Sharon Churnin Nash
Stanford University
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Featured researches published by Sharon Churnin Nash.
Sex Roles | 1984
S. Shirley Feldman; Sharon Churnin Nash
In this short-term longitudinal study, 31 middle-class primigravidae and their husbands were seen once during the last trimester of pregnancy and again when their infants were 6 months old. At both times, a common core of self-assessment instruments was administered: mood scales, social change ratings, anticipation/experience of parenthood, and a modified Bem satisfaction scale. Some additional items were given at parenthood. For both men and women, expectancy was marked by optimism and contentment, despite some emotional and physical strain. Similarly, as parents of an infant, subjects rated the experience as highly positive. However, the transition to parenthood involved major role upheaval with both more positive and more negative changes reported by women than men. Despite these changes, women displayed considerable stability in mood and self-satisfaction over time and situation. In contrast, measures of the anticipation and self-reported experience of parenthood revealed no consistency for women; the types of mothers they turned out to be were unrelated to their expectations. Men successfully predicted their parenting behavior on more than half of the dimensions measured. The results were discussed in terms of the stresses inherent in role changes encountered during transitions from one stage of life to the next.
Sex Roles | 1980
Sharon Churnin Nash; S. Shirley Feldman
Responsivity to babies was observed in 96 mature adults representative of three junctures of parenthood: parents of infants, parents of 8-to-9-year-olds, and parents of adolescents. Among the measures used were reactions to an unfamiliar infant in a waiting room, interest in pictures of babies versus other objects, and sex-role concept and attitudinal questionnaires. Stage of family life cycle affected womens responsivity, but not mens. New mothers displayed a heightened generalized interest in babies which is optimally timed and functional in terms of sex-differentiated role requirements. A possible confounding between cohort effects and stage in the family life cycle was examined and rejected. Traditionally sex-typed behaviors were reinterpreted as life-situation specific rather than general traits.
Child Development | 1978
Deanna Kuhn; Sharon Churnin Nash; Laura Brucken
Child Development | 1983
S. Shirley Feldman; Sharon Churnin Nash; Barbara G. Aschenbrenner
Developmental Psychology | 1978
Barbara Abrahams; S. Shirley Feldman; Sharon Churnin Nash
Sex Roles | 1975
Sharon Churnin Nash
Developmental Psychology | 1981
S. Shirley Feldman; Zeynep Biringen; Sharon Churnin Nash
Child Development | 1978
S. Shirley Feldman; Sharon Churnin Nash
Developmental Psychology | 1977
S. Shirley Feldman; Sharon Churnin Nash; Carolyn E. Cutrona
Developmental Psychology | 1979
S. Shirley Feldman; Sharon Churnin Nash