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Assessments and Surveys
What Works Clearinghouse Rating
Peer reviewedGarland, Diana R. – Family Relations, 1981
Evaluates effectiveness of training in active listening skills. Couples trained in the skills became significantly more accurate in their perceptions of spouses' attitudes and feelings. Results indicate that greater accuracy did not have a significant effect on marital adjustment. (Author)
Descriptors: Behavior Change, Counseling Effectiveness, Interpersonal Relationship, Listening Skills
Peer reviewedHudson, Walter W.; Murphy, Gerald J. – Journal of Marriage and the Family, 1980
A review of previous research has failed to demonstrate that a family life-cycle model is a viable theoretical framework for investigating and understanding patterns of change in marital satisfaction or discord in the American family. (Author)
Descriptors: Age Differences, Attitude Measures, Developmental Stages, Family Life
Peer reviewedPebley, Anne R.; And Others – Journal of Marriage and the Family, 1980
The predominant preference among men and and women is for equal numbers of sons and daughters. Yet agreement between husbands and wives is low. Motivations for preferring equal numbers may differ between the rural and semiurban areas. (Author)
Descriptors: Family Characteristics, Foreign Countries, Parent Attitudes, Parent Child Relationship
Peer reviewedJorgensen, Stephen R.; Johnson, Alberta C. – Journal of Marriage and the Family, 1980
Childless spouses were significantly more liberal toward divorce than were spouses with children, with childless wives being the most liberal of all. Husbands were more influenced by the perceived quality of the marital relationship, in support of cognitive dissonance theory. (Author)
Descriptors: Correlation, Divorce, Marital Instability, Parent Child Relationship
Peer reviewedChiriboga, David A.; Thurnher, Majda – Journal of Divorce, 1980
Results suggest that characteristics of the marital lifestyle may impede or facilitate adjustment to marital separation, although salient characteristics may vary for men and women, and change with age. The existence of separate avenues for self-expression constitutes a major resource in coping with the transition to singlehood. (Author)
Descriptors: Adjustment (to Environment), Age Differences, Behavior Patterns, Coping
Peer reviewedSkinner, Denise A. – Family Relations, 1980
Although acknowledging stressful aspects of dual-career living, most participants defined their life-style positively. Achieving a balance between the advantages and disadvantages of the lifestyle appears to be the overriding concern of most dual-career couples. (Author)
Descriptors: Adjustment (to Environment), Behavior Patterns, Coping, Family (Sociological Unit)
Peer reviewedNelson, Richard C.; Friest, Wendell P. – Journal of Marital and Family Therapy, 1980
Choice Awareness is a cognitive-affective-behavioral system that goes beyond both communication training and behavioral bartering approaches to marriage enrichment. Couples explore thoughts, feelings, and actions in their relationships and develop personal power in making choices and in taking responsibility for their own lives. (Author)
Descriptors: Behavior Change, Decision Making, Individual Power, Interpersonal Relationship
Peer reviewedSpitze, Glenna D.; Waite, Linda J. – Journal of Marriage and the Family, 1981
Used longitudinal data to examine the relations between husbands' perceived attitudes toward wives' working and early employment attitudes and behaviors of wives. Revisions in husband's perceived attitudes to conform with wives' employment attitudes and behaviors during early years of marriage were found. (Author)
Descriptors: Attitudes, Employed Women, Employment Level, Influences
Peer reviewedMedling, James M.; McCarrey, Michael – Journal of Marriage and the Family, 1981
Examined the relation between value system similarity of spouses and marital adjustment. Results indicated that value similarity was only peripherally related to the level of marital adjustment. However, spouse value similarity appeared to have a significant impact upon adjustment in the later years of marriage. (Author)
Descriptors: Adjustment (to Environment), Adult Development, Attitude Change, Emotional Adjustment
Peer reviewedSchwarz, J. Conrad – American Psychologist, 1979
Discusses implications of recent evidence for genetic influences on personality development and psychopathology. Presents a model of the childhood origins of psychopathology that incorporates genetics and gives special emphasis to the role of parental conflict in the previously neglected middle childhood years. (Author/GC)
Descriptors: Conflict, Emotional Disturbances, Family Relationship, Genetics
Peer reviewedJohnson, Judith L. – Counseling and Values, 1976
This study examines the role of communication regarding sexual topics before, during, and after cancer treatment, including that between patient and health professional. (Author)
Descriptors: Adjustment (to Environment), Cancer, Communication Problems, Health Services
Peer reviewedRoss, Susan M. – Child Abuse & Neglect: The International Journal, 1996
Analysis of data on 3,363 American parents from the 1985 National Family Violence Survey found that marital violence is a statistically significant predictor of physical child abuse and the greater the amount of spousal abuse, the greater the probability of physical child abuse. The relationship was stronger for abusing husbands than for abusing…
Descriptors: At Risk Persons, Battered Women, Child Abuse, Correlation
Peer reviewedHorneffer, Karen J.; Fincham, Frank D. – Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, 1996
Compares attributional models presented in depression and marital literatures by examining simultaneously their prediction of depressive symptoms and marital distress with 150 married couples. Findings show that a model including paths from depressogenic and distress-maintaining marital attributions to both depressive symptoms and marital distress…
Descriptors: Affective Measures, Attribution Theory, Depression (Psychology), Goodness of Fit
Guernsey, Lisa – Chronicle of Higher Education, 1997
Two state courts have reached opposite conclusions on whether universities must provide health benefits to domestic partners of gay employees. A New Jersey appeals court unanimously ruled that partners of Rutgers University employees do not qualify for family benefits. Also in a unanimous decision in Alaska, the state Supreme Court ruled that the…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Court Litigation, Fringe Benefits, Higher Education
Peer reviewedHughes, Michael; Hertel, Bradley R. – Social Forces, 1990
Among 2,107 Black Americans, lighter skin color was associated with greater education, income, occupational prestige; higher socioeconomic status (SES) of spouse; lower Black consciousness. Association between skin color and life chances in this sample was as strong as the effect of race (Black versus White), and it has persisted from 1950s to…
Descriptors: Blacks, Educational Attainment, Ethnicity, Family Income


