Gender-related Behaviour, Attitudes, and Personality in Parents of Young Children in England and Hungary
This paper is concerned with the extent to which "traditionality" of parents' attitudes towards the other sex are related to sex-bias in expectations regarding children and to involvement in sex-typical household tasks. We also examine each of these in relation to how parents see them...
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Veröffentlicht in: | International journal of behavioral development 1995-03, Vol.18 (1), p.105-126 |
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Zusammenfassung: | This paper is concerned with the extent to which "traditionality" of parents'
attitudes towards the other sex are related to sex-bias in expectations regarding
children and to involvement in sex-typical household tasks. We also examine each of
these in relation to how parents see themselves along dimensions of "masculinity"
(instrumental traits) and "femininity" (expressive traits). To obtain a wide
spectrum of cultural values, comparable data were collected on parents of
preschool-aged children (n = 161) in Cambridge (England) and Budapest (Hungary).
Parents' personalities, attitudes, and behaviour were assessed by self-report
questionnaires. Parents with more traditional views on male-female adult relations
had more sex-biased expectations of their children. Furthermore, with the exception
of Budapest mothers, parents who had more traditional attitudes and expectations
were more gender-stereotyped in their behaviour. Mothers' sex-role behaviour in
Budapest was related to their husbands' attitudes. Comparing parents according to
sex and location the following results emerge: fathers were more sex-biased in
parenting expectations and more traditional in their attitudes to adult relations
than mothers. Sex-typical household and child-care duties were more likely to be
performed by the parent of the traditionally "appropriate" sex. Budapest parents
were more sex-biased in their attitudes than Cambridge parents, but less
gender-typed in their role-sharing behaviour. This difference in role-sharing was
related to maternal employment.
These results further support the contention that the various gender-related
phenomena-traits, attitudes, values, interests, preferences, and behaviour- are
multifactorial. As a considerable variation has been found in parents'
gender-related personality, behaviour, and attitudes, it remains to be seen whether
this variation is reflected in any way in the behaviour of their preschool daughters
and sons. |
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ISSN: | 0165-0254 1464-0651 |
DOI: | 10.1177/016502549501800106 |