The Impact of Social Background on Gender-role Ideology
- 1 January 2002
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Journal of Family Issues
- Vol. 23 (1), 53-73
- https://doi.org/10.1177/0192513x02023001003
Abstract
The study examines the effects of parental background variables on parent-child differences in sex typing of roles and occupations, using a sample of Israeli fathers and mothers and their adolescent children (n = 134 in each group). In general, mothers held more liberal attitudes, followed by their children, whereas fathers appeared to be the most conservative. Parents' background variables were found to have some effect on their own attitudes as well as their children's attitudes to gender roles, but no impact on sex typing of occupations was found. Mothers' and fathers' education, as well as the mother's work status, significantly affected the views of both parents and children on the question of gender role. Parents with more education and families with full-time working mothers tended to be more liberal. The mother's place of birth, degree of family's religiosity, and number of children influenced parental attitudes but not those of offspring.Keywords
This publication has 38 references indexed in Scilit:
- Continuity and Discontinuity in Attitudes toward Marital Power Relations: Pre-retired vs Retired HusbandsAgeing and Society, 1997
- Their Mother's Daughters? The Intergenerational Transmission of Gender Attitudes in a World of Changing RolesJournal of Marriage and Family, 1997
- Predicting Gender-Role Attitudes In Adolescent Females: Ability, Agency, and Parental FactorsPsychology of Women Quarterly, 1996
- The Influence of Gender Role Attitudes on Life Expectations of College StudentsYouth & Society, 1989
- Social Background, Schooling, and Parental Job Attitudes as Related to Adolescents' Work ValuesYouth & Society, 1988
- Black-White Differences in Mother-to-Daughter Transmission of Sex-Role AttitudesThe Sociological Quarterly, 1987
- Family structure, job characteristics, rewards and strains as related to work‐role centrality of employed and self‐employed professional women with childrenJournal of Organizational Behavior, 1984
- Domestic Role Sharing in SwedenJournal of Marriage and Family, 1981
- Multivariate Analyses of Factors Affecting Work Role Centrality of Occupational CategoriesHuman Relations, 1978
- The Development of Gender Stereotyping of Adult Occupations in Elementary School ChildrenChild Development, 1977