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Ganguly, Sriti – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2022
The paper argues that the mother's association with the child's schooling and educational needs is not just limited and peculiar to the middle-class families, as the literature suggests, but it is increasingly true of poor and working-class families too. This paper discusses how mothers from a poor neighbourhood in India straddle between household…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Mothers, Poverty, Family Work Relationship
Ruchi Saini – Current Issues in Comparative Education, 2023
This exploratory study analyzes six female school teachers' narratives of navigating increased care work at home with online teaching during COVID-19 in India. A theoretical framework of decolonizing feminist research, with an emphasis on moving beyond Anglo/Eurocentric forms of feminist knowledge-making, frames the study. Based on the interviews,…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Females, Women Faculty, Online Courses
Mustafa Koc; Betul Boztepe – International Society for Technology, Education, and Science, 2024
There are many roles that women play in their lives. The most important of these roles is being a mother. The mother has to deal with other roles and responsibilities in her life. She wants to be successful in her working life, have healthy communication with her baby, and fulfill her responsibilities for the needs of her home. It causes some…
Descriptors: Infants, Mothers, Parent Child Relationship, Employed Parents
Thébaud, Sarah; Kornrich, Sabino; Ruppanner, Leah – Sociological Methods & Research, 2021
Gender remains a key predictor of housework in modern society. However, previous studies have been relatively limited in their ability to adjudicate between possible mechanisms operating at the individual and social-interactional level that may cause this relationship. To address this gap, we employ a novel experimental design in which respondents…
Descriptors: Gender Differences, Housework, Sex Role, Comparative Analysis
Parks, Kathrin A. – Peabody Journal of Education, 2022
As institutions across the country rushed to adjust to the realities of the spread of the COVID-19 virus, faculty parents were left to decipher how to manage childcare and their professional responsibilities while working remotely. Balancing work and home is a problem that has yet to be solved for working parents, especially working mothers. This…
Descriptors: COVID-19, School Closing, Educational Change, Online Courses
Horta, Hugo; Tang, Li – Higher Education Quarterly, 2023
This article explores the experiences of male and female academics in China's higher education system concerning career progression and examines how they perceive the challenges faced by the opposite gender. Our analysis of interviews with 40 academics from a research university revealed that academics' experience of career progression is informed…
Descriptors: Gender Differences, College Faculty, Career Development, Work Environment
Nartgun, Senay Sezgin; Tunc, Emine; Ergun, Elif – Journal on Educational Psychology, 2020
This study aims to articulate the views of women academicians regarding the difficulties of being a woman academician and the support of a spouse. The research was conducted with case study design. Twenty married women academicians participated in the study. The results of the study demonstrate that women academicians experience societal, family…
Descriptors: Women Faculty, College Faculty, Spouses, Family Work Relationship
Cabero, Ismael; Epifanio, Irene – Education Sciences, 2021
This paper presents a snapshot of the distribution of time that Spanish academic staff spend on different tasks. We carry out a statistical exploratory study by analyzing the responses provided in a survey of 703 Spanish academic staff in order to draw a clear picture of the current situation. This analysis considers many factors, including…
Descriptors: Gender Differences, Faculty Workload, Foreign Countries, College Faculty
Moreau, Marie-Pierre – Gender and Education, 2020
This article draws primarily on a dataset of 60 semi-structured interviews conducted with teachers working in English and French state-funded secondary schools. Informed by feminist sociological theories of work and education and a cross-national comparative perspective, it explores the mechanisms leading to the production of gender inequalities…
Descriptors: Teacher Attitudes, Sex Fairness, Secondary School Teachers, Feminism
Heijstra, Thamar M.; Einarsdóttir, Þorgerður; Pétursdóttir, Gyða M.; Steinþórsdóttir, Finnborg S. – European Educational Research Journal, 2017
In the labour market women's jobs have frequently been conceptually and literally tied to housework and hence thought of as unskilled and therefore undervalued. Although academic institutions have undergone changes, the fact that women still carry the main responsibility for domestic and caring tasks continues to follow them into the academic work…
Descriptors: Housework, Labor Market, Gender Differences, Caring
Lam, Chun Bun; Greene, Kaylin M.; McHale, Susan M. – Developmental Psychology, 2016
The developmental course, family correlates, and adjustment implications of youth housework participation from age 8-18 were examined. Mothers, fathers, and 2 siblings from 201 European American families provided questionnaire and/or daily diary data on 6 occasions across 7 years. Multilevel modeling within an accelerated longitudinal design…
Descriptors: Parent Child Relationship, Parents, Adolescents, Working Hours
Kuhhirt, Michael; Ludwig, Volker – Journal of Marriage and Family, 2012
Previous research suggests that household tasks prohibit women from unfolding their full earning potential by depleting their work effort and limiting their time flexibility. The present study investigated whether this relationship can explain the wage gap between mothers and nonmothers in West Germany. The empirical analysis applied fixed-effects…
Descriptors: Wages, Mothers, Salary Wage Differentials, Foreign Countries
Cummings, Katrina P.; Hardin, Belinda J.; Meadan, Hedda – Rural Special Education Quarterly, 2017
Understanding the contexts in which young children develop is essential for promoting positive outcomes. In this study, the researchers used focus groups to investigate the perspectives of 14 parents across rural North Carolina concerning ecocultural features that enhanced or prevented sustained engagement with their infants and toddlers with…
Descriptors: Focus Groups, Parent Attitudes, Rural Areas, Infants
Schober, Pia S. – Journal of Family Issues, 2013
This study investigates whether gender inequality in the division of housework and child care may be an obstacle to childbearing and relationship stability among different groups of British couples. Furthermore, it explores whether outsourcing of domestic labor ameliorates any negative effects of domestic work inequality. The empirical…
Descriptors: Females, Employment Level, Child Care, Foreign Countries
Ornstein, Michael; Stalker, Glenn J. – Journal of Family Issues, 2013
Based on the 2006 Canadian Census "long form" sample of one in every five households, the authors develop a detailed typology of family strategies for employment and the care of preschool children. The analysis is restricted to opposite-sex couples with at least one child under age 6 and no older child or other adult in the household.…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Employment Patterns, Preschool Children, Employed Parents