سهم تعارض نقش جنسیتی در پیشبینی سلامت روانی دانشجویان
محورهای موضوعی : تربیتینادر حاجلو 1 , رقیه عزیزی 2 , خدیجه مقدسی 3
1 - عضو هیأت علمی دانشگاه محقق اردبیلی
2 - دانشجوی کارشناس ارشد روانشناسی دانشگاه محقق اردبیلی
3 - دانشجوی کارشناس ارشد روانشناسی دانشگاه محقق اردبیلی
کلید واژه: دانشجویان, تعارض نقش جنسیتی, سلامت روانی,
چکیده مقاله :
هدف از این مطالعه، پیشبینی سلامت روانی دانشجویان براساس تعارض نقش جنسیتی آنان بود. این مطالعه از نوع توصیفی همبستگی بود. آزمودنیهای پژوهش شامل 200 نفر دانشجوی مرد بودند که به روش نمونهگیری خوشهای چند مرحلهای از میان دانشجویان دانشگاه محقق اردبیلی انتخاب شدند. برای جمعآوری دادهها از مقیاس تعارض نقش جنسیتی (وستر و همکاران، 2012) و مقیاس سلامت روانی (گلدبرگ و هیلر، 1979)استفاده شد. دادههای بهدست آمده با استفاده از تحلیل رگرسیون چندمتغیره مورد تحلیل قرار گرفتند. نتایج نشان داد که اثر مؤلفههای موفقیت، قدرت، رقابت؛ هیجانپذیری محدود و تعارض بین کار و روابط خانوادگی بر مؤلفههای اضطراب و بیخوابی، نارساکنشوری اجتماعی و افسردگی معنیدار است (01/0P < )، ولی بر مؤلفه نشانههای بدنی اثر معنیداری ندارد. همچنین، تعارض نقش جنسیتی 64 درصد از واریانس سلامت روانی را در میان دانشجویان تبیین میکند. بر اساس نتایج این تحقیق افرادی که از تعارض نقش جنسیتی کمتری برخوردارند سلامت روانی بهتر و بالاتری دارند.
The aim of the present study was to predict students’ psychological health based on their gender role conflict. The type of study was descriptive- correlation. Participants were 200 male students of Mohaghegh Ardabili University which were selected by multi stage cluster sampling method. The Scale of Gender Role Conflict (Wester et al., 2012) and Psychological Health Scale (Goldberg and Hillier, 1979) were used to collect the data. The data were analyzed using multivariate regression analysis. The results showed that components of success, power, competition, limited affectivity, and conflict between work and family relationship were effective on anxiety and insomnia components, social dysfunction and depression (P < 0.01), but not on somatization. Also, 64% of the variance in students general health is explained by gender role conflict. Based on these results, individuals with less gender role conflict have better and greater psychological health.
Babakas, E., Yavas, U., & Ashill, N.J. (2009). The role of customer orientation as a moderator of the job demand-burnout-performance relationship: A surface-level trait perspective. Journal of Retailing, 85(4), 480-492.
Blazina, C., & Marks, I. (2001). College men’s affective reactions to individual therapy psycho education workshops, and men’s support group brochures: The influence of gender role conflict and power dynamics upon help seeking attitudes. Psychotherapy, 38, 297–305.
Blazina, C., & Watkins, C.E. (1996). Masculine gender role conflict: Effects on college men\'s psychological well-being, chemical substance usage, and attitudes towards help-seeking. Journal of Counseling Psychology, 43, 461-465.
Dalal, R.S. (2005). A meta-analysis of the relationship between organizational citizenship behavior and counterproductive work behavior. Journal of Applied Psychology, 90(6), 1241-1255
Garnets, L., & Pleck, J. (1979). Sex role identity, androgyny, and sex role transcendence: A sex role strain analysis. Psychology of Women Quarterly, 3, 270 –283.
Goldberg DP, & Hillier VF. (1979). A scaled version of the general health questionnaire. PSYCHOL MED. 9:139-45.
Good, G.E., Robertson, J.M., O\'Neil, J.M., Fitzgerald, L.F., DeBord, K.A., Stevens, M.A., Bartels, K.M., & Braverman, D.G. (1995). Male gender role conflict: Psychometric properties and relations to distress. Journal of Counseling Psychology, 42, 3-10.
Goodwin, M.E. (2009). Gender role conflict, depression, and personality’s effects on help seeking behaviors, attitudes, and academic performance. (Doctoral dissertation, Iowa State University). Dissertation Abstracts International, 70, 88.
Griffin, J.A. (2011). Sexual compulsivity among sexual minorities: Relations to attachment orientations and gender role conflict. (Masters Thesis, Loyola University Maryland, Baltimore, MD).
Hayes, J.A., & Mahalik, J.R. (2000). Gender Role Conflict and psychological distress in male counseling center clients. Journal of Psychology of Men & Masculinity, 1, 116- 125.
Kaplan HL., Sadock BJ. (1991). Comprehensive glossary of psychiatry and psychology. 1 Edition, Williams and Willins: London.
Korcuska, J.S., & Thombs, D.L. (2003). Gender role conflict and sex-specific drinking norms: Relationship to alcohol use in undergraduate women and men. Journal of College Student Development, 44, 204–216.
Norwalk, K.E., Vandiver, B.J., White, A.M., & Englar-Carlson, M. (2011). Factor structure of the Gender Role Conflict Scale in African American and European American men. Psychology of Men & Masculinity, 12, 128 –143.
O’Neil, J.M. (1981). Males sex-role conflict, sexism, and masculinity: Implications for men, women, and the counseling psychologist. The Counseling Psychologist, 9, 61–80.
O’Neil, J.M., Good, G.E., & Holmes, S. (1995). Fifteen years of theory and research on men’s gender role conflict: New paradigms for empirical research. In R. Levant & W. Pollack (Eds.), A new psychology of men (pp. 164–206). New York, NY: Basic Books.
O’Neil, J.M., Helms, B., Gable, R., David, L., & Wrightsman, L. (1986). Gender-Role Conflict Scale: College men’s fear of femininity. Sex Roles, 14, 335–350.
Park, J. (2010). Gender role conflict and willingness to seek counseling in male university students The mediating roles of social stigma and attitudes toward counseling. Department of Education, The Graduate Yon Sei University, Seoul, Korea.
Pederson, E.L., & Vogel, D.L. (2007). Male Gender Role Conflict and Willingness to Seek Counseling: Testinga Mediation Model on College-Aged Men. Journal of Counseling Psychology, 54, 373-384.
Pleck, J.H. (1981). The myth of masculinity. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
Pryzgoda, J., & Chrisler, J.C. (2000). Definitions of gender and sex: The subtleties of meaning. Sex Roles, 43(7/8): 553-569.
Rochlen, A. B., Blazina, C., & Raghunathan, R. (2002). Gender role conflict, attitudes toward career counseling, career decision making, and perceptions of career advertising brochures. Psychology of Men & Masculinity, 3, 127–137.
Sarracino, F. (2010). Social capital and subjective well-being trends: Comparing 11 western European countries. The Journal of Socio-Economics, 39(4), 482-517.
Schwartz, J.P., Waldo, M., & Daniel, D. (2005). Gender-Role Conflict and Self-Esteem: Factors Associated With Partner Abuse in Court-Referred Men. Psychology of Men & Masculinity, 6, 109- 113.
Serna, G.S. (2004). The confounding role of personality in the relation to gender role conflict and substance abuse and sexual aggression against women (Doctoral dissertation, University of Akron, 2003). Dissertation Abstracts International, 65, 1064.
Shepard, D.S. (2002). A negative state of mind: Patterns of depressive symptoms among men with high gender role conflict. Psychology of Men & Masculinity, 3, 3–8.
Steinfeldt, J.A., Steinfeldt, M.C., England, B., & Speight, Q.L. (2009). Gender role conflict and stigma toward help-seeking among college football players. Psychology of Men & Masculinity, 10, 261–272.
Wester, S.R., Vogel, D.L., O’Neil, J.M., & Danforth, L. (2012). Development and evaluation of the Gender Role Conflict Scale Short Form (GRCS-SF). Psychology of Men and Masculinity, 13, 199-210.
Wood, A.M., Joseph, S., & Maltby, J. (2009). Gratitude predicts psychological well-being above the Big Five facets. Personality and Individual Differences, 46(4), 443-47.
Woodhill, B.M., & Samuels, C.A. (2004). Desirable and undesirable androgyny: A prescription for the twenty-first century. Journal of Gender Studies, 13(11), 15-28.
Yamaoka, K. (2008). Social capital and health and well-being in East Asia: a population-based study. Journal Social Science & Medicine. 66(4), 885-99.
Zamarripa, M.X., Wampold, B.E., & Gregory, E. (2003). Male Gender Role Conflict, Depression and Anxiety: Clarification and Generalizability to Woman. Journal of Counseling psychology, 50, 333-338.