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- W52072911 abstract "Three-hundred-and-twenty six undergraduates at a large south-eastern university completed a confidential anonymous 74-item questionnaire designed to assess beliefs about men, women, and relationships held by university students. This study focused on the data regarding gender differences in beliefs about men. Women were significantly more likely than men to believe that all men cheat on their partners at least once, that a man not call when he says he that men would rather live with a woman than marry her, that men think more about sex than women, that men care more about a woman's appearance, and that men have poorer communication skills than women. Implications and limitations of the data are suggested. ********* All men cheat, man won't call when he says he will, and would rather live together than get married are examples of beliefs commonly held about men. These beliefs permeate our culture and, in the absence of a sustained Men's Movement (Farrell, 1986) and few Men's Studies Programs, are rarely challenged. Indeed, little research has been conducted on attitudes toward men. An exception is research by Maltby and Day (2001) who identified personality correlates associated with attitudes toward men. They found, for example, that women high in femininity WERE more likely to have positive attitudes toward men. Twenty years ago Iazzo (1983) developed an Attitudes Toward Men Scale, which has been used rarely. The current study attempted to provide new research on attitudes toward men, specifically to identify gender dif ferences in beliefs commonly held about men. Data and Analysis The data consisted of 326 undergraduates enrolled at a large southeastern university who voluntarily completed an anonymous 74 item questionnaire designed to assess beliefs about men, women, and relationships held by university students. This study focused on the data regarding gender differences in beliefs about men. Among the respondents, 69.9% were women; 30.1% were men. The median age was 19 with a range of 17 to 58. Racial identification included 83.1% white, 12.6% African-American, and 4.3% who self identified as other. A typical profile of the respondents is that they were experienced in dating (had been in an average of 2 serious relationships) and currently dating an average of three times a month (usually the same person). Data analysis consisted of recoding Likert responses to 12 stereotypical items about men such as All men cheat on their partner's at least once and man not call when he says he will into the categories of agreement and disagreement. Such responses were cross-classified with sex of respondent and assessed for significance using chi-square. Findings and Discussion Analysis of the data comparing women and men on beliefs about men revealed six significant differences. 1. Men cheat. Women were significantly (p 2. Men won't call. Women were significantly (p" @default.
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- W52072911 date "2004-12-01" @default.
- W52072911 modified "2023-09-27" @default.
- W52072911 title "Beliefs about Men: Gender Differences among Colleges Students" @default.
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