Examples of Kinsey Report in the following topics:
-
Sexual Behavior Since Kinsey
- The Kinsey Report helped spark the sexual revolution, in which social regulations regarding sexual activity were loosened.
- The publication of the Kinsey Report, the findings of norms in American sexuality by Dr.
- The Kinsey Report was one step towards non-heterosexual orientations and behaviors becoming accepted by society as normal.
- Second, one cannot underestimate the significance of the mere publication of the Kinsey Report, independent of its findings.
- Summarize the impact of the Kinsey Report and the sexual revolution of the 1960s on American sexuality
-
Sexual Behavior: Kinsey's Study
- Alfred Kinsey produced the Kinsey Report, the largest documentation of sexuality in the United States at the time of its publication.
- This lecture sparked intensive research that resulted in the Kinsey Report.
- The Kinsey Report was the most extensive analysis of human sexuality conducted to its day.
- A large section of the Kinsey Report was devoted to the idea of sexual orientation.
- The Kinsey study also gave statistics on sexuality within marriage that had never before been reported.
-
Gender and Research
- Both instruments categorize individuals as either being sex typed (males report themselves as identifying primarily with masculine traits, females report themselves as identifying primarily with feminine traits), cross sex-typed (males report themselves as identifying primarily with feminine traits, females report themselves as identifying primarily with masculine traits), androgynous (either males or females who report themselves as high on both masculine and feminine traits) or undifferentiated (either males or females who report themselves as low on both masculine and feminine traits).
- While gender research focuses on many of the concepts listed above, sex research (influenced by the likes of Sigmund Freud, Alfred Kinsey, Richard von Krafft-Ebing, William Masters and Virginia Eshelman) looks at such things as human sexual behavior, sexual attraction, and sexual orientations.
-
Online Communities
- In 2001, consultants at McKinsey & Company did a study where they found that only 2% of transaction site customers returned after their first purchase.
- In 2001, consultants at McKinsey & Company did a study where they found that only 2% of transaction site customers returned after their first purchase.
-
Suggested Multimedia Resources
-
Labeling Theory
- It was Alfred Kinsey and his colleagues who pointed out the big discrepancy between the behavior and the role attached to it.
-
Coleman's Study of Between-School Effects in American Education
- In 1966, the finished report was published and was over 700 pages in length.
- The report, titled "Equality of Educational Opportunity," came to be known as the "Coleman Report. " At the time, it launched widespread debate on school effects, or the ways in which school-level characteristics influence student achievement.
- The Coleman Report also fed the debate over the validity of standardized testing.
- The report states: "These tests do not measure intelligence, nor attitudes, nor qualities of character.
- The Coleman Report led to busing programs to help integrate schools.
-
Crime Statistics
- Public surveys are sometimes conducted to estimate the amount of crime not reported to police.
- The two major methods for collecting crime data are law enforcement reports and victimization statistical surveys.
- The U.S. has no comprehensive infrastructure to monitor crime trends and report the information to related parties, such as law enforcement.
- One way in which victimization surveys are useful is that they show some types of crime are well reported to law enforcement officials, while other types of crime are under reported.
- These surveys also give insights as to why crime is reported, or not.
-
Sexual Violence
- Prison rape is the type of rape that is common (and seriously under reported) in prisons all over the world, including the United States, in which inmates will force sex upon one another as a demonstration of power.
- Sexual violence is particularly difficult to track because it is severely under reported.
- Most victims of sexual violence do not report it because they are ashamed, afraid of being blamed, concerned about not being believed, or are simply afraid to relive the event by reporting it.
- Most countries and many NGOs are undertaking efforts to try to increase the reporting of sexual violence as it so obviously has serious physical and psychological impacts on its victims.
- Sexual violence is severly under reported.
-
Religion and Social Support
- Surveys by Gallup, the National Opinion Research Center, and the Pew Organization conclude that spiritually committed people are twice as likely to report being "very happy" than the least religiously committed people.
- People who report that God is very important in their lives are on average more satisfied with their lives, after accounting for their income, age and other individual characteristics that might bias results.
- Surveys by Gallup, the National Opinion Research Center and the Pew Organization conclude that spiritually committed people are twice as likely to report being "very happy" than the least religiously committed people.
- Those same studies associate religious involvement with reports of higher satisfaction with sex life and a sense of well-being.