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The transmission of social, cultural...
~
Dancy, Janel Lorraine.
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The transmission of social, cultural, and spiritual values by middle-class mothers of African American ancestry.
Record Type:
Language materials, printed : Monograph/item
Title/Author:
The transmission of social, cultural, and spiritual values by middle-class mothers of African American ancestry./
Author:
Dancy, Janel Lorraine.
Description:
90 p.
Notes:
Adviser: Harriet P. McAdoo.
Contained By:
Masters Abstracts International39-05.
Subject:
Black Studies. -
Online resource:
http://pqdd.sinica.edu.tw/twdaoapp/servlet/advanced?query=1403854
ISBN:
0493189599
The transmission of social, cultural, and spiritual values by middle-class mothers of African American ancestry.
Dancy, Janel Lorraine.
The transmission of social, cultural, and spiritual values by middle-class mothers of African American ancestry.
- 90 p.
Adviser: Harriet P. McAdoo.
Thesis (M.A.)--Michigan State University, 2001.
This study involved 106 middle-class, educated mothers of African American ancestry in the examination of value transmission through proverbs. Intergenerational value transmission was determined through the Page, Washington, McAdoo Proverb Scale. This scale provided mean ratings of the proverbs the mothers believed, proverbs the mothers perceived that their own mothers had believed, and finally, proverbs the participant mothers desired to pass on to their children. Proverbs that espoused personal responsibility and a strong work ethic received the two top mean ratings across three generations. The top ten proverbs across three generations also incorporated the values of spirituality, caution and self-affirmation or self-respect. Seventy percent of the participant middle-class mothers top ten proverbs were the same as the proverbs they perceived their own mothers believed. Seventy percent of proverbs middle-class mothers of African American ancestry desired to pass on to their children were the same as the ones they believed. These results indicate relative stability in the values transmitted across three generations. The participant mothers indicated they would pass on to their children fewer highly ranked proverbs with spiritual values than had been included in previous generations. Marital status did not significantly affect proverb mean ratings or values passed to the participant mothers' children. This study of middle-class mothers and value transmission provides evidence that the values transmitted over three generations appear fairly stable.
ISBN: 0493189599Subjects--Topical Terms:
1017673
Black Studies.
The transmission of social, cultural, and spiritual values by middle-class mothers of African American ancestry.
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The transmission of social, cultural, and spiritual values by middle-class mothers of African American ancestry.
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Thesis (M.A.)--Michigan State University, 2001.
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This study involved 106 middle-class, educated mothers of African American ancestry in the examination of value transmission through proverbs. Intergenerational value transmission was determined through the Page, Washington, McAdoo Proverb Scale. This scale provided mean ratings of the proverbs the mothers believed, proverbs the mothers perceived that their own mothers had believed, and finally, proverbs the participant mothers desired to pass on to their children. Proverbs that espoused personal responsibility and a strong work ethic received the two top mean ratings across three generations. The top ten proverbs across three generations also incorporated the values of spirituality, caution and self-affirmation or self-respect. Seventy percent of the participant middle-class mothers top ten proverbs were the same as the proverbs they perceived their own mothers believed. Seventy percent of proverbs middle-class mothers of African American ancestry desired to pass on to their children were the same as the ones they believed. These results indicate relative stability in the values transmitted across three generations. The participant mothers indicated they would pass on to their children fewer highly ranked proverbs with spiritual values than had been included in previous generations. Marital status did not significantly affect proverb mean ratings or values passed to the participant mothers' children. This study of middle-class mothers and value transmission provides evidence that the values transmitted over three generations appear fairly stable.
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http://pqdd.sinica.edu.tw/twdaoapp/servlet/advanced?query=1403854
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