Publication | Closed Access
Effects of Age, Sex, and University Status on Life-Satisfaction
33
Citations
21
References
1994
Year
Quality Of LifeLife SatisfactionStatus AttainmentUniversity StatusSubjective Well-beingLongevityGender StudiesSociologyLater AdulthoodLife CourseSexual OrientationHigher EducationSocial SciencesLife ScaleMaturity Trends
Diener, et al.'s 1985 Satisfaction With Life Scale was administered to 1749 adult Australians to examine differences between men and women, university students and nonuniversity students, and among 17- to 22-, 23- to 29-, and 30- to 40-yr.-olds. No significant differences in life-satisfaction emerged in relation to sex or university status, but age showed a significant effect as higher life-satisfaction characterized older subjects. No interactions were found for any combination of the three variables. The results are interpreted in terms of egalitarian sex-role ideologies regarding sex, status-specific criteria in the assessment and conceptualisation of life-satisfaction for university status, and maturity trends in viewing life events concerning age.
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