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Shelton, Beth Anne – Journal of Family Issues, 1990
Examined relationship between wives' (N=147) employment status and their versus their husbands' (N=154) time spent on household tasks. Compared adjusted mean time that women and men spent in specific household tasks. Found employed women spent less time on female-typed tasks than full-time homemakers. Found husbands' total housework time not…
Descriptors: Employed Women, Family Structure, Homemakers, Housework
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Demo, David H.; Acock, Alan C. – Family Relations, 1993
Used data from nationally representative sample (n=2,528) to examine division of household labor in first-marriage families, stepfamilies, families headed by divorced mothers, and families headed by never-married mothers. Findings indicated that, across family types and regardless of women's employment status, women performed two to three times…
Descriptors: Cohabitation, Divorce, Employment Level, Family Structure
Bird, Gloria W. – 1982
The rapid increase in the number of families with two wage-earners has contributed significantly to changes in family structure and function in the past three decades; a current belief holds that wives who share the income-earner role have a right to expect more assistance from their husbands with such family tasks as meal preparations, cleaning,…
Descriptors: Dual Career Family, Family Attitudes, Family Income, Family Structure
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Abdel-Ghany, Mohamed; Nickols, Sharon Y. – Home Economics Research Journal, 1983
Inspite of the tremendous increase in the burden of market work faced by married American women in the last decade, the differential in household work time between husbands and wives still persists. The results of this study assert that the differences in socioeconomic characteristics between husbands and wives explain only part of that…
Descriptors: Dual Career Family, Employed Parents, Employed Women, Family Life
McKitric, Eloise J. – 1984
Women's increased labor force participation and continued responsibility for most household work and child care have resulted in "time crunch." This strain results from assuming multiple roles within a fixed time period. The existence of an egalitarian family has been assumed by family researchers and writers but has never been verified. Time…
Descriptors: Adults, Child Rearing, Dual Career Family, Employed Parents