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Parish, Thomas S.; Copeland, Terry F. – Sex Roles: A Journal of Research, 1981
Results of a survey of female undergraduates revealed no significant differences in moral development between women from broken homes (divorced parents or father deceased) and from intact families. There was a strong correlation between age at loss of father and level of moral development for women from broken homes. (Author/MK)
Descriptors: Fatherless Family, Females, Moral Development
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Parish, Thomas S.; Taylor, James C. – Journal of Youth and Adolescence, 1979
Over 400 students, grades 3-8, who had experienced father loss through divorce and whose mothers had not remarried demonstrated significantly lower self-concepts than those who were from intact families. Students whose mothers had remarried had slightly lower self-concepts than those from intact families. (Author/CP)
Descriptors: Divorce, Elementary Education, Fatherless Family, Self Concept
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Parish, Thomas S.; Nunn, Gerald D. – Journal of Psychology, 1983
American undergraduate students (n = 644) completed the Rather Internality-Externality Scale and provided information on their family background. Subjects were grouped according to father absence, cause of this absence, and their age at the time this event occurred. Results indicated locus of control varied markedly as a function of these…
Descriptors: Death, Divorce, Family Characteristics, Fatherless Family
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Parish, Thomas S. – Adolescence, 1980
Descriptors: Adolescents, Death, Divorce, Fatherless Family
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Parish, Thomas S.; Nunn, Gerald D. – Journal of Psychology, 1981
Examines relationships between children's self-concepts and their evaluations of parents in families where father loss had occurred either through divorce or death. Subjects were 120 fifth- through eighth-grade children. (Author/MP)
Descriptors: Childhood Attitudes, Children, Comparative Analysis, Death
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Parish, Thomas S.; Copeland, Terry F. – Journal of Genetic Psychology, 1980
Examines whether male and female college students reared in either father-absent or intact families differ in terms of their locus of control. (CM)
Descriptors: Child Rearing, College Students, Comparative Analysis, Fatherless Family
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Parish, Thomas S.; Kappes, Bruno M. – Social Behavior and Personality, 1980
Parents from families broken by divorce were more negatively evaluated than were parents from either intact families or families where the father had died. These findings held regardless of whether or not the mother had remarried and regardless of the sex of students doing the evaluations. (Author)
Descriptors: Death, Divorce, Family Structure, Fatherless Family
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Parish, Thomas S.; And Others – Education, 1980
Comparing human values priorities among individuals from intact and fatherless families, this study indicated college students from divorced families placed significantly higher priority on values of "mature love,""self-respect," and "polite" than did students from intact families. Students whose fathers had died…
Descriptors: Attitude Measures, College Students, Comparative Analysis, Divorce
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Nunn, Gerald D.; Parish, Thomas S. – Psychology: A Quarterly Journal of Human Behavior, 1982
Examined the effects of family form and process on 314 college students. Findings indicated that parental childrearing roles were perceived more positively by those from intact, and death (of father) nonremarried families than those from divorced, remarried families. Perceived family happiness did not impact significantly. (Author/JAC)
Descriptors: Child Rearing, College Students, Family Structure, Fatherless Family
Nunn, Gerald D.; Parish, Thomas S. – Phi Delta Kappan, 1982
Findings from a study of 633 students indicate that children from intact families are significantly better off in their personal and familial adjustment than are children whose fathers have died, who, in turn, are significantly better adjusted than are children from divorced families. (Author/MLF)
Descriptors: Adjustment (to Environment), Divorce, Elementary Secondary Education, Family Characteristics