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Coverman, Shelley; Sheley, Joseph F. – Journal of Marriage and the Family, 1986
Examined change in men's housework and child-care time between 1965 and 1975. Results indicated men's housework or child-care time did not change significantly. Further, few systematic changes in housework and child care are observed for specific categories of men. Overall, the findings cast doubt on the supposed covergence of men's and women's…
Descriptors: Behavior Change, Child Rearing, Family Structure, Fathers

Koopman-Boyden, Peggy G.; Abbott, Max – Journal of Marriage and the Family, 1985
Compares engaged couples' expected gender-role differentiation of labor in marriage with their actual household task allocation one year after marriage. The acceptance of feminist ideology was the dominant predictor of household task allocation for both males and females. Parental household task allocation did not predict task allocation.…
Descriptors: Expectation, Family Structure, Feminism, Followup Studies

Sanik, Margaret Mietus; Stafford, Kathryn – Adolescence, 1985
Develops a model to predict the contribution adolescent males and females make to household work, based upon family characteristics, human capital of the adolescent, geographic location, and societal expectations. Adolescent females worked longer than males, regardless of birth order. Time use for household work was largely unaffected by family…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Family Characteristics, Geographic Location, Housework

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

Yogev, Sara – Journal of Marriage and the Family, 1981
Studied marital dynamics of 106 faculty women at Northwestern University, focusing on a division of housework and childcare. Questionnaire responses indicated a traditional pattern. Suggests today's professional women are going through a role expansion rather than a role redefinition. (Author/RC)
Descriptors: Attitudes, Child Rearing, Females, Home Management

Suitor, J. Jill – Journal of Marriage and the Family, 1991
Used data from national survey of 741 men and 964 women to examine life-cycle variations in satisfaction with division of household labor and relationship between satisfaction with division of household labor and marital quality. Satisfaction with division of labor was more important in explaining marital happiness and conflict than were age,…
Descriptors: Age, Educational Attainment, Employment Level, Housework

Zimmerman, Toni Schindler; Northen, Leslie Parker; Seng, Stephanie Crandall; Grogan, John W. – Initiatives, 1999
Examines the experience of the family arrangement in which fathers choose to stay at home as the primary caregiver while their wives provide the family's income. Results indicate that couples choose this arrangement for both practical and philosophical reasons and that these couples are sharing more responsibilities than couples have…
Descriptors: Child Rearing, Employed Parents, Fathers, Homemakers

Ducharme, Joseph M.; Drain, Tammy L. – Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, 2004
Objective: Children with autism often demonstrate distress and oppositionality when exposed to requests to complete academic or household tasks. Errorless academic compliance training is a success-focused, noncoercive intervention for improving child cooperation with such activities. In the present study, the authors evaluated treatment and…
Descriptors: Rewards, Probability, Intervention, Cooperation
Beaujot, Roderic; Liu, Jianye – Journal of Family Issues, 2005
Models of time use need to consider especially the reproductive and productive activities of women and men. For husband-wife families, the breadwinner, one-earner, or complementary-roles model has advantages in terms of efficiency or specialization and stability; however, it is a high-risk model for women and children. The alternate model has been…
Descriptors: Females, Spouses, Models, Time Management
Davis, Shannon N.; Greenstein, Theodore N. – Journal of Marriage and Family, 2004
Using data from the International Social Justice Project, we describe the division of household labor in married couple households using a sample of 13 nations (N= 10,153). We find significant differences in the division of household labor based upon respondents nations of residence. We find support for the time availability approach; households…
Descriptors: Spouses, Justice, Family (Sociological Unit), Role Perception
Cunningham, Mick – Journal of Family Issues, 2005
The analysis examines the direct and indirect influences of early gender socialization on the allocation of routine housework later in the life course. The study articulates hypotheses suggesting that the relationship between gender socialization early in adulthood and housework allocation later in adulthood is moderated by gender and union type…
Descriptors: Gender Differences, Housework, Socialization, Young Adults
Romich, Jennifer L. – Journal of Early Adolescence, 2007
This manuscript reports on a study of how low-income employed single mothers and young adolescents manage household daily life. Analysis is based on longitudinal ethnographic data collected from families of 35 young adolescents over 3 years following the 1996 welfare reforms. Although mothers worked, young adolescents spent time unsupervised,…
Descriptors: Early Adolescents, Adolescents, Siblings, Ethnography

Clark, Robert A.; And Others – Journal of Marriage and the Family, 1978
Multivariate analysis of survey data from 390 Seattle couples reveals that husbands' work time did not significantly decrease their participation in the housekeeper and therapeutic roles, nor their competence in the housekeeper, therapeutic, sexual, and recreation roles. (Author)
Descriptors: Family Life, Housework, Interpersonal Relationship, Marriage

Dorfman, Lorraine T.; Heckert, D. Alex – Family Relations, 1988
Interviewed 149 retired rural couples to examine conjugal role organization. Found that subjects showed a traditional, gender-differentiated division of household tasks, but that household role segregation decreased significantly after retirement; spouses made majority of decisions jointly; and spouses participated in large number of joint leisure…
Descriptors: Decision Making, Housework, Leisure Time, Older Adults

Light, Harriett K.; And Others – Adolescence, 1985
Examined farm children's work contribution to the household and farming operation, as reported by their mothers (N=263). Results showed that children began working at a very early age, and continued through adolescence. All adolescents between the ages of 13 and 19 years helped with farm chores; fewer helped with household chores. (Author)
Descriptors: Adolescents, Child Responsibility, Children, Family Involvement