Parental attitudes toward children walking and bicycling to school : a multivariate ordered response analysis

Recent research suggests that, besides traditional socio-demographic and built environment attributes, the attitudes and perceptions of parents toward walking and bicycling play a crucial role in deciding their children’s mode choice to school. However, very little is known about the factors that sh...

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Main Author: Seraj, Saamiya
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2152/ETD-UT-2011-12-4536
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spelling ndltd-UTEXAS-oai-repositories.lib.utexas.edu-2152-ETD-UT-2011-12-45362015-09-20T17:05:26ZParental attitudes toward children walking and bicycling to school : a multivariate ordered response analysisSeraj, SaamiyaParental attitudesPerceptions and valuesChildren’s school mode choiceTravel behaviourIntra-household interactionsMultivariate ordered responseComposite marginal likelihoodRecent research suggests that, besides traditional socio-demographic and built environment attributes, the attitudes and perceptions of parents toward walking and bicycling play a crucial role in deciding their children’s mode choice to school. However, very little is known about the factors that shape these parental attitudes toward their children actively commuting to school. The current study aims to investigate this unexplored avenue of research and identify the influences on parental attitudes toward their children walking and bicycling to school, as part of a larger nationwide effort to make children more physically active and combat rising trends of childhood obesity in the US. Through the use of a multivariate ordered response model (a model structure that allows different attitudes to be correlated), the current study analyses five different parental attitudes toward their children walking and bicycling to school, based on data drawn from the California add-on sample of the 2009 National Household Travel Survey. In particular, the subsample from the Los Angeles – Riverside – Orange County area is used in this study to take advantage of a rich set of micro-accessibility measures that is available for this region. It is found that school accessibility, work patterns, current mode use in the household, and socio-demographic characteristics shape parental attitudes toward children walking and bicycling to school. The study findings provide insights on policies, strategies, and campaigns that may help shift parental attitudes to be more favourable toward their children walking and bicycling to school.text2012-02-16T20:37:53Z2012-02-16T20:37:53Z2011-122012-02-16December 20112012-02-16T20:38:00Zthesisapplication/pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/2152/ETD-UT-2011-12-45362152/ETD-UT-2011-12-4536eng
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Parental attitudes
Perceptions and values
Children’s school mode choice
Travel behaviour
Intra-household interactions
Multivariate ordered response
Composite marginal likelihood
spellingShingle Parental attitudes
Perceptions and values
Children’s school mode choice
Travel behaviour
Intra-household interactions
Multivariate ordered response
Composite marginal likelihood
Seraj, Saamiya
Parental attitudes toward children walking and bicycling to school : a multivariate ordered response analysis
description Recent research suggests that, besides traditional socio-demographic and built environment attributes, the attitudes and perceptions of parents toward walking and bicycling play a crucial role in deciding their children’s mode choice to school. However, very little is known about the factors that shape these parental attitudes toward their children actively commuting to school. The current study aims to investigate this unexplored avenue of research and identify the influences on parental attitudes toward their children walking and bicycling to school, as part of a larger nationwide effort to make children more physically active and combat rising trends of childhood obesity in the US. Through the use of a multivariate ordered response model (a model structure that allows different attitudes to be correlated), the current study analyses five different parental attitudes toward their children walking and bicycling to school, based on data drawn from the California add-on sample of the 2009 National Household Travel Survey. In particular, the subsample from the Los Angeles – Riverside – Orange County area is used in this study to take advantage of a rich set of micro-accessibility measures that is available for this region. It is found that school accessibility, work patterns, current mode use in the household, and socio-demographic characteristics shape parental attitudes toward children walking and bicycling to school. The study findings provide insights on policies, strategies, and campaigns that may help shift parental attitudes to be more favourable toward their children walking and bicycling to school. === text
author Seraj, Saamiya
author_facet Seraj, Saamiya
author_sort Seraj, Saamiya
title Parental attitudes toward children walking and bicycling to school : a multivariate ordered response analysis
title_short Parental attitudes toward children walking and bicycling to school : a multivariate ordered response analysis
title_full Parental attitudes toward children walking and bicycling to school : a multivariate ordered response analysis
title_fullStr Parental attitudes toward children walking and bicycling to school : a multivariate ordered response analysis
title_full_unstemmed Parental attitudes toward children walking and bicycling to school : a multivariate ordered response analysis
title_sort parental attitudes toward children walking and bicycling to school : a multivariate ordered response analysis
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/2152/ETD-UT-2011-12-4536
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