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Peer reviewedCrawford, Duane W. – Family and Consumer Sciences Research Journal, 1999
Results of a study that examined the relationship between husbands' and wives' (n=66) occupational characteristics, their extent of their involvement in different types of leisure activities, and whether they engaged in these activities together revealed no consistent support for any models but indicated that wives' characteristics were important…
Descriptors: Adults, Dual Career Family, Employee Attitudes, Family Work Relationship
Carlson, Howard C. – School Administrator, 2004
The baby boomer generation, typically referred to as those individuals born between 1946 and 1964, has been teaching in the schools since the 1960s. These dedicated professionals, many of them serving their schools for more than 30 years, soon will retire. In the next 10 years, more than two million new teachers will be needed to staff the…
Descriptors: School Policy, Teacher Leadership, Baby Boomers, Teacher Retirement
Zvonkovic, Anisa M.; Solomon, Catherine Richards; Humble, Aine M.; Manoogian, Margaret – Family Relations, 2005
This study explores how family members experience their lives when family breadwinners must be absent from home because of their jobs. Informed by general systems theory and contextual perspectives, we described wives' family work that supports the breadwinner role and maintains the emotional connections among family members. From our findings…
Descriptors: Family Relationship, Spouses, Males, Time Management
Hyde, Janet Shibley; Else-Quest, Nicole M.; Goldsmith, H. H.; Biesanz, Jeremy C. – Child Development, 2004
Numerous studies have been conducted on the impact of dual-earner parents' employment on their children, yet the reverse process the impact of children and their behavior on the work functioning of their parents has been ignored. This study investigated spillover from the mother role to the work role in a sample of more than 300 families. At 4…
Descriptors: Rewards, Personality, Behavior Problems, Mothers
Williams, Joan C. – New Directions for Higher Education, 2005
Mothers get caught between the prescriptive image of the ideal worker and the prescriptive image of the ideal mother.
Descriptors: Women Faculty, Mothers, Higher Education, Gender Bias
Hill, E. Jeffrey – Journal of Family Issues, 2005
Work-family research frequently focuses on the conflict experienced by working mothers. Using data from the National Study of the Changing Workforce (N = 1,314), this study also examined work-family facilitation and working fathers. Ecological systems, family stress, family resilience, and sex role theories were used to organize the data and…
Descriptors: Sex Role, Mothers, Life Satisfaction, Marital Satisfaction
Kirkpatrick Johnson, Monica – Journal of Marriage and Family, 2005
This study focuses on whether marriage and parenthood influence work values after taking into account the influence of work values on family formation. In a recent panel of young adults (N=709), stronger extrinsic and weaker intrinsic work values during adolescence predicted marriage and parenthood 9 years out of high school. Controlling these…
Descriptors: Spouses, Rewards, Marriage, Young Adults
Day, Arla L.; Chamberlain, Trina C. – Journal of Vocational Behavior, 2006
When trying to balance work and family responsibilities, many workers experience conflict between these two roles. Although role commitment has been viewed both as contributing to and alleviating conflict, this relationship has not been fully tested. Using a sample of female nurses and police officers, we examined the direct and indirect…
Descriptors: Family Work Relationship, Role Conflict, Females, Nurses
Press, Julie E.; Fagan, Jay; Laughlin, Lynda – Journal of Marriage and Family, 2006
We use the Philadelphia Survey of Child Care and Work to model the effect of child-care subsidies and other ecological demands and resources on the work hour, shift, and overtime problems of 191 low-income urban mothers. Comparing subsidy applicants who do and do not receive cash payments for child care, we find that mothers who receive subsidies…
Descriptors: Child Care, Grants, Employed Women, Mothers
Bumpus, Matthew F.; Crouter, Ann C.; McHale, Susan M. – Journal of Early Adolescence, 2006
This study examines the relationships between mothers' and fathers' perceptions of negative work-to-family spillover and their knowledge of their preadolescent children's (mean age = 11.8 years) daily lives in a sample of dual-earner families. Three constructs are tested as potential mediators of the association between spillover and parental…
Descriptors: Mothers, Fathers, Parent Child Relationship, Family Work Relationship
de Graaf, Paul M.; Kalmijn, Matthijs – Journal of Family Issues, 2006
Using survey data on 1,718 ever-divorced men and women in the Netherlands, the authors describe the motives people give for their divorce. The authors distinguish motives regarding three types of issues: relational issues, behavioral problems, and problems about work and the division of labor. They observe three important trends: the normalization…
Descriptors: Housework, Behavior Problems, Divorce, Foreign Countries
Dyer, Suzette – Australian Journal of Career Development, 2006
In this article the five career narratives of three siblings and two unemployed men are drawn upon to critically examine the use of contemporary career discourse as a means to negotiate changes to work since the 1980s and to the present time. A critical analysis enables contemporary career discourse and workplace change to be located within the…
Descriptors: Siblings, Criticism, Time Perspective, Social Theories
Sweet, Stephen; Moen, Phyllis – Innovative Higher Education, 2004
This study of 276 couples compares coworking couples, which means both partners work for the same university, with noncoworking couples, those couples in which only one partner is employed at a university. Among the employees at the two universities studied, one in seven dual-earner couples cowork. These couples are more educated and are less…
Descriptors: Spouses, Employees, Marital Satisfaction, Family Work Relationship
Carpenter, Barry; Towers, Christine – Support for Learning, 2008
In this article, the authors aim to develop a better understanding among practitioners of the issues faced by fathers of children with a learning disability, and suggest how schools can involve the parents who are regarded by many as "hard to reach". They recontextualize the roles and perceptions of fathers in the light of outcomes from the recent…
Descriptors: Mental Retardation, Disabilities, Parent Child Relationship, Public Policy
Fortunato, Vincent J.; LeBourgeois, Monique K.; Harsh, John – Educational and Psychological Measurement, 2008
This article describes the development of a measure of adult sleep quality: the Adult Sleep-Wake Scale (ADSWS). The ADSWS is a self-report pencil-and-paper measure of sleep quality consisting of five behavioral dimensions (Going to Bed, Falling Asleep, Maintaining Sleep, Reinitiating Sleep, and Returning to Wakefulness). Data were collected from…
Descriptors: Construct Validity, Test Validity, Sleep, Personality Traits

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