Publication | Closed Access
Endurance of Undergraduate Attitudes Toward Older Adults
77
Citations
33
References
2006
Year
Adult LearningAgingAging ProcessGeriatricsHealthy AgingLongevityEducationAttitude Endurance 3Later AdulthoodCross-sectional StudyActive AgeingGerontologyMedicineLifespan AgingPsychologyUndergraduate AttitudesElderly Wellbeing
This cross-sectional study assessed undergraduate attitudes toward older adults and attitude endurance 3 to 18 months after aging coursework. Survey respondents included 349 students who took an aging elective and 430 comparison students. Aging-elective students indicated more positive attitudes than comparison students. Attitudes did not vary across 3 groups staggered by time elapsed from completing the course until testing (3 to 18 months). 4 variables accounted for the variance in attitudes toward elders at a statistically significant level: majoring in biology, having frequent or occasional contact with unrelated older adults, taking an aging course, and post-course knowledge of aging.
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