2002
DOI: 10.1111/1471-6402.00052
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Trait Judgments of Stay-At-Home and Employed Parents: A Function of Social Role and/or Shifting Standards?

Abstract: Primarily middle-class, White college students (n = 484) read a brief description of a stay-at-home or employed mother or father, estimated how often the target performed several parenting behaviors, and rated her/him on communion and parenting effectiveness. Results showed that respondents estimated more parenting behaviors for mothers than fathers in both roles, gave stay-at-home mothers and fathers similar trait ratings, and viewed employed mothers as lower in communion and parenting effectiveness than fath… Show more

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Cited by 48 publications
(54 citation statements)
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References 16 publications
(49 reference statements)
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“…Although social judgments and evaluations play an important role in facilitating or inhibiting the pursuit of greater gender equality, relatively few studies have explored people's perceptions of men and women who violate traditional family roles (e.g., Bridges et al, 2002;Part et al, 2008). These studies have mainly focused on the valence of people's responses, comparing participants' perceptions of individuals who conform to traditional gender roles and their perceptions of those who challenge these roles.…”
Section: Perceptions Of Deviations From Gendered Family Rolesmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Although social judgments and evaluations play an important role in facilitating or inhibiting the pursuit of greater gender equality, relatively few studies have explored people's perceptions of men and women who violate traditional family roles (e.g., Bridges et al, 2002;Part et al, 2008). These studies have mainly focused on the valence of people's responses, comparing participants' perceptions of individuals who conform to traditional gender roles and their perceptions of those who challenge these roles.…”
Section: Perceptions Of Deviations From Gendered Family Rolesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Ample research has been conducted in an attempt to account for the persistence of gender inequality in the home (see for a review Lachance-Grzela & Bouchard, 2010), which in turn also contributes to the gender pay gap (Gershuny, 2004). Many researchers have drawn attention to the important role played by gender attitudes and ideologies in inhibiting or facilitating changes in the division of labor (e.g., Bulanda, 2004;Gaunt, 2006;Greenstein, 1996), some of them specifically addressing people's perceptions of men and women who violate traditional family roles (e.g., Bridges, Etaugh, & Barnes-Farrell, 2002;Park, Smith, & Correll, 2008).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…An experiment by Bosak, Sczesny, and Eagly (2007) supported social role theory by showing that information about social roles reduced judged stereotypical communal and agentic sex differences on a common-rule measure that eliminated standard shifts. In contrast, an experiment by Bridges, Etaugh, and Barnes-Farrell (2002) The present research is therefore designed to investigate whether the tendency of social role information to reduce gender stereotyping can be accounted for by judges' shift to within-sex standards in the presence of role information. As in previous studies (e.g., Eagly & Steffen, 1984, 1986, participants rated male and female targets described as full-time employees or homemakers or without role information.…”
Section: Research Question and Hypothesesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Early research in the area of work and family largely focused on perceptions of working mothers (e.g., Orza 1992, 1993). Later research compared perceptions of working and stay-at-home mothers and fathers (e.g., Brescoll and Uhlmann 2005;Bridges et al 2002). More recently, researchers have begun to investigate taking family leave after the birth of a child as an additional option for working parents (e.g., Allen and Russell 1999;Bridges and Orza 1993;Wayne and Cordeiro 2003).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%