Femininity, Masculinity, and Androgyny  
Minority Students’ Gender Role Issues 
Ipah Saripah and Nur Fitri Rosdianti 
Department of Educational Psychology and Guidance, Universitas Pendidikan Indonesia, Bandung, Indonesia 
ipah_bk@upi.edu 
Keywords:  Gender role, Minority Students, Femininity, Masculinity, Androgyny. 
Abstract:  This study was intended to describe the minority students’ gender orientation including their visible 
characteristics. To this end, this research used qualitative approach in narrative case study framework. It 
was carried out by analyzing three research subjects. The data was obtained from BSRI (Bem Sex Role 
Inventory) supported with interviews and observations. The result showed that the three research subjects 
have different gender role orientation; masculine, feminine and androgyny. It is implied that guidance and 
counselling programs at school are strongly required in order to develop the students’ gender awareness. 
1 INTRODUCTION 
Each individual has a different gender role 
consistent with his gender and is influenced by the 
construction of his community culture. The role of 
gender is an expectation and role that determine 
individuals in their thinking, behaving and feeling 
either as men or women (Santrock, 2003)  
Ideally, individual’s gender role is supposed to 
be relevant to his sex. In fact, despite the assumption 
that male is supposed to have masculine identity and 
female is supposed to have feminine one, there are 
some research suggested that gender identity was not 
consistent with one’s biological sex (Bem, 1974; 
Palan et al., 1999). 
Based on Bem’s gender scheme (1974), 
individual self-concept based on gender is 
influenced by how individuals’ process information 
both based on their own experiences and others’ 
experiences. He further claimed that individual with 
ideal gender identity (man as masculine and women 
as feminine) is likely to more rely on the gender 
scheme than individual inconsistent with their 
gender roles (e.g. men who see themselves more 
dominated by feminine character rather than 
masculine) (Palan et al., 1999).  
One of the most challenging gender roles to 
observe is in the minority group of people including 
students at school. Minority school-age students 
often struggle in adjusting to the two different value 
systems; the value system they adopt and the 
dominant value system in their surrounding 
(Santrock, 2003). Generally, this group of minority 
students is in crisis in many ways such as identity, 
gender, origin, culture, language, etc. (Office of The 
High Commissioner for Human Right, 2010).  
In 2013, the National School Climate Survey 
recorded more than half of sexual minority teenagers 
in schools felt insecure because of their sexual 
orientation, and almost 38% of them felt insecure 
because their gender expression acted quite feminine 
for teenage boys and quite masculine for adolescent 
girls (Kosciw et al., 2014). The results of this study 
are also reinforced by Thorne's research in 
Golshirazian et al. (2015) which concludes that 
unsupportive schools can inhibit gender 
stereotypical attitudes and behaviors to their 
students. 
In general, Bem (1974) and Santrock (2003) 
divide the individual gender roles into four 
categories; masculine, feminine, androgyny, and 
undifferentiated. 
Masculinity is an individual outlook that has 
instrumental characteristics and is a male construct 
of males (Boe, 2015; Demartoto, A., 2010; Santrock, 
2003). Masculinity is a component of a gender social 
construction that is usually associated with men and 
their characteristics (Johnson and Repta, 2012). The 
role of gender in masculine characters has 
personality traits such as assertive, self-reliant, 
competitive, ambitious, dominant, courageous, 
strong, confidence, and brave (Bem, 1974).