ERIC: Education Resources Information Center Skip main navigation

ED227961 - Father-Infant Interaction and Sex Role.

Help Tutorial Help | Tutorial Help | Tutorial Help With This Page Help With This Page
Record Details

Full-Text Availability Options:

More Info:
Help | Tutorial
Help Finding Full Text

Click on any of the links below to perform a new search
ERIC #:ED227961
Title:Father-Infant Interaction and Sex Role.
Authors:Campbell, Nayna D.
Descriptors:Androgyny; Comparative Analysis; Fathers; Femininity; Infants; Masculinity; Middle Class; Parent Child Relationship; Personality Traits; Sex Role; Whites
Source:N/A
More Info:
Help
Peer-Reviewed:
N/A
Publisher:N/A
Publication Date:1982-04-00
Pages:17
Pub Types:Reports - Research; Speeches/Meeting Papers
Abstract:An investigation was made of the relationship between sex-role orientation (as measured by the Bem Sex Role Inventory) and responsiveness in infant care (as determined by observations on the Nursing Child Assessment Feeding Scale). Subjects participating in the study consisted of 44 father/infant dyads. It was hypothesized that androgynous fathers would interact more responsively with their infants than would fathers with a sex-typed orientation and that fathers with a high degree of feminine traits would interact more responsively with their infants than fathers with a low degree of feminine traits. Classification of fathers yielded four sex-role orientation groups, including 13 androgynous, 9 masculine, 9 feminine, and 13 undifferentiated fathers. Findings indicated that (1) interaction scores were higher in dyads with female infants than in those with male infants, (2) androgynous fathers did not interact more responsively with their infants than did fathers with a sex-typed masculine orientation, (3) fathers with high feminine traits interacted more responsively with their infants than fathers with a low degree of feminine traits, and (4) masculinity was not negatively related to paternal responsiveness. Such findings suggest that femininity scores, not androgyny scores, predict paternal responsiveness in interaction. Of more general significance, it was found that 43 of the 44 fathers cared for their infants on a regular basis and that nearly 1 in 5 was the main caregiver. (RH)
Abstractor:N/A
Reference Count:0

Note:Paper presented at the Biennial Southeastern Conference on Human Development (7th, Baltimore, MD, April 1982).
Identifiers:Dyadic Interaction Analysis; Gender Identity; Responsive Parenting
Record Type:Non-Journal
Level:1 - Available on microfiche
Institutions:N/A
Sponsors:N/A
ISBN:N/A
ISSN:N/A
Audiences:N/A
Languages:English
Education Level:N/A
 

ERIC Home