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Zick, Cathleen D.; Bryant, W. Keith – Home Economics Research Journal, 1983
Discusses techniques for measuring the value of home work time. Estimates obtained using the reservation wage technique are contrasted with market alternative estimates derived with the same data set. Findings suggest that the market alternative cost method understates the true value of a woman's home time to the household. (JOW)
Descriptors: Homemakers, Housework, Measurement Techniques, Productivity

Hafstrom, Jeanne L.; Schram, Vicki R. – Home Economics Research Journal, 1983
Provides an expansion and improvement of research on the factors related to wife's time spent doing housework. Results indicate that the fewer hours worked outside the home, the larger the family, the fewer number of meals out, the larger the house, the more hours are spent on housework. (JOW)
Descriptors: Employed Women, Females, Homemakers, Housework

Goldschmidt-Clermont, Luisella – Home Economics Research Journal, 1983
Reviews monetary evaluations of unpaid household work, taking as a starting point the output of household productive activity. Outlines possibilities for further developments and desirable characteristics of such evaluations. (JOW)
Descriptors: Economic Factors, Homemakers, Housework, Productivity

Stafford, Kathryn – Home Economics Research Journal, 1983
Discusses research based on a household time allocation model which assumes employment status and length of employment day are outside the realm of family choice when making daily time-use decisions. (JOW)
Descriptors: Employed Women, Employment Level, Homemakers, Housework

Sanik, Margaret Mietus – Home Economics Research Journal, 1981
Time data indicate that, even when employed outside the home, wives still spend more time in household production than other family members. Wives spent less time in dishwashing and care of clothing activities, while children spent more time shopping, in 1977 than in 1967. (Author/CT)
Descriptors: Child Responsibility, Employed Women, Family Role, Home Management

Lawrence, Frances Cogle; And Others – Home Economics Research Journal, 1983
This study examined the amount of time urban adolescents spent in housework. Data used here resulted from the elecen-state family time use survey, "An Inter-state Urban/Rural Investigation of Families' Time Use." The findings indicate that adolescents in this multi-state sample average 71 minutes per day in household work. (SSH)
Descriptors: Adolescent Development, Adolescents, Dual Career Family, Family Life

Lovingood, Rebecca P.; McCullough, Jane L. – Home Economics Research Journal, 1986
Data from 2,100 two-parent, two-child households were analyzed to determine the relationships of demographic variables, ownership of 11 appliances, and time spent in four categories of household tasks. Little evidence was found that appliance ownership is related to less time being spent in household tasks. (Author/CT)
Descriptors: Age, Children, Demography, Equipment

Berger, Peggy S. – Home Economics Research Journal, 1984
This review of the six stages of development of home management research and of changes in methodology and researcher qualifications illustrates increasing sophistication in research design and technique. (SK)
Descriptors: Home Economics, Home Management, Housework, Research Methodology

Sampson, Joan M.; And Others – Home Economics Research Journal, 1975
This study was designed to determine factors that affect the employment status of the wife-mother and prove that these factors would be similar in both "typical" and "disadvantaged" samples. Three "universal variables" were: the husband's attitudes, youngest child's educational status, and frequency of family sharing the housework…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Disadvantaged, Employed Women, Employment Patterns

Rowland, Virginia T.; And Others – Home Economics Research Journal, 1986
Patterns of time allocation of parents were examined for 29 mothers in one-parent households and for 30 mothers and 30 fathers jointly heading two-parent households. Mothers in two-parent households differed significantly from the other groups in time allocated to employment/unpaid work, household work, and leisure. (Author/CH)
Descriptors: Child Rearing, Employed Parents, Fathers, Home Management

Perlmutter, Jane Clarkson; Wampler, Karen Smith – Home Economics Research Journal, 1985
This study of 75 families with at least one preschool child examined the effects of sex-role orientation and wife's employment status on the division of housework and child care and husband and wife's satisfaction with that division. Results indicate that where wives work outside the home, husbands and wives share child care and housework more.…
Descriptors: Child Rearing, Employed Women, Employment Level, Home Management

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