PREFERENCE OF TRADITIONAL VS. MODERN ROLE OF A WOMEN IN THE SOCIETY SCALE: CONSTRUCTION AND VALIDATION Cover Image

Skala preferencji tradycyjnej vs. nowoczesnej roli kobiety w społeczeństwie: konstrukcja i walidacja
PREFERENCE OF TRADITIONAL VS. MODERN ROLE OF A WOMEN IN THE SOCIETY SCALE: CONSTRUCTION AND VALIDATION

Author(s): Mirosław Kofta, Wiktor Soral, Zuzanna Kwiatkowska, Sylwia Kapusta, Małgorzata Mikołajczak
Subject(s): Social Sciences, Gender Studies, Psychology, Sociology, Social psychology and group interaction, Behaviorism
Published by: Wydawnictwo Naukowe Scholar Sp. z o.o.
Keywords: traditional vs. modern woman's role in society; traditional vs. modern sexism; ambivalent sexism

Summary/Abstract: A new measure of preference for traditional vs. modern role of a woman in the society was developed with Polish female university students as participants. A 16-item scale was selected in a principal component analysis from the list of 65 normative statements describing desirable features of woman’s character and behavior. Eight items formed the traditional role sub-scale, the remaining items formed the modern role sub-scale. Confirmatory factor analysis revealed a better fit of the two-dimensional (with separate sub-scales for the acceptance of the traditional vs. modern role) than the one-dimensional solution (one bi-polar scale). The new scale showed acceptable reliability (Cronbach’s alpha = 0,76 for the traditional role, and 0,74 for the modern role). As predicted, acceptance of the traditional role correlated strongly with traditional and benevolent sexism (the latter including, two additional dimensions: maternity and aesthetics). The modern role subscale appeared to be a reliable predictor (much better than the traditional role, with weak negativeimpact) of the acceptance of pro-choice statements, as well as of support for free access to contraceptives and sexual education. Overall, the new scale shows satisfactory reliability and seems to be a promising instrument for measuring the content of female social identity.

  • Issue Year: XI/2016
  • Issue No: 39
  • Page Range: 474-488
  • Page Count: 15
  • Language: Polish