Centre for Policy on Ageing
 

 

Students' attitudes toward older people
 — a cross-cultural comparison
Author(s)Xiaoping Lin, Christina Bryant
Journal titleJournal of Intergenerational Relationships, vol 7, no 4, 2009
PublisherRoutledge, 2009
Pagespp 411-424
Sourcehttp://www.tandfonline.com
KeywordsStudents ; Attitudes to the old of general public ; Comparison ; Cross cultural surveys.
AnnotationThere is a popular belief that attitudes toward older people are predominantly negative in Western cultures and positive in Eastern cultures. In the light of social and cultural change in these cultures, it is timely to investigate whether this belief still holds true. The study also explores an often-ignored feature of cultural differences in these attitudes, namely, that attitudes toward older people are mixed phenomena in both cultures. The study uses a cross-group research design. 65 undergraduates (31 Western and 35 Eastern) completed the Fraboni Scale of Ageism (FSA) administered on computers. It found that attitudes toward older people were generally positive in both cultures and did not support the first hypothesis that attitudes toward older people would be predominantly negative in Western cultures and positive in Eastern cultures. However, as predicted, attitudes toward older people were mixed in both cultures. This study highlights the similarity in attitudes toward holder people across cultures, and argues that future studies need to be encouraged to pay more attention to positive attitudes. (KJ/RH).
Accession NumberCPA-100302203 A
ClassmarkXN: TOB: 48: 3KA

Data © Centre for Policy on Ageing

...from the Ageinfo database published by Centre for Policy on Ageing.
 

CPA home >> Ageinfo Database >> Queries to: webmaster@cpa.org.uk