The work and family role orientations of STEM students

Students in the future can expect to partake in two life roles as adults: a work role and family role. This study investigated the life role salience of students studying science, technology, engineering and mathematics (N = 191) and examined the extent to which their gender role ideology and percei...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Nzima, Ntombeziningi
Other Authors: Bagraim, Jeffrey
Format: Dissertation
Language:English
Published: University of Cape Town 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11427/25416
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uct-oai-localhost-11427-254162020-10-06T05:11:22Z The work and family role orientations of STEM students Nzima, Ntombeziningi Bagraim, Jeffrey Jaga, Ameeta Organisational Psychology Students in the future can expect to partake in two life roles as adults: a work role and family role. This study investigated the life role salience of students studying science, technology, engineering and mathematics (N = 191) and examined the extent to which their gender role ideology and perceived parental work-family conflict are predictors of life role salience. Regression analysis showed that students with traditional gender role ideologies had greater family role salience and students with egalitarian gender role ideologies had greater work role salience. Further analysis showed that students' family role salience was predicted by the work-family conflict of their same-sex parent. The implications of the findings and suggestions for future research are discussed. 2017-09-26T14:58:21Z 2017-09-26T14:58:21Z 2017 Master Thesis Masters MCom http://hdl.handle.net/11427/25416 eng application/pdf University of Cape Town Faculty of Commerce Organisational Psychology
collection NDLTD
language English
format Dissertation
sources NDLTD
topic Organisational Psychology
spellingShingle Organisational Psychology
Nzima, Ntombeziningi
The work and family role orientations of STEM students
description Students in the future can expect to partake in two life roles as adults: a work role and family role. This study investigated the life role salience of students studying science, technology, engineering and mathematics (N = 191) and examined the extent to which their gender role ideology and perceived parental work-family conflict are predictors of life role salience. Regression analysis showed that students with traditional gender role ideologies had greater family role salience and students with egalitarian gender role ideologies had greater work role salience. Further analysis showed that students' family role salience was predicted by the work-family conflict of their same-sex parent. The implications of the findings and suggestions for future research are discussed.
author2 Bagraim, Jeffrey
author_facet Bagraim, Jeffrey
Nzima, Ntombeziningi
author Nzima, Ntombeziningi
author_sort Nzima, Ntombeziningi
title The work and family role orientations of STEM students
title_short The work and family role orientations of STEM students
title_full The work and family role orientations of STEM students
title_fullStr The work and family role orientations of STEM students
title_full_unstemmed The work and family role orientations of STEM students
title_sort work and family role orientations of stem students
publisher University of Cape Town
publishDate 2017
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/25416
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