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Presentation
Implicit and Explicit Attitudes toward Mothers in the Workplace
Poster presented at the Society for Personality and Social Psychology annual conference (2015)
  • Christine A. Vitiello, Georgia Southern University
  • Amy Hackney, Georgia Southern University
Abstract
One laboratory experiment investigated how the manipulation of parental status of a female job applicant affected hiring decisions. Ninety-three participants acted as mock employers and evaluated one female applicant on the dimensions of warmth and competence from the Stereotype Content Model and provided a hiring decision for this applicant. Participants evaluated the applicant on an implicit level with two IATs and explicit level. Results indicated that parental status of the applicant did not affect hiring decisions. Participants did perceive the mother applicant as higher in warmth than the childless applicant, but the two applicants did not differ on perceived competency. Furthermore, participants implicitly associated warmth and competence traits more with mothers. Finally, participants’ explicit attitudes predicted more variance in the hiring decisions than the participants’ implicit attitudes. These results suggest that people may have more positive implicit and explicit attitudes toward mothers in the workplace than previously predicted.
Keywords
  • Attitudes towards mothers in the workplace,
  • Mothers in the workplace,
  • Relationship between parental status and hiring decision
Publication Date
February 27, 2015
Location
Longbeach, CA
Citation Information
Christine A. Vitiello and Amy Hackney. "Implicit and Explicit Attitudes toward Mothers in the Workplace" Poster presented at the Society for Personality and Social Psychology annual conference (2015)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/amy-hackney/6/