A comparative study of the marital attitudes of students from divorced, intact and single-parent families

Magister Psychologiae - MPsych === The aim of the research study was to examine the marital attitudes of students from divorced, intact and single parent families. Most of these students were in the intimacy versus isolation developmental phase. During this phase young adults seek to form an intimat...

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Main Author: Memani, Patience Sandiswa
Other Authors: Mathiti, Vuyisile
Language:en
Published: University of the Western Cape 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11394/238
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uwc-oai-etd.uwc.ac.za-11394-2382017-08-02T03:59:58Z A comparative study of the marital attitudes of students from divorced, intact and single-parent families Memani, Patience Sandiswa Mathiti, Vuyisile Dept. of Psychology Faculty of Community and Health Sciences Adult children of divorce South Africa Western Cape Psychology Divorce Psychological aspects Magister Psychologiae - MPsych The aim of the research study was to examine the marital attitudes of students from divorced, intact and single parent families. Most of these students were in the intimacy versus isolation developmental phase. During this phase young adults seek to form an intimate relationship with another person, but may fear intimacy or may not want to give up their independence and may experience loneliness and isolation instead. It was thus important to conduct the study since some of the students were at a developmental stage in which they might have been dealing with intimate relationship issues. Given the focus of international studies on the marital attitudes of students from intact and divorced families, it was considered important to include, in the comparison, students from single parent families. A survey research design was used as a broad methodological framework and Bowen's family systems theory was used as a theoretical framework. A convenient sampling method was used to select a sample of 209 participants from the Community and Health Science Faculty. A Marital Attitude Scale and a questionnaire was used to collect data. The data was analyzed by means of basic descriptive statistics, the Kruskal-Wallis H-test, T-Test and Mann Whitney U-Test. Results showed that students’ parental marital status (married, divorced, single) had no influence on their attitudes towards marriage. Generally, the students showed positive attitudes towardsmarriage. The results showed that there was a statistically significant difference among different racial groups. The results suggest that except for race, there was no statistically significant difference on the marital attitudes when compared on such variables as gender, religion and age. Although the marital attitudes of participants were generally positive among the different racial groups, participants from the Black community had less positive marital attitudes when compared with their Coloured, Indian and White counterparts. Participants from the Coloured community also had less positive marital attitudes when compared to their counterparts from the Indian and White communities. The results of this study show that participants had relative positive attitudes towards marriage and that these attitudes did not differ according to parental status. South Africa 2013-05-27T10:30:43Z 2007/03/16 08:24 2007/03/30 2013-05-27T10:30:43Z 2003 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/11394/238 en University of the Western Cape University of the Western Cape
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic Adult children of divorce
South Africa Western Cape
Psychology
Divorce
Psychological aspects
spellingShingle Adult children of divorce
South Africa Western Cape
Psychology
Divorce
Psychological aspects
Memani, Patience Sandiswa
A comparative study of the marital attitudes of students from divorced, intact and single-parent families
description Magister Psychologiae - MPsych === The aim of the research study was to examine the marital attitudes of students from divorced, intact and single parent families. Most of these students were in the intimacy versus isolation developmental phase. During this phase young adults seek to form an intimate relationship with another person, but may fear intimacy or may not want to give up their independence and may experience loneliness and isolation instead. It was thus important to conduct the study since some of the students were at a developmental stage in which they might have been dealing with intimate relationship issues. Given the focus of international studies on the marital attitudes of students from intact and divorced families, it was considered important to include, in the comparison, students from single parent families. A survey research design was used as a broad methodological framework and Bowen's family systems theory was used as a theoretical framework. A convenient sampling method was used to select a sample of 209 participants from the Community and Health Science Faculty. A Marital Attitude Scale and a questionnaire was used to collect data. The data was analyzed by means of basic descriptive statistics, the Kruskal-Wallis H-test, T-Test and Mann Whitney U-Test. Results showed that students’ parental marital status (married, divorced, single) had no influence on their attitudes towards marriage. Generally, the students showed positive attitudes towardsmarriage. The results showed that there was a statistically significant difference among different racial groups. The results suggest that except for race, there was no statistically significant difference on the marital attitudes when compared on such variables as gender, religion and age. Although the marital attitudes of participants were generally positive among the different racial groups, participants from the Black community had less positive marital attitudes when compared with their Coloured, Indian and White counterparts. Participants from the Coloured community also had less positive marital attitudes when compared to their counterparts from the Indian and White communities. The results of this study show that participants had relative positive attitudes towards marriage and that these attitudes did not differ according to parental status. === South Africa
author2 Mathiti, Vuyisile
author_facet Mathiti, Vuyisile
Memani, Patience Sandiswa
author Memani, Patience Sandiswa
author_sort Memani, Patience Sandiswa
title A comparative study of the marital attitudes of students from divorced, intact and single-parent families
title_short A comparative study of the marital attitudes of students from divorced, intact and single-parent families
title_full A comparative study of the marital attitudes of students from divorced, intact and single-parent families
title_fullStr A comparative study of the marital attitudes of students from divorced, intact and single-parent families
title_full_unstemmed A comparative study of the marital attitudes of students from divorced, intact and single-parent families
title_sort comparative study of the marital attitudes of students from divorced, intact and single-parent families
publisher University of the Western Cape
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/11394/238
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