Men's stereotypes of women in management: are women aware of how they are stereotyped?

It is commonly thought that men and women differ in the extent or frequency to which each exhibits various traits-especially traits that are frequently perceived to be more agentic and stereotypical of males (e.g., aggressive and forceful) or more communal and stereotypical of females (e.g., interpe...

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Main Author: Crawford, Kevin Charles
Language:en
Published: 2006
Online Access:http://etd.lib.montana.edu/etd/2006/crawford/CrawfordK0506.pdf
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spelling ndltd-MONTSTATE-http---etd.lib.montana.edu-etd-2006-crawford-CrawfordK0506.pdf2012-03-09T15:49:06Z Men's stereotypes of women in management: are women aware of how they are stereotyped? Crawford, Kevin Charles It is commonly thought that men and women differ in the extent or frequency to which each exhibits various traits-especially traits that are frequently perceived to be more agentic and stereotypical of males (e.g., aggressive and forceful) or more communal and stereotypical of females (e.g., interpersonally sensitive and sympathetic). Further, stereotypes frequently influence behaviors, with many real-world consequences, not the least of which are those often manifested in the disparate treatment of men and women in the workplace. In a recent study (Martell & DeSmet, 2001), male MBA students rated male and female managers on 14 items considered important to achieving success as a manager. Because having a realistic job preview is an important component of success at one's work, the present study explored the accuracy of Business and Management students' perceptions of male stereotypes of female versus male managers' leadership abilities. Results revealed a remarkable ability of respondents to closely predict the previous men's responses. In comparing current respondents' ratings to Martell and DeSmet's males' ratings, few significant differences were observed between men's estimates of female managers' abilities and the current respondents' expectations of those men's beliefs. 2006-05-15 Thesis Montana State University en http://etd.lib.montana.edu/etd/2006/crawford/CrawfordK0506.pdf
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
description It is commonly thought that men and women differ in the extent or frequency to which each exhibits various traits-especially traits that are frequently perceived to be more agentic and stereotypical of males (e.g., aggressive and forceful) or more communal and stereotypical of females (e.g., interpersonally sensitive and sympathetic). Further, stereotypes frequently influence behaviors, with many real-world consequences, not the least of which are those often manifested in the disparate treatment of men and women in the workplace. In a recent study (Martell & DeSmet, 2001), male MBA students rated male and female managers on 14 items considered important to achieving success as a manager. Because having a realistic job preview is an important component of success at one's work, the present study explored the accuracy of Business and Management students' perceptions of male stereotypes of female versus male managers' leadership abilities. Results revealed a remarkable ability of respondents to closely predict the previous men's responses. In comparing current respondents' ratings to Martell and DeSmet's males' ratings, few significant differences were observed between men's estimates of female managers' abilities and the current respondents' expectations of those men's beliefs.
author Crawford, Kevin Charles
spellingShingle Crawford, Kevin Charles
Men's stereotypes of women in management: are women aware of how they are stereotyped?
author_facet Crawford, Kevin Charles
author_sort Crawford, Kevin Charles
title Men's stereotypes of women in management: are women aware of how they are stereotyped?
title_short Men's stereotypes of women in management: are women aware of how they are stereotyped?
title_full Men's stereotypes of women in management: are women aware of how they are stereotyped?
title_fullStr Men's stereotypes of women in management: are women aware of how they are stereotyped?
title_full_unstemmed Men's stereotypes of women in management: are women aware of how they are stereotyped?
title_sort men's stereotypes of women in management: are women aware of how they are stereotyped?
publishDate 2006
url http://etd.lib.montana.edu/etd/2006/crawford/CrawfordK0506.pdf
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