Gender Attitudes in Religious Schools: A Comparative Study of Religious and Secular Private Schools in Guatemala
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Theoretical Background
2.1. The Importance of Gender Attitudes
2.2. The Formation of Gender Attitudes
2.3. The Measurement of Gender Attitudes
3. Methods
3.1. Data
3.2. Latent Class Analysis
3.3. Proportional Tests and HLM to Assess Predictors of Gender Attitudes
4. Results
4.1. Patterns of Gender Attitudes
4.2. Effect of Religious Schools
4.3. Religious and Nonreligious Effects on Gender Attitudes
5. Discussion
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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1 | It is difficult to speculate about why this result is so high without learning more about the students who make up this “other” group. |
2 | “Other” students are higher, but again these comparisons are difficult because the survey provides no information about these students’ religious affiliations. |
3 | A variable measuring commitment to the idea that Christ died for our sins was a significant indicator in Steigenga and Smilde’s (1999) research. I have not included that variable in this analysis because there is very little variation in student responses (80.44% of all students in the sample strongly agreed with this statement) and because it was highly correlated with biblical literalism (90.47% of students who strongly supported biblical literalism also strongly agreed that Christ died for our sins). |
4 | Note that a privately egalitarian profile did not emerge from the data, indicating that few, if any, support gender equality in the home, but not in public. |
Variable | Mean | % * |
---|---|---|
The man should be the head of the family. | 2.61 | 13.16% |
(4 = strongly agree; 1 = strongly disagree) | strongly disagree | |
The majority of men are better leaders than women. | 2.20 | 20.78% |
(4 = strongly agree; 1 = strongly disagree) | strongly disagree | |
Women can do the same jobs as men. | 3.12 | 39.50% |
(4 = strongly agree; 1 = strongly disagree) | strongly agree | |
Someday I would like to see a woman as president of our country. | 3.57 | 61.10% |
(4 = strongly agree; 1 = strongly disagree) | strongly agree |
Number of Classes | # of Parms. | df | LL | BIC | AIC | Bootstrapped p-Value |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 4 | 11 | 479.690 | 398.084 | 457.690 | 0.000 |
2 | 9 | 6 | 56.730 | 12.217 | 44.729 | 0.000 |
3 | 14 | 1 | 6.530 | −0.886 | 4.532 | 0.072 |
4 | 19 | −4 | 0.820 | 30.494 | 8.819 | 0.214 |
5 | 24 | −9 | 0.039 | 66.810 | 18.040 | 0.448 |
Non-Egalitarian | Publicly Egalitarian | Generally Egalitarian | |
---|---|---|---|
Cluster Size | 0.130 | 0.540 | 0.319 |
Indicators: | |||
The Man Is Not the Head of Family | |||
0 | 0.892 | 0.767 | 0.112 |
1 | 0.108 | 0.233 | 0.888 |
Men Are Not Better Leaders Than Women | |||
0 | 0.858 | 0.558 | 0.032 |
1 | 0.142 | 0.442 | 0.968 |
Women Can Do the Same Jobs as Men | |||
0 | 0.623 | 0.296 | 0.205 |
1 | 0.377 | 0.704 | 0.795 |
Would Like to See a Female President | |||
0 | 0.766 | 0.005 | 0.085 |
1 | 0.234 | 0.995 | 0.915 |
N | Non-Egalitarian | Publically Egalitarian | Generally Egalitarian | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Sample Mean | 1678 | 13.05% | 54.05% | 31.94% |
Catholic School | 724 | 12.71% | 46.41% *** | 40.47% *** |
Catholic Student | 986 | 10.15% ** | 52.28% | 36.95% *** |
Catholic Student in Catholic School | 613 | 11.58% | 47.31% *** | 40.78% *** |
Catholic Student in Evangelical School | 211 | 9.95% | 57.35% | 30.81% |
Catholic Student in Secular School | 161 | 4.97% ** | 64.60% ** | 30.43% |
Evangelical School | 658 | 15.50% * | 57.90% * | 24.77% *** |
Evangelical Student | 525 | 16.19% * | 59.05% * | 23.24% *** |
Evangelical Student in Evangelical School | 365 | 18.08% ** | 58.90% * | 21.37% *** |
Evangelical Student in Catholic School | 77 | 14.29% | 48.05% | 36.36% |
Evangelical Student in Secular School | 83 | 9.64% | 69.88% ** | 19.28% ** |
Secular School | 296 | 8.45% ** | 64.19% *** | 27.03% * |
Other Student | 165 | 19.39% ** | 50.30% | 29.70% |
Other Student in Secular School | 51 | 15.69% | 54.90% | 29.41% |
Other Student in Catholic School | 32 | 28.12% ** | 28.12% ** | 43.75% |
Other Student in Evangelical School | 82 | 18.29% | 56.10% | 24.39% |
Independent Variable | Description of Variable | Sample Mean or % | Cath. Schl. Mean or % |
---|---|---|---|
Catholic school | Student goes to Catholic school. | 43.10% | 100.00% |
Evangelical school | Student goes to evangelical school. | 39.30% | 0.00% |
Catholic student | Student identifies self as Catholic. | 58.90% | 85.04% |
Evangelical student | Student identifies self as evangelical. | 31.36% | 10.66% |
Cath. student in Cath. school | Student is Catholic going to a Catholic school. | 36.68% | |
Evan. student in evan. school | Student is evangelical going to an evangelical school. | 21.80% | |
Female student | Student identifies as female. | 50.33% | 54.13% |
Student grade level | Student’s grade in school (Ranges 5–9) | 7.09 (1.41) | 7.06 (1.40) |
Mother’s education | Mother’s education 0 = did not complete primary school; 1 = completed primary school; 2 = completed middle school; 3 = completed secondary school; 4 = attended university | 2.03 (1.42) | 1.96 (1.37) |
Mother is a homemaker | Student’s mother is a homemaker. | 38.05% | 37.01% |
Biblical literalism | Student strongly agrees that the Bible is inspired by God and must be accepted literally word for word. | 67.36% | 63.86% |
Christ returns soon | Student strongly agrees that Christians should not be concerned about this world because Christ will return soon to establish his kingdom. | 42.75% | 36.00% |
Church decides morals | Student strongly agrees that the church should play a key role in deciding what is right or wrong in our societies. | 35.79% | 38.62% |
Standard deviation in parenthesis |
Non-Egalitarian | Publicly Egalitarian | Generally Egalitarian | ||||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Model 1 | Model 2 | Model 1 | Model 2 | Model 1 | Model 2 | |||||||||||||
OR | SE | OR | SE | OR | SE | OR | SE | OR | SE | OR | SE | |||||||
Catholic school | 1.58 | (0.37) | 2.13 | (0.97) | 0.48 | *** | (0.08) | 0.38 | ** | (0.12) | 1.83 | ** | (0.32) | 2.07 | * | (0.71) | ||
Evangelical school | 1.99 | ** | (0.47) | 1.23 | (0.44) | 0.77 | (0.12) | 0.92 | (0.19) | 0.88 | (0.16) | 0.95 | (0.22) | |||||
Catholic student | 0.35 | ** | (0.12) | 1.44 | (0.32) | 1.15 | (0.28) | |||||||||||
Evangelical student | 0.44 | (0.20) | 2.26 | ** | (0.68) | 0.60 | (0.19) | |||||||||||
Cath. student in Cath. School | 0.76 | (0.39) | 1.37 | (0.48) | 0.83 | (0.31) | ||||||||||||
Evan. student in Evan. School | 2.40 | (1.25) | 0.57 | (0.19) | 1.14 | (0.42) | ||||||||||||
Female student | 0.31 | *** | (0.06) | 1.08 | (0.13) | 1.63 | *** | (0.21) | ||||||||||
Student grade level | 0.86 | * | (0.06) | 0.92 | (0.04) | 1.19 | *** | (0.05) | ||||||||||
Mother’s education | 1.07 | (0.07) | 1.03 | (0.04) | 0.93 | (0.04) | ||||||||||||
Mother is a homemaker | 1.03 | (0.20) | 0.96 | (0.12) | 1.04 | (0.14) | ||||||||||||
Biblical literalism | 0.60 | * | (0.12) | 1.30 | * | (0.17) | 0.95 | (0.13) | ||||||||||
Christ returns soon | 0.95 | (0.19) | 1.21 | (0.15) | 0.79 | (0.11) | ||||||||||||
Church decides morals | 0.73 | (0.15) | 1.57 | *** | (0.20) | 0.69 | ** | (0.10) | ||||||||||
N | 1678 | 1315 | 1678 | 1315 | 1678 | 1315 | ||||||||||||
Wald chi-square | 8.90 | 76.11 | 26.89 | 64.39 | 29.43 | 87.64 |
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Mather, D.M. Gender Attitudes in Religious Schools: A Comparative Study of Religious and Secular Private Schools in Guatemala. Religions 2018, 9, 219. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel9070219
Mather DM. Gender Attitudes in Religious Schools: A Comparative Study of Religious and Secular Private Schools in Guatemala. Religions. 2018; 9(7):219. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel9070219
Chicago/Turabian StyleMather, Darin M. 2018. "Gender Attitudes in Religious Schools: A Comparative Study of Religious and Secular Private Schools in Guatemala" Religions 9, no. 7: 219. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel9070219
APA StyleMather, D. M. (2018). Gender Attitudes in Religious Schools: A Comparative Study of Religious and Secular Private Schools in Guatemala. Religions, 9(7), 219. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel9070219