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Journal of Applied Gerontology
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Youth's Attitudes Toward the Elderly

Gregory F. Sanders

James E. Montgomery

Joe F. Pittman, Jr.

Carolyn Balkwell

This paper examines the attitudes of 35 male and 122 female college students toward six target groups of elderly individuals: males and females aged 65-74, 75-99 and 100 or older. A twenty-item semantic differential scale was used. Findings support the conclusion that the elderly are perceived as a heterogeneous group with age being an important discriminator, and with gender being less potent but, nevertheless, important. Older target groups were perceived less favorably than younger target groups, but actual values of attitude scores indicate that the least favorable means were in a neutral affect range rather than the more extreme negative range of possible scores. Finally, the effects of several characteristics of respondents on attitudes toward the elderly were examined. Only modest differences were found, suggesting that perceived differences between target groups are widely shared. Implications are discussed.

Journal of Applied Gerontology, Vol. 3, No. 1, 59-70 (1984)
DOI: 10.1177/073346488400300107


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This article has been cited by other articles:


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Journal of Applied GerontologyHome page
R. H. Aday, C. R. Sims, and E. Evans
Youth's Attitudes Toward the Elderly: the Impact of Intergenerational Partners
Journal of Applied Gerontology, September 1, 1991; 10(3): 372 - 384.
[Abstract] [PDF]


Home page
Journal of Applied GerontologyHome page
G. F. Sanders and J. F. Pittman
Attitudes of Youth Toward Known and General Target Elderly
Journal of Applied Gerontology, January 1, 1987; 6(4): 464 - 475.
[Abstract] [PDF]