Essay sample library > Stereotypes and Stereotyping - I Was a Teenage Trouble-Maker

Stereotypes and Stereotyping - I Was a Teenage Trouble-Maker

2023-06-27 21:37:09

Stereotype - I am a troubmaker in my teens, but it is autumn of 2000. This is my senior grade, we are in our 4th time in family economics class. My best friend and I am about to finish a two-day speech on how to bake a cake. Now, while class and teacher intensively see, we add two layers of chocolate cake to the ice with bare hands. An uncontrollable laughter took place throughout the class; it goes without saying that our teacher was very angry. To make matters worse, we left her the greatest cake.

In 1993, the Los Angeles Times announced a series of interviews with teenagers using stereotypes. A high school freshman said to the reporter, "I am not a stereotype, but sometimes I will judge them through the first impression.I know her, I will not let me know that she is a sweet person She knows, she behaves just like she does because she grows around black.This changed my mind.What is the difference? Stereotype is in your school relationship How do you influence? At home and on the street? How do they affect the way you see yourself? How do you see other people's way of doing things?

Today there were more stereotypes than before. Black and white stereotypes, male and female stereotypes, national stereotypes and teenage stereotypes. People see the group achieving one thing, and automatically think that everyone belonging to that group is doing the same thing. I do not know how realistic this is, especially for teenagers. We have so many stereotypes. These include teenagers who cause problems, corrupt society, drink too much, drink too much, smoke too much, do not respect people, become lazy, and so on.

This is a fixed idea that men are "difficult to express their own feelings", but this stereotype is somewhat reasonable. The clinical psychiatrist noticed that some of their male clients are difficult to express their emotional reality and named it "canonical male loss of emotion". I do not intend to examine the reasons for this culture in detail, but I think personally I think that this is related to the way we train men. I realized that when I was forced to endure male culture for so long (as a programmer), I began to find it difficult to recognize my emotions.