The Family, Work and Roles
AMERICAN FAMILY TODAY
2000 Census – typical American family is now a dual-earner family
58.6% of children under 6 – both parents working
55% of mothers with children under 1 year old were working or looking for work
31% in 1976
(Image courtesy of stockimages/FreeDigitalPhotos.net)
Women as Full-Time Homemakers
39.8% of females aged 16 and over and 38.7% of marriage women with a husband did not work outside of the home (2000)
Low-status
Low prestige
Low economic value (unpaid; devalued)
Least fulfilling and least recognition
Would be extremely expensive to pay for these services
THE INVISIBLE OCCUPATION
“Do you work?”
“No, I’m just a housewife”
Lonely, boring, and repetitive
Traditional gender attitudes – does not seem unfair to these individuals
Wives’ perceptions of the fairness of division of labor –marital conflict
Children’s contributions – little unless parent is in poor health
Conflict and feminist perspective – unequal division of labor
“HIS” marriage is better then “HER” marriage (Jessie Bernard)
More wives marital frustration, dissatisfaction, negative feelings, and marital problems) p. 86
Positive views were inversely related to level of education (college educated, young wives)
Employed Wives and Mothers
60.2% of all females aged 16 and over were employed (2000)
Majority of the female labor force is married
Divorced mothers with children of school age have higher employment rates
Biggest increase: married women with at least one child under age 6.
Government policy shift – welfare
SHOULD SOCIETY BE CONCERNED?
Female Labor Force Participation |
||
Year |
Number |
Percent of female population |
1940 |
13,840 |
27.4 |
1950 |
17,795 |
31.4 |
1960 |
22,516 |
34.8 |
1970 |
31,233 |
42.6 |
1980 |
45,487 |
51.5 |
1990 |
56,829 |
57.5 |
2000 |
65,616 |
60.2 |
Source: U.S. Bureau of the Census
Projection by 2008:
Women 48% of the labor force
Men 52% of the labor force
CAUSES OF INCREASED LABOR FORCE PARTICIPATION
Changes in the Economy (manufacturing to service economy; women in service jobs)
Economic need (inflation, interest rates, unemployment, shrinking wages)
Maintaining a standard of living
Contributing to family income (two incomes to survive)
Personal Fulfillment (economic independence…allowance, ketchup)
Employed Women and Motherhood
Majority: have jobs prior to pregnancy, leave job as pregnancy progresses,…
Women who retain their jobs show some decline in hours at work
Paid Leave: resumed to work sooner
Lower hourly pay than non-mothers
Wage penalty of 7% per child
Lose job experience and seniority due to employment breaks
Less productive at work
Trade off high-stress, higher-wage jobs for more mother-friendly ones that pay less
Employment discrimination
Lower earning potential have more children
Employed Wives and Mothers
Effects of female employment on marriage and
intimate partnerships varies
Affects marriage negatively if nonntraditional gender ideologies held by women
Husbands do not share equally in the division of household labor
Women with nontraditional gender ideologies: decrease in marital satisfaction, increase in marital conflict, and more likely to have marital disruption
Marriage is improved when husband is supportive and wife has more freedom from child-rearing responsibilities
Review of twenty-seven studies: wife’s employment status alone appears to have little or no effect on marital adjustment
Shifts in power, wife is employed, wife’s power
Employed: gains income, independence, and new contacts (resources)
Differs cross-culturally
When male partners are not employed the risk of spousal abuse is increased (economic insecurity of unemployed men)
Middle years – full employment
“SUPERMOM” SYNDROME
Mothers who remain heavily involved with family responsibilities while also meeting the demands of paid employment
Women’s life satisfaction is slightly greater
Equity à life satisfaction
Women complain about imbalances in division of household labor
ROLE CONFLICT AND STRAIN
Major sources of strain: individual, family-related, and work-related
ROLE STRAIN: woman’s own conflict over the fact that she is working
If prefers to be at home but has to work
OR
Nontraditional gender-role attitudes but who fill a traditional homemaker role
More young children the more stress
Guilt
Strain of having to fulfill too many roles at once
MARITAL ADJUSTMENT
Both partners take responsibility for supporting the family à marital satisfaction for husbands and wives (Wilkie, Ferree, and Ratcliff, 1998)
EGALITARIAN IDEOLOGY
Equitable relationship: fair balance of rewards and constraints for both spouses is the key
GENDER-ROLE ATTITUDES AND ROLE EXPECTATIONS
LONGITUDINAL STUDY
Gap in dual-earner couples
Husbands experienced lower marital quality if their spouses earned more than they earned
Employed Husbands and Fathers
74.7% of all males aged 16 and over were employed in the labor force (2000)
Number increased but proportion has decreased
Females: number and proportion increased
Boy asked what he wants to be when he grows up?
Is work their major source of identity?
Husbands unemployment: self-esteem, personal functioning, and marital and family relationships
Jeffry Larson: blue-collar families, lower marital adjustment, poorer marital communication, and lower satisfaction and harmony in family relations
NON-PARENT
NON-FATHER
Role overload: long hours and high overload
Less positive father-adolescent relationships
Work: “home away from home”
Women are likely to gain status and identity through marriage, men are often “married to their work” and gain their status and identity accordingly
Dual-Earner Families
A family in which both spouses are in the paid labor force
Traditionally female, lower-paid professions of teaching and nursing
Positive Benefits:
Sense of success and accomplishment – balancing work and family
Added income, social support, increased self-complexity, and varied opportunities to experience success
Dual-Career Marriages
Career: level of commitment and continuous development that offers personal and material rewards
DUAL PROFESSIONAL FAMILY
Increasing female access to high-level professions and managerial positions, norms of gender equality, employment motivations centering on self-development and interpersonal relationships more than on economics alone
More likely to be single, married with no children, or divorced as a consequence of their career involvement than men
ISSUES: Role strain, travel, and child care
WORK AND STRESS
Work-family spillover: the extent to which participation in one domain (e.g., work) impacts participation in another domain (e.g., family)
EX: job stress affects the parents’ marriage and their relationship with their children
Leads to both job and life dissatisfaction
Stressful jobs – periods of separation from family and time-consuming so that one cannot spend any quality time with the family
Difficulty in meeting work and family demands: depression and family conflict
SUCCESSFUL FAMILIES FOR BALANCING WORK AND FAMILY
Haddock and colleagues (2001)
àà
Needed: MORE TIME
Average full-time employee’s workweek (43 hours per week)
Black families 9.4 hours more
Hispanic families 5 hours more
Long work hours – negative consequences – balance the demands
STUDY: Fortune 500 company (Crouter, Bumpus, Head, and McHale, 2001)
513 employees
Long work hours assoaciated with increased work-family conflict and psychological distress
STUDY: Crouter and colleagues (2001)
Men’s relationships with their spouse and children
More hours worked, less time spent with spouse and family
Less-positive marital relationships
BARRIER
Schedule – difficult for members to be together
NON-OVERLAPPING SHIFT
Save on child care costs
Little time for the marital relationship
Caring for the children alone
Divorce is common
FLEXTIME
A company policy that allows employees to choose the most convenient hours for them to work during the day, selected from hours designated by the employer.
Job flexibility plays an important role in the family
Work satisfaction and increased family well-being
Data: many companies still don’t offer job sharing, telecommuting, flexplace…
24% of companies allow employees to bring children to work in an emergency
5% have on-site child care
68% had flexible starting and stopping times, but only 24% allowed this change on a daily basis
55% of companies allowed employees to work at home occasionally
Many do not take advantage of this because they believe effects promotion
SCALING BACK: placing limits on the amount of work, having a –one-job, one-career marriage, and trading off of family and career responsibilities over the life course
STUDY: women who leave the labor force (even for a short time) have more difficulty with career advancement and salary gains if they decide to return to the labor force.
Hertz: MOTHERING APPROACH (assumes the best person to raise children is the wife, who should be with them at home.
PARENTING APPROACH: make both parents full participants in the care of children; shift work or employment during nonstandard hours on the part of parents
MARKETING APPROACH: hiring other people to care for one’s children
Day care
Effects on the child
Differences explained less by the mother’s working than by other factors: social class, part or full-time employment, age of the child, mothers’ attitude toward employment, and other social and psychological factors
Hold high-status jobs: positive effects on children’s schooling, better in school, complete high school, enter college, and complete a degree
Bring more resources to home and family
Decreased time spend with children: less traditionally defined child-care time, parent-child shared housework and leisure time increase, self-esteem, educational attainment, delay of childbearing, and older age and maturity
Socioemotional development (Jay Belsky)
First or second year of the child’s life scored more poorly on a compliance component of adjustment
Behavior problems, insecurity, sociability, and inhibition – no negative effects
Degree to which child care is sensitive and responsive
Latchkey children: self-care
Cain and Hofferth: fewer than populary believed (about 2.4 million): short period fo time each day, not the children of low-income, single parents who cannot afford stable child-care arrangements
Alternate child-care arrangements: great economic cost
Work-related costs, advantage over single earners is decreased by as much as 68%
HOUSEWORK AND CHILD CARE
1965 – spent 27 hours per week on cooking and cleaning
1995 – 15 ½ hours per week
Men: doubled their housework time since the 1960s (few hours per week to slightly over 5 hours per week TO almost 1/3 of the housework)
DATA à
Today – fathers are expected to share in the responsibilities, especially in dual-earner families
Still do not do as much
Enhanced marital relations and closer father-child bonds
Husband assume increased responsibility for household tasks when:
High levels of education
Have wives with educational levels similar to theirs
Have egalitarian attitudes about gender and family roles
Are in, along with their wives, professional or managerial occupations
Earn about the same rather than significantly more than their wives
Have somewhat different work schedules than their wives
Men as Full-Time Homemakers
Traditionally: provide economic support through paid employment
Role differentiation: male external needs, female internal needs of the family
Male avoidance of housework and child care strategy to maintain power over women
Single parent fathers, fathers deliberately holding part time jobs, single adoptive fathers, and full time male homemakers: men assume major household and child-care duties
No major trend toward full-time male homemakers, but increased participation of men in household and child-care tasks
Commuter Marriage
Husband and wife live separately
Today, woman’s career aspirations unwillingness to divorce or relocate
Traditional option< wife give up her job to live with the other
Views on commuter marriage are pessimistic
Actually more satisfied with their life work and time they had for themselves, fewer overloads, less stressful lifestyle, independence, greater self-sufficiency, and enhanced appreciation for spouse and family
More dissatisfied with family life and lack of emotional support and companionship
Telephone and email
Time together was planned
About admin
Teaching Sociology is very enjoyable for me. Sociology is like a gateway to a plethora of knowledge and understanding. The subject material is directly applicable to real-world events and situations found in everyday life. The methods and concepts of sociology yield powerful insights into the social processes shaping the contemporary world. The ability to identify and understand these processes is valuable preparation for professional participation in an ever changing and complex society.Related Posts
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