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The Effects of Co-Education on Levels of Benevolent Sexism in College-Age Males

The Effects of Co-Education on Levels of Benevolent Sexism in College-Age Males. Sarah Kemp & Ruth Hudgens Hanover College. Introduction. Differences in levels of Sexism between single-sex and co-educational high schools (Lee, Marks, & Byrd, 1994) Contact Hypothesis (Stephan, 1985)

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The Effects of Co-Education on Levels of Benevolent Sexism in College-Age Males

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  1. The Effects of Co-Education on Levels of Benevolent Sexism in College-Age Males Sarah Kemp & Ruth Hudgens Hanover College

  2. Introduction • Differences in levels of Sexism between single-sex and co-educational high schools (Lee, Marks, & Byrd, 1994) • Contact Hypothesis (Stephan, 1985) 1. Equal Status 2. Personal Interaction 3. Achieve Goals through Cooperative Activities 4. Social Norms & Relevant Authorities

  3. Intro cont…. • Sex Role Attitudes: Egalitarian vs. Traditional (Vanyperen & Buunk, 1991) • Benevolent Sexism – Encompasses subjectively positive (for the sexist) attitudes toward women in traditional roles (Glick & Fiske, 1997)

  4. Hypotheses • Male subjects who attended co-educational high schools will display lower levels of benevolent sexism than those who attended single-sex high schools. • Male subjects who have more traditional sex role attitudes will display higher levels of benevolent sexism than males who have more egalitarian sex role attitudes.

  5. Method • Participants: students at a small liberal arts college in the Midwest *91 subjects: 58 females & 33 males • Subjects were recruited either individually or through Resident Assistants according to living unit

  6. Method-Materials • Ambivalent Sexism Inventory: 22-item Likert scale (0=strongly disagree/5=strongly agree) *Ex: “Women should be cherished and protected by men.” (Glick & Fiske, 1997) • Sex Role Attitudes Scale: 40-item Likert scale *Ex: “A Woman who pursues a career cannot be a good mother” • Demographics

  7. Procedure • Participant selection • Consent form • Survey – 15 minutes • Debriefing and contact information

  8. Results • Men from single-sex high schools did not show significantly higher levels of benevolent sexism than men from co-ed high schools (One-Way ANOVA= n.s.) • No correlation between men’s benevolent sexism and sex role attitude

  9. Results/ Discussion • Range of Benevolent Sexism was from 14 to 44: Women’s M=26.62, Men’s M=27.58 • Men were more egalitarian (M=100.06) than women (M=94.24), with a range of 75 to 150

  10. Discussion • Small Sample Size – not enough power • Homogeneity of small college • Conditions of contact hypothesis were not met by the high school • Sex role attitudes of campus women may not be egalitarian enough. • May have been obvious what our scale was measuring.

  11. Future Research • Larger, more diverse sample • Co-residential living units- more interaction with women • Questions concerning conditions of h.s.- contact hypothesis

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