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Sex-role self-concept and persistence in a traditional vs nontraditional college major for women
Authors:Barbara J Yanico  Susan I Hardin
Affiliation:Southern Illinois University USA;Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University USA
Abstract:This article reports a 3-year follow-up study of a sample of women engineering and home economics majors who were previously studied as freshmen. It was hypothesized that persistence in the two curricula would be related to sex roles, with feminine-typed women more likely to leave engineering and masculine-typed women more likely to leave home economics. The findings did not generally support this hypothesis, however. Women in the two majors who persisted were not found to differ significantly from women who changed majors or dropped out on either sex roles or on ratings given as freshmen of their satisfaction with and certainty of college major. Persisters in engineering had higher college entrance SAT math scores than changers or dropouts. Those who changed majors from home economics tended to go into less traditional fields than home economics. Nearly all of the women who changed from engineering chose another nontraditional or male-dominated field as their second major.
Keywords:Requests for reprints should be sent to Barbara J. Yanico   Department of Psychology   Southern Illinois University   Carbondale   IL 62901.
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