Research on a workshop to reduce the effects of sexism and sex role socialization on women's career planning

Assessed the effects of a 4-wk workshop designed to enhance the awareness of 60 college women about sex role and career factors and to expand their sex role attitudes and self-concepts. During the workshop, portions of a 28-min videotape were presented to Ss and discussed each wk in small groups. Th...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of counseling psychology 1980-07, Vol.27 (4), p.355-363
Hauptverfasser: O'Neil, James M., Ohlde, Carroll, Barke, Charles, Gelwick, Beverly Prosser, Garfield, Nancy
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Assessed the effects of a 4-wk workshop designed to enhance the awareness of 60 college women about sex role and career factors and to expand their sex role attitudes and self-concepts. During the workshop, portions of a 28-min videotape were presented to Ss and discussed each wk in small groups. The videotape presentation is a direct application of a model depicting factors affecting both sex role socialization and career decision-making processes. Treatment effects were assessed by means of 5 career and sex-role instruments in a pretest/posttest control-group design. Results indicate that treatment Ss spent more time thinking about their career planning, described themselves as being more "masculine," and reported investigative, social, and enterprising careers as being more appropriate career choices than control Ss. The workshop appears to have expanded Ss' "masculine" sex role self-concepts and changed their attitudes about the appropriateness of 2 stereotypic masculine career areas (investigative and enterprising). (59 ref)
ISSN:0022-0167
1939-2168
DOI:10.1037/0022-0167.27.4.355