2001
DOI: 10.1080/00224540109600519
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The Effects of Gender Role Orientation on Team Schema: A Multivariate Analysis of Indicators in a U.S. Federal Health Care Organization

Abstract: In this empirical study of 649 employees at a federally supported health care facility in the United States, the authors investigated the effects of individual gender role orientation on team schema. The results indicated (a) that nontraditional male and female employees perceived the greatest amount of group cohesion in their team schemas and (b) that both traditional and nontraditional male employees perceived greater problem-solving potential in their team schemas. Meaningful implications for team compositi… Show more

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Cited by 15 publications
(19 citation statements)
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“…As a result of these protocols, all those details considered as irrelevant for the interaction are dismissed (Harwood et al, 2000;Stangor & Schaller, 1996). The role of schemas in hypothetical or real situations of intergroup contact has been registered in previous studies (Goodman & Gareis, 1993;Scherer & Petrick, 2010). Harwood et al, (2000), for example, analyzed the schematic representations of intergenerational communication in younger and older adults.…”
Section: The Schema Conceptmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As a result of these protocols, all those details considered as irrelevant for the interaction are dismissed (Harwood et al, 2000;Stangor & Schaller, 1996). The role of schemas in hypothetical or real situations of intergroup contact has been registered in previous studies (Goodman & Gareis, 1993;Scherer & Petrick, 2010). Harwood et al, (2000), for example, analyzed the schematic representations of intergenerational communication in younger and older adults.…”
Section: The Schema Conceptmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In the next section of the article, we introduce the importance of gender role orientation in the study of earnings and discuss predictors of gender role orientation. 1 The term gender role orientation is used in gender research to refer to one's attitudes toward women's roles (e.g., Harris, Firestone, & Vega, 2005;Rhoden, 2003;Scherer & Petrick, 2001). Although the term is used by some researchers to reflect a trait-based conceptualization of masculinity and femininity (Rammsayer & Troche, 2007), in an effort not to create additional terms, we use gender role orientation to refer to a statelike conception of gender role attitudes, with high scores representing traditional attitudes and low scores egalitarian attitudes.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In another situation, Cinamon and Rich (2002), Harris and Harper (2008), Mintz and Mahalik (1996), Frieze and McHugh (1998), Rhoden (2003), Scherer and Petrick (2001), asserted that gender role attitudes refered to the beliefs about the appropriate role activities for men and women in all settings. In the meantime, Brownmiller (1975) asserted that rape was an oppression process by men who kept women in a state of fear.…”
Section: Desire For Sex and Inability To Resist Lustmentioning
confidence: 99%