The Psychology of Gender 4th Edition
Methods and History of Gender Research 55 TABLE 2.5 PERSONAL ATTRIBUTES QUESTIONNAIRE Masculinity (M+) Femininity (F+) Masculini ...
56 Chapter 2 femininity scales in half to create the four groups shown in Figure 2.7. Someone who possessed a high number of mas ...
Methods and History of Gender Research 57 Drawing on this work, Spence and colleagues (1979) developed a negative masculinity sc ...
58 Chapter 2 ■ The use of independent M/F scales led to the develop- ment of the androgyny construct. Initially, androgyny was c ...
Methods and History of Gender Research 59 features for each target. In addition, many of the identified personality traits were ...
60 Chapter 2 perceivers, create gender by our expectations, by our behavior, and by what we decide to in- clude in this category ...
Methods and History of Gender Research 61 not be adaptive. Examine sources of gender- role strain at your college in Do Gender 2 ...
62 Chapter 2 associated with less relationship satisfaction, less involvement with children, more sexual aggression, more negati ...
Methods and History of Gender Research 63 One instance in which gender-role strain may be prevalent among women is when they fin ...
64 Chapter 2 difficulties with assertion, and uncertainty about how to behave in traditionally masculine settings. ■ The nature ...
Methods and History of Gender Research 65 between cross-sectional and longitudinal studies; longitudinal designs may provide str ...
66 Chapter 2 Ashmore, R. D. (1990). Sex, gender, and the individual. In L. A. Pervin (Ed.),Hand- book of personality: Theory and ...
67 I n 1977, a group of college men were induced to talk on the phone to either an attractive female or an unattractive female. ...
68 Chapter 3 acceptable, then you have an egalitarian view of gender roles. Most people find they agree with some of these ideas ...
Gender-Role Attitudes 69 job opportunities? Second, the ATWS fails to capture some of the contemporary concerns about men’s and ...
70 Chapter 3 TAKE HOME POINTS ■ One’s attitudes toward gender can be classified as tradi- tional, egalitarian, or transitional. ...
Gender-Role Attitudes 71 women, including a prosocial orientation to- ward women (e.g., the desire to help women). Both hostile ...
72 Chapter 3 Benevolent sexism provides a powerful jus- tification for the high-status group to exploit the low-status group. Ac ...
Gender-Role Attitudes 73 sexism. There are other circumstances in which women endorse benevolent sexism. A study of women colleg ...
74 Chapter 3 (Glick et al., 2000). Among those countries, nations that scored higher in hostile and be- nevolent sexism also sco ...
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