Attitudes towards women and perceived marital adjustment among dual career couples
This study sought to examine the relationship between attitudes toward women's contemporary roles and perceived marital adjustment for married couples who were attempting to construct a dual career lifestyle. A purposive sample of sixty-seven partners involved in a dual career marriage was...
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Language: | English |
Published: |
2009
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Online Access: | http://hdl.handle.net/2429/5046 |
Summary: | This study sought to examine the relationship between
attitudes toward women's contemporary roles and perceived
marital adjustment for married couples who were attempting
to construct a dual career lifestyle.
A purposive sample of sixty-seven partners involved in
a dual career marriage was drawn from the lower mainland of
British Columbia, Canada. The sample was divided into two
groups, distressed and non distressed based on the
participants scores on the Dyadic Adjustment Scale. Both
the couple and the individual were the units of analysis.
Their attitudes toward women were then tested on the
Attitudes Toward Women Scale. Participants were mailed two
copies of each inventory for husband-wife pairs to be filled
out independently.
Males were found to be more traditionally oriented in
their attitudes toward women's contemporary roles than were
females. Males were especially more traditional in respect
to their views on women's achievement and family roles.
There was also a moderately strong positive correlation
(Pearson r) between all of the subjects' scores on the
Dyadic Adjustment Scale and their scores on the Attitudes
Toward Women Scale. However, there was no support for
earlier research on gender role incongruence and marital
adjustment. |
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