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Peer reviewedKroska, Amy – Journal of Marriage and Family, 2003
This study examines factors related to the affective meanings that spouses and cohabitors attach to child care, baby care, and nine household chores. Gender is related to about a third of these task meanings. Gender also moderates the relationship between work and twelve task meanings. (Contains 35 references, 8 tables, and 1 appendix.) (BF)
Descriptors: Affective Measures, Child Rearing, Cohabitation, Housework
Peer reviewedFirestone, Juanita; Shelton, Beth Anne – Journal of Family Issues, 1988
Examined leisure time expenditures of married women in paid labor force. Found both active and passive leisure activities differentially affected by work. Estimated path model of amount of available leisure time, showing effects of paid labor time, age, children, and household labor time. Estimated that women's responsibilities for employment and…
Descriptors: Employed Women, Homemakers, Housework, Leisure Time
Peer reviewedHawkins, Alan J.; Roberts, Tomi-Ann – Family Relations, 1992
Critiques the few scholarly reports found on interventions to help dual-earner couples share domestic labor and to increase fathers' temporal involvement in child care. Presents model of forces both constraining and driving equitable participation in domestic labor. Recommends model as basis on which to design, implement, and evaluate family life…
Descriptors: Employed Parents, Family Life Education, Fathers, Housework
Peer reviewedOrellana, Marjorie Faulstich – Harvard Educational Review, 2001
Research on Mexican and Central American immigrant children illuminates their everyday work as helpers in the home, community, and school. Their participation is shaped by gender dynamics. Their work can be viewed in multiple ways as volunteerism, learning opportunities, and cultural and linguistic brokering. (Contains 57 references.) (SK)
Descriptors: Child Labor, Children, Family Financial Resources, Housework
L. Hook, Jennifer – Journal of Marriage and Family, 2004
The gendered division of household labor is more multifaceted than the allocation of paid work and domestic work. People also engage in volunteer work and informal support. I investigate the applicability of household labor allocation theories - specifically the time constraints, economic, and doing gender perspectives - to all unpaid work. I…
Descriptors: Volunteers, Least Squares Statistics, Labor, Diaries
Cast, Alicia D.; Bird, Sharon R. – Social Psychology Quarterly, 2005
Our work contributes to research on variation in role-taking by investigating changes in perceptions of role-taking ability over time as a result of exposure to situations and activities typically associated with others; that is, we investigate how "walking in others' shoes" contributes to individuals' perceptions of role-taking ability. Using a…
Descriptors: Spouses, Labor, Housework, Role
Minnotte, Krista Lynn; Stevens, Daphne Pedersen; Minnotte, Michael C.; Kiger, Gary – Journal of Family Issues, 2007
This study compares four theories of domestic labor in their ability to predict relative emotion-work performance among dual-earner couples. Specifically, the authors investigate the effects of gender ideology, time availability, relative resources, and crossover factors on the dependent variable of relative emotion-work performance using…
Descriptors: Employed Parents, Emotional Response, Family Life, Gender Differences
Peer reviewedBenin, Mary Holland; Agostinelli, Joan – Journal of Marriage and the Family, 1988
Surveyed dual-employed couple to explore causes of satisfaction with and arguments over division of household labor. Found husbands more satisfied with equitable division; wives more satisfied with division favoring them. Wives were more content if husbands shared women's traditional chores. Spouses disagreed about how often they argued over…
Descriptors: Dual Career Family, Family Life, Homemakers, Housework
Peer reviewedPropper, Alice M. – Journal of Marriage and the Family, 1972
The evidence suggests that adolescents have only slightly more responsibility for household chores when the mother is employed, and that their degree of participation in social activities does not differ consistently from respondents whose mothers are not employed. (Author)
Descriptors: Adolescents, Employed Women, Housework, Parent Child Relationship
Peer reviewedGrusec, Joan E.; And Others – Developmental Psychology, 1996
Interviewed Australian and Canadian mothers about the assignment of either routine or specially requested household work to their 9- to 14-year-old sons and daughters. Found that routine work was positively correlated with older children's concern for family members. There was no correlation between household work and prosocial behavior toward…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Age Differences, Children, Family Environment
Peer reviewedBroman, Clifford L. – Journal of Marriage and the Family, 1988
Examined relationship of family life satisfaction to division of household work between men and women among married Black adults. Found women almost twice as likely as men to feel overworked by household work; people who felt overworked had lower levels of family life satisfaction. Found interactions among family life satisfaction, division of…
Descriptors: Adults, Blacks, Employment Level, Family Life
Peer reviewedBlair, Sampson Lee – Journal of Youth and Adolescence, 1992
Two theories of children's household labor participation (child socialization or the need for household labor) involving 1,352 families from the 1988 National Survey of Families and Households find support for both, with more confirmation for the pragmatic (labor needed) aspects. Children's efforts represent about 12 percent of all household…
Descriptors: Children, Family (Sociological Unit), Housework, Hypothesis Testing
Peer reviewedSzinovacz, Maximiliane – Family Relations, 1992
Investigated whether perceived involvement in household work after retirement related to husbands' and wives' retirement adaptation. Data from 611 recent retirees showed positive effect of postretirement housework involvement on women's adjustment. For men, relationship between housework and adaptation was contingent on such factors as health,…
Descriptors: Adjustment (to Environment), Homemakers, Housework, Physical Health
Peer reviewedBird, Chloe E.; Ross, Catherine E. – Journal of Marriage and the Family, 1993
Used nationally representative sample of 2,031 adults aged 18 to 90 to compare housework and family care as primary activity with paid work and with volunteer work, leisure activities, home and yard maintenance, and schoolwork. Found that unpaid domestic work was more routine, and it provided less intrinsic gratification and fewer extrinsic…
Descriptors: Employed Women, Females, Homemakers, Housework
Peer reviewedCunningham, Mick – Journal of Marriage and Family, 2001
Assesses parental influences on young adults' attitudes toward gendered family roles, housework allocation, and housework enjoyment. Results show that children's ideal allocation of housework at age 18 is predicted by maternal gender role attitudes when the children are very young and by the parental division of housework when the children were…
Descriptors: Attitudes, Behavior, Employed Parents, Housework

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