes that were places on women of that time period. These specific female characters don’t let those stereotypes define them, they break free and show their true strengths. Though their societies would suggest them fragile, the main characters -- Louise Mallard, Minnie Foster Wright, and the narrator of “The Yellow Wallpaper” -- respectively presented in the…
The purpose of this study was to examine the experiences of male nursing students who were completing the collaborative baccalaureate degree program in Canada. The research question developed by the researchers was “Tell me what is your experience of being a male student in a baccalaureate nursing program?” (Meadus & Twomey, 2011). The central concepts of this study were to explore barriers involving sexual stereotypes, such as all men who are nurses are gay and their masculinity is doubted, as well as gender biases in nursing texts, language, images, in school and in the hospital setting (Meadus & Twomey, 2011).…
advertisement (female nurse, male nurse, or masculinity emphasized male nurse), reported their perceptions of the nurse in…
2. Carvel, John. "Former Male Nurse Wins Sex Discrimination Case | Society | The Guardian." Latest News, Comment and Reviews from the Guardian | Guardian.co.uk. 10 June 2006. Web. 24 Oct. 2010. .…