PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Dads who do chores bolster daughters' aspirations

2014-05-28
(Press-News.org) Fathers who help with household chores are more likely to raise daughters who aspire to less traditional, and potentially higher paying, careers.

So finds a new study that suggests how parents share dishes, laundry and other domestic duties plays a key role in shaping the gender attitudes and aspirations of their children, especially daughters.

While mothers' gender and work equality beliefs were key factors in predicting kids' attitudes toward gender, the strongest predictor of daughters' own professional ambitions was their fathers' approach to household chores.

"This suggests girls grow up with broader career goals in households where domestic duties are shared more equitably by parents," says lead author Alyssa Croft, a PhD Candidate in the University of British Columbia's Dept. of Psychology. "How fathers treat their domestic duties appears to play a unique gatekeeper role."

The study, to appear in Psychological Science, suggests parents' domestic actions may speak louder than words. Even when fathers publically endorsed gender equality, if they retained a traditional division of labour at home, their daughters were more likely to envision themselves in traditionally female-dominant jobs, such as nurse, teacher, librarian or stay-at-home-mom.

"Despite our best efforts to create workplace equality, women remain severely under-represented in leadership and management positions," says Croft. "This study is important because it suggests that achieving gender equality at home may be one way to inspire young women to set their sights on careers from which they have traditionally been excluded."

INFORMATION: Watch Alyssa Croft explain the study on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M50ZASQgfbc

Video and images available upon request.

Background

The study involved 326 children aged 7-13 and at least one of their parents. For each household, researchers calculated the division of chores and paid labour. They also determined the career stereotypes that participants identified with, their gender and work attitudes and children's career aspirations.

The study found mothers shouldered more of the burden of housework than men, which echoes previous findings. Parents and kids associated women more than men with childcare and domestic work, and girls were significantly more likely than boys to say they want be like adults who take care of kids rather than someone who has a career.

"'Talking the talk' about equality is important, but our findings suggest that it is crucial that dads 'walk the walk' as well – because their daughters clearly are watching," says Croft, noting that girls might be learning from an early age to take on additional roles, rather than different roles, compared to boys.

The study, The Second Shift Reflected in the Second Generation: Do Parents' Gender Roles at Home Predict Children's Aspirations?, took place at UBC's Living Laboratory in Science World in Vancouver. Croft's study co-authors are Prof. Toni Schmader, Katharina Block and Prof. Andrew Baron of UBC's Dept. of Psychology.

Media contacts:

Alyssa Croft (lead author)
UBC Psychology
Email: acroft@psych.ubc.ca

Basil Waugh
UBC Public Affairs
Tel. 604.822.2048
Email: basil.waugh@ubc.ca

Anna Mikulak (for study requests before 9 am PST)
Assoc. for Psychological Science
Tel: 202.293.9300 x112
Email: amikulak@psychologicalscience.org


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Sight for sore eyes: Augmented reality without the discomfort

Sight for sore eyes: Augmented reality without the discomfort
2014-05-28
WASHINGTON, May 28—Augmented reality is increasingly becoming… well … a reality. Smartphone apps can point out restaurants as you scan the street with your phone camera or even identify constellations when you point your phone at the night sky. And goggle-like devices—akin to Google Glass—that you wear on your head can superimpose computer-generated images onto your direct view of the physical world. But one major limitation of this kind of augmented reality (AR) technology is that moving back and forth between a 2-D image on the screen and a 3-D world in front of you ...

Experimental trial represents promising step toward universal antidote for snakebite

Experimental trial represents promising step toward  universal antidote for snakebite
2014-05-28
SAN FRANCISCO (May 28, 2014) – A team of researchers, led by Dr. Matthew Lewin of the California Academy of Sciences and Dr. Stephen P. Samuel of Trinity College Dublin, Ireland has taken another promising step toward developing a universal antidote for snakebite. Last summer, the team tested the effectiveness of a nasally administered antiparalytic drug on mice injected with high doses of Indian cobra (Naja naja) venom. Mice injected with otherwise fatal doses of venom outlived and in many cases survived after being treated with the antiparalytic agent, neostigmine. These ...

Crow or raven? New birdsnap app can help!

Crow or raven? New birdsnap app can help!
2014-05-28
New York, NY—May 27, 2014—Researchers at Columbia Engineering, led by Computer Science Professor Peter Belhumeur, have taken bird-watching to a new level. Using computer vision and machine learning techniques, they have developed Birdsnap, a new iPhone app that is an electronic field guide featuring 500 of the most common North American bird species. The free app, which enables users to identify bird species through uploaded photos, accompanies a visually beautiful, comprehensive website that includes some 50,000 images. Birdsnap, which also features birdcalls for each ...

Coating stents with vitamin C could reduce clotting risks

2014-05-28
Every year, more than 1 million people in the U.S. who have suffered heart attacks or chest pain from blocked arteries have little mesh tubes called stents inserted into their blood vessels to prop them open. The procedure has saved many lives, but it still has potentially deadly downsides. Now scientists are reporting in the ACS journal Langmuir that coating stents with vitamin C could lower the implants' risks even further. Eagappanath Thiruppathi and Gopinath Mani note that today's stents have come a long way since their first introduction. Today, they come coated ...

Social networks linked to better health for older adults, studies find

2014-05-28
WASHINGTON - Having regular positive interactions with family and friends and being involved in several different social networks can help older adults be healthier, according to new research published by the American Psychological Association. "Close connections with others are likely to promote but can also sometimes detract from good health by shaping daily behavior that directly affects physical health," said Lynn M. Martire, PhD, of The Pennsylvania State University. Martire and Melissa M. Franks, PhD, of Purdue University, were guest editors for a special issue ...

Flame retardant exposure linked to lower IQs -- study

2014-05-28
A new study involving Simon Fraser University researchers has found that prenatal exposure to flame retardants can be significantly linked to lower IQs and greater hyperactivity in five-year old children. The findings are published online today in the journal Environmental Health Perspectives. The researchers found that a 10-fold increase in PBDE concentrations in early pregnancy, when the fetal brain is developing, was associated with a 4.5 IQ decrement, which is comparable with the impact of environmental lead exposure. SFU health sciences professor Bruce Lanphear ...

A more earth-friendly way to make bright white cotton fabrics

2014-05-28
With a growing number of consumers demanding more earth-friendly practices from the fashion world, scientists are developing new ways to produce textiles that could help meet rising expectations. They report in the ACS journal Industrial & Engineering Chemistry Research one such method that can dramatically reduce the amount of energy it takes to bleach cotton while improving the quality of the popular material. Quan Zu and colleagues point out that the cotton industry's current whitening techniques require bleaching the natural fiber at very high temperatures with hydrogen ...

Better catalysts for the petrochemical industry

2014-05-28
Zeolites are among the substances which can accelerate chemical reactions – they are known as catalysts. Usually applied in pellet form, the industrial production of gasoline from crude oil without zeolites is today inconceivable. The chemical reactions occur on their surface. Fortunately, these are very large for zeolites: the catalysts are interspersed with nano-sized pores and microscopic channels through which gaseous or liquid reactants penetrate and the products later can leave. One of the main industrial problems with the use of zeolites is that the reaction side ...

MRI catches breast cancer early in at-risk survivors of childhood Hodgkin lymphoma

MRI catches breast cancer early in at-risk survivors of childhood Hodgkin lymphoma
2014-05-28
(TORONTO, Canada – May 28, 2014) – The largest clinical study to evaluate breast cancer screening of female survivors of childhood Hodgkin lymphoma (HL), who are at increased risk because they received chest radiation, shows that magnetic-resonance imaging (MRI) detected invasive breast tumours at very early stages, when cure rates are expected to be excellent. The finding, published online today in the American Cancer Society Journal Cancer (doi: doi/10.1002/cncr.28747), underscores the need for at-risk childhood HL survivors and primary care physicians to be aware ...

Fish more inclined to crash than bees

2014-05-28
Swimming fish do not appear to use their collision warning system in the same way as flying insects, according to new research from Lund University in Sweden that has compared how zebra fish and bumblebees avoid collisions. The fish surprised the researchers. All animals need some form of warning system that prevents them colliding with objects in their surroundings. The warning system helps them to continually regulate their speed and judge their distance from objects. For flying and swimming creatures this is an extra challenge because they also have to deal with winds ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Novel machine learning model can predict material failure before it happens

Hereditary Alzheimer’s: Blood marker for defective neuronal connections rises early

Nature-based activity is effective therapy for anxiety and depression, study shows

New genomics tool accelerates biomedical breakthroughs

DNA methylation entropy: A new way to track and predict aging

Mount Sinai Fuster Heart Hospital recognized by Press Ganey for patient experience excellence

Nurturing now, thriving later: The lasting power of affectionate mothering

A step toward harnessing clean energy from falling rainwater

Term or permanent life insurance? A new study offers guidance

Ultrafast multivalley optical switching in germanium for high-speed computing and communications

Simulating protein structures involved in memory formation

Forward genetics approach reveals the factor responsible for carbon trade-off in leaves

The most distant twin of the Milky Way ever observed

New method to deliver cell therapies in critically ill patients on external lung support

Climate-related trauma can have lasting effects on decision-making, study finds

Your cells can hear

Farm robot autonomously navigates, harvests among raised beds

The bear in the (court)room: who decides on removing grizzly bears from the endangered species list?

First study reveals neurotoxic potential of rose-scented citronellol at high exposure levels

For a while, crocodile

Scientists find evidence that overturns theories of the origin of water on Earth

Foraging on the wing: How can ecologically similar birds live together?

Little birds’ personalities shine through their song – and may help find a mate

Primate mothers display different bereavement response to humans

New pollen-replacing food for honey bees brings new hope for survival

Gene-based blood test for melanoma may catch early signs of cancer’s return

Common genetic variants linked to drug-resistant epilepsy

Brisk walking pace + time spent at this speed may lower risk of heart rhythm abnormalities

Single mid-afternoon preventer inhaler dose may be best timing for asthma control

Symptoms of ice cold feet + heaviness in legs strongly linked to varicose veins

[Press-News.org] Dads who do chores bolster daughters' aspirations