Search results
- The Social Roles Questionnaire (SRQ; Baber & Tucker, 2006) was developed to measure participants' gender role attitudes. The initial version of the SRQ consisted of 52 items derived from the literature and/or adapted from other measures of gender roles.
psycnet.apa.org/doi/10.1037/t71100-000
People also ask
Does SRQ measure gender role attitudes?
What is the social roles questionnaire (SRQ)?
Can the SRQ contribute to the study of gender and social change?
Does the social roles questionnaire correlate with social desirability?
What is SRQ?
Is the social roles questionnaire valid?
Apr 1, 2006 · The 13-item Social Roles Questionnaire (SRQ; Baber & Tucker, 2006) was used to assess attitudes towards perceived societal gender roles. This questionnaire includes two subscales:...
- Help Center
© 2008-2024 ResearchGate GmbH. All rights reserved. Terms;...
- Help Center
- Participants
- Measures
- Procedure
Study 1 included 266 undergraduate students at a small, public university in New England. There were 191 who identified themselves as female, 72 as male, and three students who did not indicate their sex. Average age was 19.4 years (SD=1.53; range 18–27 years old). The majority of the students were White (98%), which reflects the demographic charac...
The initial version of the SRQ consisted of 52 items derived from the literature and/or adapted from other measures of gender roles as explained below. We expected there to be three subscales: a General subscale, a Child subscale, and a Gender Transcendent subscale. The 30 items that formed the “General” subscale focused on social roles generally d...
Students completed a packet in Human Development, Family Relations, and Sociology classes that included the Social Roles Questionnaire, the Attitudes Toward Women Scale, the Personal Attributes Questionnaire, the Attitudes Toward Marital and Childrearing Roles Scale, and questions about demographic variables (e.g., age, sex, ethnicity, college majo...
- Kristine M. Baber, Corinna Jenkins Tucker
- 2006
The Social Roles Questionnaire (SRQ; Baber & Tucker, 2006) was developed to measure participants' gender role attitudes. The initial version of the SRQ consisted of 52 items derived from the literature and/or adapted from other measures of gender roles.
Innovative research is constrained by instruments that assume gender to be captured by dichotomous categories. This article presents the results of two studies that document the psychometric properties of the Social Roles Questionnaire (SRQ), a new measure of gender role attitudes.
- Kristine M. Baber, Corinna Jenkins Tucker
- 2006
Nov 2, 2006 · This article presents the results of two studies that document the psychometric properties of the Social Roles Questionnaire (SRQ), a new measure of gender role attitudes.
Two studies provided evidence that the SRQ is a reliable and valid measure of gender role attitudes. Specifically, the studies found women were more likely than men to endorse egalitarian and gender transcendent beliefs as measured by the SRQ.
This article presents the results of two studies that document the psychometric properties of the Social Roles Questionnaire (SRQ), a new measure of gender role attitudes.