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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
211

Social facilitation and cross-sex competition anxiety

Sullivan, Elizabeth. January 1978 (has links)
Call number: LD2668 .T4 1978 S87 / Master of Science
212

Sex, sex role, and the expression of depression

Mohr, David Curtis, 1957- January 1988 (has links)
This study examined the relationship between sex, sex role and expression of depression. The Beck Depression Inventory, The Bem Sex Role Inventory, and the Inventory of Depressive Behaviors were administered to 589 college students. Sex differences in the expression of depression were similar to the findings of previous studies. Sex role differences in the expression of depression were found. Masculine sex role was related to expressive coping strategies along with instrumental strategies. Feminine sex role was related to behavioral and cognitive coping along with more expressive behaviors. The variance in expression of depression accounted for by sex was only partially accounted for by sex role. Undifferentiated individuals were significantly more depressed than Masculine, Feminine or Androgynous individuals, but there were no differences between the latter three groups. Thus, either masculinity or femininity appears to be associated with lower levels of depression.
213

The changing role of women and its effect on the gender-biased social policy in Japan

Huen, Wai-po., 禤懷寶. January 2008 (has links)
published_or_final_version / Social Work and Social Administration / Doctoral / Doctor of Philosophy
214

Dilemmas of the High Achieving Chicana: The Double-Bind Factor in Male/Female Relationships

González, Judith T. January 1987 (has links)
The central research question of this exploratory study is to determine if college educated, ethnically identified and preferred endogamous Chicanas experience significantly more psychological distress due to a conflict between their educational achievements and beliefs that Chicano males are threatened by high achieving women. The specific perceptions are: that Mexican American males feel threatened by their educational accomplishments, tend to exclude them from political and organizational activities, and that college attainment will cause them to be seen as elitist by the larger Chicano community. This study uses descriptive and correlational analysis to explore the relationship between ethnic identification, preferred endogamy and perceptions that Chicanas high achievements pose a threat to Chicano males as predictive factors for higher psychological distress. The sample consists of 508 randomly selected Chicanas at five colleges, varying in selectivity from a private university to a community college. The majority of respondents are single and under thirty. A sample of 160 Chicano males were also randomly selected from three of the same five college campuses and were used to make comparisons on the threat dimension. The instrument is a mail questionnaire.
215

The effects of a training module portraying sex bias and sex-role stereotyping in psychotherapy on counselor trainee attitudes toward women

Steier, Frederick A. 03 June 2011 (has links)
The purpose of this study was to determine the effects that a training module on sex bias and sex-role stereotyping in the counseling milieu would have upon attitudes toward women held by graduate counselor trainees. Attitudes of the experimental group were compared with attitudes of control subjects who received no treatment.The research was planned to answer two questions:(1) Is there a significant difference in attitudes toward between an experimental group who received the training module and a control group who did not receive the module?(2) Is there a significant difference between attitudes expressed by male subjects and attitudes expressed by female subjects?Twenty-eight male and twenty-seven female graduate students enrolled in counselor education courses with Ball State University-Europe were assigned randomly on the basis of sex to either the experimental or control group. All of the subjects were actively pursuing degree programs 1n counseling.The experimental group received a module which consisted of five phases: introduction, relaxation/fantasy, role-playing, women integration/generalization, and summary. The module was designed to help counselor trainees understand how sex bias and sex-role stereotyping influence the counseling relationship. The no-treatment control subjects attended their regularly scheduled classes.All volunteer counselor trainees completed the short version of the Attitudes toward Women Scale (Spence, Helmreich, and Stapp, 1973) one week after the experimental group received the module. The Attitudes toward Women Scale originally was developed by Spence and Helmreich (1972) as an objective paper and pencil instrument and has frequently been used to measure attitudes toward the rights and roles of women.Statistical processing of the data consisted of a two-way analysis of variance method of unweighted means. The F ratio was computed at the p<.05 level of confidence between (a) experimental and control groups, and (b) males and females using group mean scores on the short version of the Attitudes toward Women Scale. There was no significant difference between the experimental and control groups on the obtained dependent variable scores. There was a significant difference for the moderator variable sex of subject. Male counselor trainees scored significantly lower or more "traditional" in their attitudes toward the rights and roles of women in society than did the female counselor trainees.The results were discussed in terms of the difficulty in achieving change in attitudes with short-term interventions, the need for long-term follow-up, and recommendations for future research.
216

Dancing around masculinity? : young men negotiating risk in the context of dance education

Morrissey, Sean Afnán January 2009 (has links)
This thesis examines the intersection between masculinity and risk in educational settings. It draws on an intensive examination of the field of dance-education in Scotland and an extended period of research with YDance, Scotland’s only state-funded dance education company. Data was gleaned from a combination of qualitative and ethnographic methods including unstructured interviews, planned discussion groups and participant observation. The thesis synthesises the work of Ulrich Beck and with micro-level approaches popular in studies of gender and education through Bourdieu’s meso-level theories of society and social actors. It uses Bourdieu in new ways, both to reconcile these concerns of structure and action and to overcome key problems that have been identified with the work of authors like Butler and Connell. Substantively, the thesis draws attention to the risks which so-called ‘feminised’ activities like dance pose to young masculine identities and the role played by schools in reproducing and tacitly authorising inculcated assumptions about dance, gender and sexuality. The thesis also investigates the various ways in which dance educators attempt to challenge these reified associations and considers some of the unintended consequences of these practices. Despite ostensibly challenging gender stereotypes, many of the steps taken in order to engage boys in dance at school result in the reproduction of strong versions of masculinity and femininity. In attempting to recode dance as a ‘acceptable’ activity for young men, dance educators often disavow the contribution of gay and effeminate men to the art form, downplay the merits of genres like ballet which is perceived to carry particularly strong associations of femininity and homosexuality, and engage – albeit subtly – in misogyny and homophobia. Dance educators are often therefore unintentional agents of the reproduction of inculcated masculinities and gender inequality.
217

Sex-role identification in a selected group of preschool children at two age levels

McCormick, Leabelle Nadine. January 1958 (has links)
Call number: LD2668 .T4 1958 M12
218

The effect of direct working experience with women workers on attitudes towards women in management: research report.

January 1979 (has links)
Title also in Chinese. / Abstracts also in Chinese. / Thesis (M.B.A.)--Chinese University of Hong Kong. / Bibliography: leaves 46-47.
219

A meta-analytic review of male gender role conflict and its consequences. / Male gender role conflict

January 2006 (has links)
Lam Chun Bun. / Thesis (M.Phil.)--Chinese University of Hong Kong, 2006. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 45-56). / Abstracts in English and Chinese. / Chapter CHAPTER 1. --- INTRODUCTION --- p.1 / Theoretical Background --- p.3 / Impact of Male Gender Role Conflict --- p.4 / Potential Moderator Variables --- p.6 / Age --- p.6 / Ethnicity --- p.8 / Marital Status --- p.9 / The Present Study --- p.10 / Chapter CHAPTER 2. --- METHOD --- p.12 / Study Selection --- p.12 / Inclusion Criteria --- p.12 / Coding Procedure --- p.13 / Meta-analytic Procedure --- p.13 / Table 1 --- p.16 / Chapter CHAPTER 3. --- RESULTS --- p.22 / Reliability of Gender Role Conflict and its Correlates --- p.22 / Table 2 --- p.23 / Main Effect Analyses --- p.24 / Psychological Variables --- p.24 / Interpersonal Variables --- p.25 / Attitudinal Variables --- p.25 / Table 3 --- p.27 / Table 4 --- p.28 / Table 5 --- p.29 / Table 6 --- p.30 / Table 7 --- p.31 / Moderator Analyses --- p.32 / Age --- p.32 / Ethnicity --- p.33 / Marital Status --- p.33 / Table 8 --- p.34 / Table 9 --- p.35 / Table 10 --- p.36 / Chapter CHAPTER 4. --- DISCUSSION --- p.37 / Reliability of the GRCS-I --- p.37 / Main Effects --- p.38 / Age as a Moderator --- p.40 / Ethnicity as a Moderator --- p.40 / Marital Status as a Moderator --- p.41 / Limitations --- p.42 / Concluding Remarks --- p.43 / REFERENCES --- p.45
220

Gender Difference Variables Predicting Expertise in Lecture Note-taking

Reddington, Lindsay January 2011 (has links)
Lecture note-taking is an important study strategy used by a majority of college students to record important information presented in class. Research suggests that there may be gender differences in note-taking and test taking. However, previous research on lecture note-taking has only examined gender differences, or used gender as an anecdotal variable, in post-hoc analyses. This is the first dissertation to investigate gender differences in lecture note-taking directly. More specifically, the primary purpose of this dissertation was to determine if gender differences in lecture note-taking exist, and if they do, to examine the cognitive and motivational variables that might explain them. A second purpose was to determine if there might be gender related differences in test performance. This research is an extension of research on lecture note-taking expertise (Peverly, Ramaswamy, Brown, Sumowski, Alidoost, & Garner, 2007), in which a reanalysis of their data found that females wrote faster than males, had higher quality notes, higher semantic retrieval scores, and performed better on written recall of the lecture (Reddington et al., 2006). A sample of 139 undergraduate students took notes from a prerecorded lecture, and were later allowed to review their notes before taking a test of written recall. The independent variables included transcription fluency, working memory, verbal ability, conscientiousness, and goal orientation. The dependent variables were note quality and written recall. All procedures were group administered. Results indicated that females recorded more information in notes and recall than males. Females also performed significantly better on measures of transcription fluency, working memory, verbal ability, and conscientiousness. Note quality was significantly predicted by verbal ability, gender, and the gender x verbal ability interaction, while written recall was significantly predicted by transcription fluency, mastery goal orientation, and the gender x conscientiousness interaction. Future research should continue to focus on examining potential gender differences associated with note-taking and test performance.

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