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MacGregor, Anne; Cochran, Larry – Career Development Quarterly, 1988
Examined the correspondence between the roles of family and work figures, using 10 adults who had at least one year experience in their jobs. Results support the view that in working, people reenact roles and dramas from their families of origin, but these results must be regarded as tentative and promising. (ABL)
Descriptors: Adults, Behavior Patterns, Employment, Family Influence
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Violato, Claudio; And Others – Journal of School Psychology, 1981
Reported responses (N=77) to a questionnaire designed to collect information about perceptions of the role of school psychologists. Results indicated that overall respondents had a fairly accurate sense of what a school psychologist does, although they overestimated the importance of psychotherapy as one of the school psychologist's functions.…
Descriptors: Adults, Counselor Role, Foreign Countries, Professional Recognition
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Schlosser, Grace A.; Yewchuck, Carolyn R. – Roeper Review, 1998
This study of 197 eminent Canadian women on the dynamics of their childhood families, investigated their perceptions of having a special status or role. Over three-quarters indicated they were considered special within their families. They attributed it to their birth order, scholastic achievement, condition of health, or display of talents.…
Descriptors: Adults, Child Role, Family Relationship, Females
Kimmel, Ellen B.; Nevill, Dorothy D. – 1990
This study examined sex differences in values and roles reported by five samples of adults from North America and Europe. The data were derived from a larger set gathered as part of the Work Importance Study (WIS) in which researchers in a dozen countries developed the two instruments in their own language. The question posed here related to the…
Descriptors: Adults, Comparative Analysis, Cross Cultural Studies, Cultural Differences
Rosenthal, Carolyn J.; And Others – 1981
In the gerontological literature, the term kinkeeping appears frequently in reference to activities such as visiting, telephoning, letter writing and mutual aid. A survey of 464 adults in Ontario found that over half could name someone in their extended family, usually female, who worked at keeping family members in touch. Siblings were often…
Descriptors: Adults, Extended Family, Family Life, Family Relationship