Abstract
In 191 Sydney families comprising both parents and two children aged eight to 12, children's gender-role attitudes were examined as a function of children's and parents' demographic variables, gender-role-related childrearing practices, and performance of gender-related household tasks. Children's gender-role attitudes were associated with both parents' education, religiosity, and political allegiances, as well as with parental encouragement of children's cross-sex interests, tolerance of children's cross-sex behaviours, and a nontraditional division of household tasks. Hierarchical multiple regressions demonstrated that gender-role-related childrearing practices and parental gender-role-attitude scores (and, to a lesser extent, household-task performance) added significant variance to the prediction of children's gender-role-attitude scores beyond the influence of demographic variables. The results were discussed with reference to the multiple pathway by which parents influence their children.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Antill, J. K., Cunningham, J. D., & Cotton, S. (2003). Gender-role Attitudes in Middle Childhood: In What Ways Do Parents Influence Their Children? Australian Journal of Psychology, 55(3), 148–153. https://doi.org/10.1080/0004953042000298602
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