Gender Beliefs Measurement. How a Slightly Different Wording of the Same Question Changes the Story

Slightly different wordings are known to introduce important differences in the way people understand and answer survey questions and, moreover, in the quality of the items (Billiet 1991). This is what may happen also in the case of two wordings used to measure the attitude people express towards th...

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Main Author: Constantin Andreea
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Sciendo 2012-06-01
Series:Social Change Review
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.2478/scr-2013-0010
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spelling doaj-4d46066ea0914c9795ec39511f2ac9a82021-09-05T14:01:50ZengSciendoSocial Change Review2068-80162012-06-01101374610.2478/scr-2013-0010Gender Beliefs Measurement. How a Slightly Different Wording of the Same Question Changes the StoryConstantin Andreea0University of Cologne, GK SOCLIFE, 2 Richard Strauss Str., Room 3.A01, 50931 Cologne, GermanySlightly different wordings are known to introduce important differences in the way people understand and answer survey questions and, moreover, in the quality of the items (Billiet 1991). This is what may happen also in the case of two wordings used to measure the attitude people express towards the effect of the women’s job on their children. The aim of this study is to assess which of the two almost similar items, assumed to tap this kind of attitudes, produces a better measurement in terms of validity, reliability and overall quality. For this purpose I employ original data and use OLS models as well as SQP analysis. The findings reveal some surprising differences between the two items. This study starts with a short introduction, followed by the description of the method and the presentation of the findings. A short discussion concludes the text, focusing on implications for future studies.https://doi.org/10.2478/scr-2013-0010attitudes towards gender roles measurement value surveys wording
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Constantin Andreea
spellingShingle Constantin Andreea
Gender Beliefs Measurement. How a Slightly Different Wording of the Same Question Changes the Story
Social Change Review
attitudes towards gender roles measurement value surveys wording
author_facet Constantin Andreea
author_sort Constantin Andreea
title Gender Beliefs Measurement. How a Slightly Different Wording of the Same Question Changes the Story
title_short Gender Beliefs Measurement. How a Slightly Different Wording of the Same Question Changes the Story
title_full Gender Beliefs Measurement. How a Slightly Different Wording of the Same Question Changes the Story
title_fullStr Gender Beliefs Measurement. How a Slightly Different Wording of the Same Question Changes the Story
title_full_unstemmed Gender Beliefs Measurement. How a Slightly Different Wording of the Same Question Changes the Story
title_sort gender beliefs measurement. how a slightly different wording of the same question changes the story
publisher Sciendo
series Social Change Review
issn 2068-8016
publishDate 2012-06-01
description Slightly different wordings are known to introduce important differences in the way people understand and answer survey questions and, moreover, in the quality of the items (Billiet 1991). This is what may happen also in the case of two wordings used to measure the attitude people express towards the effect of the women’s job on their children. The aim of this study is to assess which of the two almost similar items, assumed to tap this kind of attitudes, produces a better measurement in terms of validity, reliability and overall quality. For this purpose I employ original data and use OLS models as well as SQP analysis. The findings reveal some surprising differences between the two items. This study starts with a short introduction, followed by the description of the method and the presentation of the findings. A short discussion concludes the text, focusing on implications for future studies.
topic attitudes towards gender roles measurement value surveys wording
url https://doi.org/10.2478/scr-2013-0010
work_keys_str_mv AT constantinandreea genderbeliefsmeasurementhowaslightlydifferentwordingofthesamequestionchangesthestory
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