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Barnett, Rosalind Chait; Gareis, Karen C.; Sabattini, Laura; Carter, Nancy M. – Journal of Family Issues, 2010
Most employed parents, many in dual-earner couples, are at work when their children get out of school, generating parental concerns about children's welfare after school. Parental concerns are hypothesized to be related to respondent and partner work hours, respondent schedule control, and child's unsupervised time and to give rise to job…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Employed Parents, Latchkey Children, Working Hours
Barnett, Rosalind Chait; Gareis, Karen C. – Journal of Family Issues, 2009
Several scholars have noted that community resources might facilitate or hinder employees' ability to meet their many work and family demands, thereby affecting their psychological well-being. However, this is the first study to estimate these relationships using a newly developed quantitative measure of community resource fit that assesses the…
Descriptors: Employed Parents, Psychology, Fathers, Well Being
Gareis, Karen C.; Barnett, Rosalind Chait; Ertel, Karen A.; Berkman, Lisa F. – Journal of Marriage and Family, 2009
We used data from the Midlife Development in the United States (MIDUS I) (N = 2,031) to compare three models of how work-family conflict and enrichment might operate to predict well-being (mental health, life satisfaction, affect balance, partner relationship quality). We found no support for a relative-difference model in which the…
Descriptors: Life Satisfaction, Conflict, Enrichment Activities, Family Work Relationship
Barnett, Rosalind Chait; Gareis, Karen C. – Journal of Family Issues, 2007
Many U.S. employees with children work nonstandard hours, yet we know little about the linkages among maternal shift schedules, mothers' and fathers' parenting behaviors, and children's socioemotional outcomes. In a sample of 55 dual-earner families with children age 8 to 14 years and mothers working day versus evening shifts, the authors found…
Descriptors: Parent Child Relationship, Working Hours, Parenting Skills, Mothers

Barnett, Rosalind Chait; Gareis, Karen C.; James, Jacquelyn Boone; Steele, Jennifer – Journal of Vocational Behavior, 2003
Analysis of data from 234 college seniors supported the social-role theory hypothesis. Those whose mothers had worked outside the home were less concerned about career-marriage conflict. Those who planned to delay having a family had fewer concerns about conflict. (Contains 55 references.) (SK)
Descriptors: College Seniors, Employed Women, Expectation, Family Work Relationship
Barnett, Rosalind Chait; Gareis, Karen C. – Journal of Marriage and Family, 2006
The mismatch between employed parents' work schedules and their children's school schedules creates the structural underpinning for an as-yet-unstudied stressor, namely, parental after-school stress, or the degree of parents' concern about their children's welfare after school. We estimate the relationship between parental after-school stress and…
Descriptors: School Schedules, Elementary Secondary Education, Working Hours, Employed Parents
Barnett, Rosalind Chait; Gareis, Karen C.; James, Jacquelyn Boone; Steele, Jennifer – 2001
Recent research suggests that working men experience as much work-family conflict as women do. More men are doing housework and childcare, and feel that family is as important as their work. An attempt was made to determine how college seniors view their potential for managing work-family conflict. College students (N=324) attending a private…
Descriptors: College Seniors, Employed Women, Family Influence, Family Work Relationship