In-Person Versus Internet Training: A Comparison of Student Attitudes Toward Homosexuality
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Lorraine J. Guth
, David F. Lopez and Manda S. Fisher
The present study investigated the influence of training modality on attitudes toward lesbian and gay issues. In a short-term longitudinal design (pre-test, post-test, follow-up), 87 undergraduate and graduate students were randomly assigned to one of three workshop modalities (In-Person, Internet, Control) following pre-test. Participants completed a post-test immediately after the training and a follow-up assessment three weeks later. Analyses revealed that both modalities (In-Person Training and Internet Training), when compared to the Control group, resulted in substantial reductions in levels of homophobia following training. Furthermore, these reductions in homophobia remained stable from the post-test to the follow-up testing. Finally, analyses suggest that changes in participants levels of positive affect, during and following training, may play a central role in the effectiveness of both training interventions. Implications for student affairs professionals and directions for future research are discussed.This study is supported by a diversity grant from the National Association of Student Personnel Administrators and the Ford Foundation awarded to Lorraine J. Guth and David F. Lopez. Special thanks go to Andrea L. Short for providing helpful editorial comments.
©2011 Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co. KG, Berlin/Boston
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Articles in the same Issue
- Article
- Learning the FACTS in New York City: Future Administrators Cultural Training
- The Influence Of Alcohol Advertising on Students' Drinking Behaviors
- Student and Faculty Perceptions of Behaviors that Constitute Cheating
- The Student Handbook, Federal Law and Electronic Technology
- A Qualitative Exploration of the First-Year Experience of Latino College Students
- The Impact of Community Service Involvement on Three Measures of Undergraduate Self-Concept
- A Study of Undergraduate Persistence by Unmet Need and Percentage of Gift Aid
- The Impact of Diversity and Multiculturalism on All Students: Findings from a National Study
- In-Person Versus Internet Training: A Comparison of Student Attitudes Toward Homosexuality
- Campus Diversity: Implementing the Town Hall Approach for Racial and Cultural Understanding at a Predominantly White University