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NotesPhilosophy HLTopic 8.3
Unit 8 · Social philosophy · Topic 8.3

IB Philosophy HL — Gender

Topic 8.3 of IB Philosophy covers Gender, which is part of Unit 8: Social philosophy. Students explore key concepts including Sex and gender, Is gender socially constructed?, Gender roles and oppression. A strong understanding of gender is essential for IB Philosophy HL exams and builds the foundation for connected topics across the syllabus.

Higher Level students should use this topic hub as a map: start with the shared sub-topics, then follow the HL-only extensions and exam-skill links where this topic asks for deeper analysis.

Exam technique guidePractice questions

Key concepts in Gender

Key Idea: Topic 8.3 pulls apart two words we often blur — sex (about the body) and gender (what a society makes of it, and how a person understands themselves). Once you see them apart, a serious debate opens: is gender a fixed natural essence, or is it largely built by the world around us? This theme is examined in Paper 1 Section B: a 25-mark essay on a set question, no stimulus, usually beginning 'Evaluate the claim that…'. Treat every position with respect and ARGUE — never preach.

🧩 The three big questions, one card each

Topic 8.3 at a glance

  1. 8.3.1 · Sex and gender — Sex is about the body; gender is what a society makes of it and how a person understands themselves. Essentialism says your sex fixes a real, natural gender. The challenge: the social traits pinned to bodies vary across cultures, while a true essence shouldn't.
  2. 8.3.2 · Is gender socially constructed? — De Beauvoir: 'One is not born, but rather becomes, a woman.' Granting the body's facts, she argues the ROLE is taught through social conditioning — copied, rewarded, mirrored everywhere until it feels like nature rather than training.
  3. 8.3.3 · Gender roles and oppression — Femininity and masculinity are constructs that both describe a supposed nature and distribute roles. Some traditions (yin and yang) frame them as complementary rather than ranked. Sexism disadvantages by gender — and, via intersectionality, combines with race and class.
Sex = facts about the body. Gender = the role, expectations and self-understanding a society builds on top of it. Almost every question in this topic turns on whether those two come apart — and, if they do, how much of gender is nature and how much is made.

✍️ Bring it together — a Section B question

IB-style questionEvaluate[25 marks]

Evaluate the claim that gender is socially constructed rather than fixed by nature.

🔒 Model answer plan

See the mark-by-mark plan — for / against / judgement, with marking guidance — in study mode.

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Important: Describing the two views instead of arguing them — and letting the essay slide into preaching. Give essentialism and constructionism each their strongest reason, test each fairly, then decide. Represent every position respectfully; a top answer persuades by argument, not by tone, and always reaches a reasoned conclusion on the exact claim.

✅ Check yourself

If you can answer these six, you have the spine of the whole topic.

Sex vs gender? Sex is about the body; gender is the role, expectations and self-understanding a society builds on top of it. The topic asks how far the two come apart.

What is gender essentialism? The view that there is a real, fixed nature to being a man or a woman — an essence set by biology — so sex fixes gender and its traits.

The main challenge to essentialism? The social traits pinned to bodies vary across cultures and shift over time, while a genuine essence shouldn't — which splits sex from gender roles.

De Beauvoir's claim in one line? 'One is not born, but rather becomes, a woman': the body's facts aside, the ROLE is learned, shaped step by step by everyone around us.

What is social conditioning? The engine of construction: copying adults, being rewarded for 'fitting' and corrected when not, and seeing roles mirrored everywhere — until they feel like nature.

What does intersectionality add? Sexism never travels alone: it overlaps with race, class, disability and more, so different women meet it in very different, combined ways.

Exam Tips

  • Social philosophy is OPTIONAL — it appears in Paper 1 Section B as a 25-mark essay with NO stimulus, so build your own structure and signpost it.
  • The sex/gender split is the hinge of the whole topic — define it early and the essentialism-vs-construction debate falls out naturally.
  • Treat every position on gender fairly and respectfully — the examiner rewards balanced ARGUMENT, never preaching or one-sidedness.
  • Name a thinker ONLY with their argument — 'De Beauvoir' alone earns nothing; 'De Beauvoir, because the role is taught by conditioning' does.

What you'll learn in Topic 8.3

  • 8.3.1 Sex and gender
  • 8.3.2 Is gender socially constructed?
  • 8.3.3 Gender roles and oppression
Suggested study order: Read the notes for each sub-topic below → test yourself with flashcards → attempt practice questions → review exam technique.

Study resources — 8.3 Gender

8.3.1

Sex and gender

Notes
8.3.2

Is gender socially constructed?

Notes
8.3.3

Gender roles and oppression

Notes

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Topic 8.3 Gender forms a core part of Unit 8: Social philosophy in IB Philosophy HL. Mastering these concepts will strengthen your understanding of connected topics across the syllabus and prepare you for exam questions that require analysis, evaluation, and real-world application.

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