NotesFAQContact Us
Collection
Advanced
Search Tips
Showing 1 to 15 of 57 results Save | Export
Rosenwasser, Shirley Miller; Patterson, William – 1984
Research indicates that the family roles of men are slowly changing, with a small minority of those sampled having primary childcare/household duties. To examine the background, life satisfaction, motives, and personality traits of such men, 16 married, male adults, whose wives were employed outside the home, and who had over 50% of the…
Descriptors: Adults, Family Characteristics, Homemakers, Life Satisfaction
Unger, Rhoda K.; Krooth, Diane M. – 1974
This study explored the extent of negative attitudes toward success among housewives by means of objective and projective tests. Since married women with families constitute the majority of women over 25, the authors found it important to determine how prevalent negative attitudes toward personal achievement in women were among them. Fifty-three…
Descriptors: Activism, Attitudes, Females, Homemakers
Barresi, Charles M.; Smerglia, Virginia L. – 1988
The number of male primary caregivers has increased as social change has reduced the availability of female family members to fulfill the caregiving role. This study examined the perceived and actual role of caregiver by older men, especially in homemaker activities, and how this aspect of the caregiving role is impacted by age. Subjects (N=74)…
Descriptors: Adjustment (to Environment), Caregivers, Homemakers, Homemaking Skills
Keating, Norah C.; Cole, Priscilla – 1979
Retirement is a life cycle phase most couples can now expect to experience. Research on retirement has been directed primarily toward the impact of retirement on the retiree, rather than on the marital dyad. Qualitative and quantitative changes that women experience were investigated, with regards to their role as wife in response to their…
Descriptors: Family Role, Foreign Countries, Gerontology, Homemakers
Engel, John W. – 1986
This study describes the attitudes of Japanese housewives toward women's employment, and compares them with those of American housewives. A questionnaire was designed to assess beliefs and attitudes related to women's roles in work and family life. It was translated into Japanese for purposes of comparison. Questionnaires were administered to over…
Descriptors: Cross Cultural Studies, Cultural Differences, Employed Women, Employment
Eagly, Alice H. – 1984
The reason that people think women and men differ in their general qualities may be that the two sexes tend to be observed in different social roles. To explore the sources of stereotypes about men and women several experiments were conducted. Most of the studies involved randomly selected college students who were presented with a description of…
Descriptors: Employees, Homemakers, Personality Traits, Sex Differences
Gunter, Nancy C.; Gunter, B. G. – 1989
This study examined the relationship of gender, sex role orientation, and work attitudes to the domestic division of labor in 141 working couples. Couples completed the Bem Sex Role Inventory and a questionnaire on the performance of household tasks. Analysis of variance (ANOVA) confirmed that working women performed a disproportionately larger…
Descriptors: Conflict, Dual Career Family, Homemakers, Role Perception
PDF pending restoration PDF pending restoration
Adams, Carol H.; Sherer, Mark – 1980
Some research has found that masculinity is associated with equally good, if not better, adjustment than androgyny. The relationship between gender-role orientation and psychological adjustment was examined using female college students and upper-middle-class housewives to test the hypothesis that masculine and androgynous women from both samples…
Descriptors: Adjustment (to Environment), Age Differences, Androgyny, College Students
Etaugh, Claire; Nekolny, Karen – 1988
The increasing participation of women in the labor force has generated research concerning how employed women are perceived by others. Less research has been done concerning how working mothers, particularly those with very young children, are perceived. This study examined how adults viewed working mothers or young children and investigated…
Descriptors: Competence, Divorce, Employed Parents, Homemakers
Eagly, Alice H.; And Others – 1982
In applying a social structural analysis of stereotyping to people's beliefs about gender, two issues must be confronted: (1) What is the content of stereotypes about men and women? and (2) What are the major differences in the ways that men and women are distributed into social roles? In part, the distribution of females and males into social…
Descriptors: Adults, Employees, Females, Homemakers
Jeynes, Jacqueline – Aspects of Educational and Training Technology Series, 1992
Employers view career breaks negatively, but particularly when women leave the work force to raise a family. Discusses how women returning to work assess their skills, knowledge, and attributes and present them to prospective employers; how employers assess the skills of job applicants; and how problems in these areas can be reduced. (PEN)
Descriptors: Employer Attitudes, Employer Employee Relationship, Employment Interviews, Employment Problems
Spigel, Lynn – 1986
This study considers the ways in which the television set appeared and figured in representations of domestic space in middle class women's home magazines from 1948 to 1955. The effect of television on the home from the housewife's perspective is described as two-fold: something which called for a careful rearrangement of the home and the…
Descriptors: Advertising, Audiences, Females, History
Stephenson, Mary J. – 1980
To elicit facts on areas of family responsibility, how decisions are made, and how the division of labor is managed in the home, 87 middle to upper-middle class married women students at the University of Maryland at College Park were queried via a written questionnaire. Respondents indicated that there had been a change in all areas of decision…
Descriptors: Change, Decision Making, Family Life, Females
Silver, Sheila J. – 1976
A content analysis of women's roles in "McCalls Magazine" in 1964 and 1974 revealed two profiles of a publication that has been dispensing advice and entertainment for wives and mothers since 1876. The recent women's movement first attracted media coverage around 1968, and a study of "McCalls" before and after this time showed…
Descriptors: Content Analysis, Females, Feminism, Homemakers
Baker, Maureen – 1992
In the past 20 years, the percentage of married women in the Canadian labor force has risen dramatically. Despite women's increased participation in the labor force, child care and housework are still largely done by women. While the difficulty of combining work and family responsibilities can result in work/family conflicts, a variety of…
Descriptors: Child Caregivers, Conflict, Employed Parents, Family Life
Previous Page | Next Page ยป
Pages: 1  |  2  |  3  |  4