The relationships between birth order, fashion opinion leadership and clothing conformity

The purpose of this study was to determine if relationships existed between birth order, fashion opinion leadership and clothing conformity. The sample consisted of 60 first borns and 60 subjects from other ordinal positions. The instrument used in this research consisted of three parts: Schrank...

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Main Author: Beasley, Roberta Watson
Other Authors: Clothing, Textiles, and Related Arts
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/75985
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-759852021-05-05T05:40:19Z The relationships between birth order, fashion opinion leadership and clothing conformity Beasley, Roberta Watson Clothing, Textiles, and Related Arts LD5655.V855 1978.B42 The purpose of this study was to determine if relationships existed between birth order, fashion opinion leadership and clothing conformity. The sample consisted of 60 first borns and 60 subjects from other ordinal positions. The instrument used in this research consisted of three parts: Schrank's (1970) Fashion Opinion Leadership (FOL) and Attitudes-Toward-Conformity and the nine statements forming Borsari's subscale of the revised Creekmore's "Importance of Clothing" questionnaire (1978). T-tests revealed that there was no significant differences between the mean scores of the first borns and those in other ordinal positions on the FOL inventory and both conformity measures. A significant difference was found between sex and the FOL scale, females were more likely to be fashion opinion leaders. The results of analysis of variance indicated that there was a significant difference between college attended and scores on the FOL and Schrank's conformity measure. Home Economic students were more likely than the students in Business and Arts and Sciences to be fashion opinion leaders and more likely than students in Agriculture and Life Sciences, Architecture and Arts and Sciences to conform. The results from a correlation showed that the validity of the two conforming measures was significant at the .05 level. Master of Science 2017-03-09T21:35:05Z 2017-03-09T21:35:05Z 1978 Thesis Text http://hdl.handle.net/10919/75985 en OCLC# 39879621 In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ vi, 85 leaves application/pdf application/pdf Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University
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language en
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topic LD5655.V855 1978.B42
spellingShingle LD5655.V855 1978.B42
Beasley, Roberta Watson
The relationships between birth order, fashion opinion leadership and clothing conformity
description The purpose of this study was to determine if relationships existed between birth order, fashion opinion leadership and clothing conformity. The sample consisted of 60 first borns and 60 subjects from other ordinal positions. The instrument used in this research consisted of three parts: Schrank's (1970) Fashion Opinion Leadership (FOL) and Attitudes-Toward-Conformity and the nine statements forming Borsari's subscale of the revised Creekmore's "Importance of Clothing" questionnaire (1978). T-tests revealed that there was no significant differences between the mean scores of the first borns and those in other ordinal positions on the FOL inventory and both conformity measures. A significant difference was found between sex and the FOL scale, females were more likely to be fashion opinion leaders. The results of analysis of variance indicated that there was a significant difference between college attended and scores on the FOL and Schrank's conformity measure. Home Economic students were more likely than the students in Business and Arts and Sciences to be fashion opinion leaders and more likely than students in Agriculture and Life Sciences, Architecture and Arts and Sciences to conform. The results from a correlation showed that the validity of the two conforming measures was significant at the .05 level. === Master of Science
author2 Clothing, Textiles, and Related Arts
author_facet Clothing, Textiles, and Related Arts
Beasley, Roberta Watson
author Beasley, Roberta Watson
author_sort Beasley, Roberta Watson
title The relationships between birth order, fashion opinion leadership and clothing conformity
title_short The relationships between birth order, fashion opinion leadership and clothing conformity
title_full The relationships between birth order, fashion opinion leadership and clothing conformity
title_fullStr The relationships between birth order, fashion opinion leadership and clothing conformity
title_full_unstemmed The relationships between birth order, fashion opinion leadership and clothing conformity
title_sort relationships between birth order, fashion opinion leadership and clothing conformity
publisher Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University
publishDate 2017
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/75985
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