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Showing all 13 results Save | Export
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Han, Pi-Chi – Adult Learning, 2022
In 2020, more than 560,617 female marriage migrants (FMMs) live in Taiwan. For over three decades, they have been victims of social, gender, and cultural discrimination and have been considered as an inferior group of "desirable others" from "undeveloped countries." Until today, literature about FMMs has focused on the problems…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Females, Marriage, Spouses
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Lin, Shumin – Anthropology & Education Quarterly, 2015
Drawing on 15 months of fieldwork in Taiwan, this article analyzes circulating discourses and practices across heterogeneous scales that conflate Taiwanese minority-language elders with foreign brides as nonmodern and childlike. The assiduous production and reproduction of historically and geographically displaced linguistic Others is part and…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Discourse Analysis, Language Minorities, Older Adults
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Chou, Yueh-Ching; Wang, Shih-Chih; Chang, Heng-Hao; Fu, Li-Yeh – Journal of Intellectual & Developmental Disability, 2014
Background: Earlier research shows that nonemployed mothers of children with intellectual disability (ID) have lower wellbeing than employed mothers. This study explored why and to what extent these mothers did not participate in the labour market. Method: An in-depth interview was employed, and 18 working-age and nonemployed mothers in Taiwan who…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Mothers, Unemployment, Adults
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Chen, Hui-Hua; Liang, Yi-Ching; Gapp, Susan C.; Newland, Lisa A.; Giger, Jarod T.; Lin, Chunn-Ying – Journal of Experimental Education, 2017
This study measured aspects of the couple relationship to examine direct and indirect relations with parental involvement in education and children's school outcomes. The sample (n = 100) consisted of families that have at least one child between the ages of 8 and 11 in urban central Taiwan. Findings indicated that couple relationship quality is…
Descriptors: Spouses, Interpersonal Relationship, Outcomes of Education, Parent Participation
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Wang, Li-Fen – Novitas-ROYAL (Research on Youth and Language), 2014
This paper aims to identify how Taiwanese and Mandarin (the two dominant languages in Taiwan) are used as interactional resources by Vietnamese female spouses in bilingual Taiwanese families. Three Vietnamese-Taiwanese transnational families (a total of seventeen people) participated in the research, and mealtime talks among the Vietnamese wives…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Immigrants, Females, Language Usage
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Chen, Lung Hung; Li, Tsui-Shan – Social Indicators Research, 2012
Role balance theory proposed that a well-organized self-system, rather than a salient hierarchy role, contributes to individual psychological well-being. However, research on role balance focuses only on the intrapersonal process without regard for the interpersonal process on the spouse's well-being. Furthermore, previous studies were all…
Descriptors: Marital Satisfaction, Measures (Individuals), Foreign Countries, Role Perception
Kang, Hsin-Ru – ProQuest LLC, 2014
Due to the impact of Confucianism on Taiwanese society, Taiwanese married women play multiple family roles including being a daughter-in-law, wife, mother, and working woman. Having to play multiple roles usually brings Taiwanese married women burdens and stress. It is reported that Zen meditation improves people's physical and mental wellbeing.…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Females, Asian Culture, Cultural Influences
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Wu, Ya-Ling; Wu, Hsing-Chen – Adult Education Quarterly: A Journal of Research and Theory, 2015
Based on a sociocultural approach to adult learning and poststructural feminist theories, this study draws on interviews with 11 married Vietnamese women to explore the higher education learning experiences of Vietnamese immigrant women in Taiwan. On the basis of their husbands' permission and support, Vietnamese immigrant women embraced the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Womens Education, Females, Higher Education
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Lu, Luo – Journal of Career Development, 2011
The aim of this research was to explore demographic, familial, and attitudinal correlates of Taiwanese women's employment status. Using data from a representative nationwide sample of female workers aged 21 and above (N = 1,047), the author found that (a) the employment rate of females decreased steadily with age, with no sign of reentry into the…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Employment Level, Family Income, Females
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Wu, Tsui-Feng; Yeh, Kuang-Hui; Cross, Susan E.; Larson, Lisa M.; Wang, Yi-Chao; Tsai, Yi-Lin – Counseling Psychologist, 2010
This study applies social support theory to the question of whether four types of husband behavior (taking the wife's side, problem solving, ignoring conflict, and taking the mother's side) moderate the association between conflict with the mother-in-law and a Taiwanese woman's marital satisfaction. Data were collected from 125 married Taiwanese…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Females, Spouses, Mothers
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Lu, Luo – International Journal of Aging and Human Development, 2010
The aim of this research was twofold: to examine the prevalence of employment and under-employment among Taiwanese older workers (aged 50 and above), and to explore personal correlates of their employment status, in particular gender and education. Using a national representative sample, we found that: 1) a rather substantial percentage of people…
Descriptors: Employment Level, Family Income, Hygiene, Multivariate Analysis
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Sun, Shirley Hsiao-Li – Childhood: A Global Journal of Child Research, 2008
How does the presence of grandparents in the household impact the gendered division of childcare responsibilities between spouses? How does it compare with market-based care? Drawing on in-depth interview data, this study finds that Taiwanese grandparents treat childcare assistance as their moral responsibility. Mothers express more appreciation…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Grandparents, Child Care, Attitudes
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Hsieh, Kuang-Hua; Burgess, Robert L. – Journal of Family Issues, 1994
Examines differences in marital role attitudes and expected behavior among unmarried college students in mainland China (n=288) and Taiwan (n=339) by comparing survey responses on four dimensions of marital role attitudes and six areas of traditional husband and wife role behaviors. Hypotheses were generally supported with some exceptions.…
Descriptors: Attitudes, College Students, Cultural Differences, Family Life