Found 3224 Hypotheses across 323 Pages (0.005 seconds)
  1. Mean levels of achievement anxiety will be higher for male than for female children (19).Welch, Michael R. - Sex differences in socialization anxiety, 1979 - 2 Variables

    Authors look for associations between the gender of children and several dimensions of socialization anxiety.

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  2. Male children will display higher mean levels of anxiety about self-reliance than female children (19).Welch, Michael R. - Sex differences in socialization anxiety, 1979 - 2 Variables

    Authors look for associations between the gender of children and several dimensions of socialization anxiety.

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  3. Male children will display higher mean levels of overall socialization anxiety than females (19).Welch, Michael R. - Sex differences in socialization anxiety, 1979 - 2 Variables

    Authors look for associations between the gender of children and several dimensions of socialization anxiety.

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  4. Females will exhibit higher mean levels of anxiety associated with compliant or obedient patterns of behaviors (19).Welch, Michael R. - Sex differences in socialization anxiety, 1979 - 2 Variables

    Authors look for associations between the gender of children and several dimensions of socialization anxiety.

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  5. Mean levels of independence-related anxiety will be higher for males than for females (19).Welch, Michael R. - Sex differences in socialization anxiety, 1979 - 2 Variables

    Authors look for associations between the gender of children and several dimensions of socialization anxiety.

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  6. Females will also display higher aggregate mean levels of responsibility-related anxiety than males (19).Welch, Michael R. - Sex differences in socialization anxiety, 1979 - 2 Variables

    Authors look for associations between the gender of children and several dimensions of socialization anxiety.

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  7. The socialization of female children is accomplished more easily than the socialization of males (4).Welch, Michael R. - Sex differences in the ease of socialization: an analysis of the efficiency ..., 1981 - 7 Variables

    This study examines differences in the ease of socialization for male and female children in preindustrial societies. Results support the hypothesis that the socialization of females is accomplished more easily than the socialization of males.

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  8. Where a society's subsistence economy generates a more complex form of social organization, there will be a lower concentration of value emphases in children's socialization (p. 365).Welch, Michael R. - Social structural expansion, economic diversification, and concentration of ..., 1984 - 4 Variables

    This article investigates the relationship between economic type and socialization of children. The author focuses on the concentration of value emphases in childhood socialization--that is, whether children are instilled with several different value orientations rather than just one or two. Value concentration is examined alongside subsistence technology and economic diversification; attention is also paid to gender differences.

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  9. Societies with more diversified subsistence economies will have a lower concentration of value emphases in children's socialization (p. 366).Welch, Michael R. - Social structural expansion, economic diversification, and concentration of ..., 1984 - 4 Variables

    This article investigates the relationship between economic type and socialization of children. The author focuses on the concentration of value emphases in childhood socialization--that is, whether children are instilled with several different value orientations rather than just one or two. Value concentration is examined alongside subsistence technology and economic diversification; attention is also paid to gender differences.

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  10. African societies place greater emphasis on the inculcation of independence, self-reliance, and nurturance than do non-African societies (11).Welch, Michael R. - Childhood socialization differences in african and nonafrican societies, 1978 - 7 Variables

    This study compares child socialization emphases in African and non-African societies. Results show that differences in child socialization are neglibible.

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