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SERVE: SouthEastern Regional Vision for Education. – 1998
The relationship between family and the workplace and the impact of both on school readiness are well documented. As society changes, home, work, and school relationships are being reassessed and retooled. Noting that employers are taking an increasing role in helping families cope with societal changes, this handbook offers information to…
Descriptors: Employed Parents, Family Life, Family School Relationship, Family (Sociological Unit)
Gilbert, Marvin G. – Journal of College Student Personnel, 1982
Discusses the impact of graduate education on marital and family relations, and finances. Concludes that the graduate school experience produces familial stress and is potentially destructive to family life, especially for married female students, and suggests the need for college student personnel intervention and research. (Author)
Descriptors: Adjustment (to Environment), Family Life, Females, Financial Problems
Peer reviewedYarber, William L.; McCabe, George P., Jr. – Journal of School Health, 1981
In a study on the characteristics of health science teachers as sex educators, it was found that the most important quality of an effective sex educator was that of a positive attitude toward one's own sexuality. (JN)
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Elementary Secondary Education, Family Life Education, Health Education
Peer reviewedYarber, William L. – Education, 1981
Describes results of a study designed to discover the views of third, sixth, ninth, and twelfth graders about their need for family life and sex education. Data revealed strong desires of students for more information. (JD)
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Curriculum Evaluation, Elementary Secondary Education, Family Life Education
Peer reviewedFeatherstone, Joseph – Harvard Educational Review, 1979
Emphasizing the family as the center of political/policy debates is the result of the tradition of romanticizing family virtues and a set of events ("the sixities"). Author sees the family emerging as a symbol in communal social policy development. Warns of dangers inherent in seeking private solutions to collective problems. (Author/CSS)
Descriptors: American History, Attitude Change, Community Problems, Educational Policy
Effects of Parent Orientation Meetings on Parent-Child Communication About Sexuality and Family Life
Peer reviewedGoodman, Barry; Goodman, Norman – Family Coordinator, 1976
The authors hypothesized an improvement in parent-child communication about family life and human sexuality when parents participate in an orientation program about their adolescent child's health education unit on this topic. The results of a series of one-way analyses of variance confirmed the original hypotheses. (Author)
Descriptors: Communication (Thought Transfer), Counseling Services, Family Life Education, High School Students
Peer reviewedStringer-Seibold, Traci; And Others – Dimensions of Early Childhood, 1996
Describes a qualitative research study of children from divided families and analyzes findings in terms of family contexts, children's resiliency, and needs. Suggests strategies for professionals including recognition of developmental capacity within family circumstances, interactive systems, communication patterns and areas of stress. Includes…
Descriptors: Divorce, Early Childhood Education, Family Attitudes, Family Characteristics
Peer reviewedPauley, Elizabeth D. – Journal of Family and Consumer Sciences, 1996
A survey of 317 Pennsylvania middle school students, 237 parents, 29 faculty, 39 family/consumer professionals, and 19 community members indicated that the program teaches only 4 of adults' top 10 subject preferences and none of the top 3 (family, parenting, communicating). All four top subjects preferred by students (banking, sewing, child care,…
Descriptors: Community Attitudes, Consumer Education, Course Content, Family Life Education
Peer reviewedParette, Phil; Huer, Mary Blake – Journal of Special Education Technology, 2002
Contrasting Euro-American and Asian values are examined with particular emphasis on differences exhibited by these families with regard to perspectives on disability, health care, family life, and education/intervention; communication styles; and reactions to augmentative and alternative communication needs. Specific suggestions for practitioners…
Descriptors: Asian Americans, Attitudes toward Disabilities, Augmentative and Alternative Communication, Cultural Differences
Peer reviewedEcarius, Jutta – Zeitschrift fur Padagogik, 2003
Discusses empirical findings of a qualitative research project covering three generations of twentieth century families. Examines the importance of family topics for biographical learning. Argues that family topics leave their mark on biographical constructions and influence acting, thinking and perceiving, and the shaping of the biography…
Descriptors: Biographies, Educational Practices, Elementary Secondary Education, Family (Sociological Unit)
Peer reviewedFox, Lise; Vaughn, Bobbie J.; Wyatte, Merili Llanes; Dunlap, Glen – Exceptional Children, 2002
Open-ended interviews in which 20 family members discussed issues related to their child's problem behavior revealed three major themes: the difficult process of coming to terms with the child's disability, the importance of having support from caring people, and the pervasive impact the problem behavior exerts on family functioning. (Contains…
Descriptors: Behavior Problems, Children, Coping, Disabilities
Peer reviewedSchvaneveldt, Jay D.; And Others – Family Relations, 1990
Interviewed 42 children in preschool, first grade, third grade, and fifth grade to clarify questions regarding children's knowledge of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome (AIDS) from a developmental viewpoint. Findings suggest that children's knowledge of AIDS was associated with perceptions children had regarding illness, and that accurate…
Descriptors: Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome, Child Development, Children, Diseases
Peer reviewedMacDermid, Shelley M.; And Others – Journal of Marriage and the Family, 1990
A longitudinal design was used to examine marital change in 98 couples over the first 2.5 years of marriage, comparing parents to nonparents. The degree of congruity between spouses' sex role activities and division of labor explained differences between reports of love and marital conflict. (Author/TE)
Descriptors: Attitude Change, Behavior Change, Comparative Analysis, Family Life
Peer reviewedEdelman, Marian Wright – Journal of Negro Education, 1989
Presents data on the problems of poor children and youth. Describes the efforts of the Children's Defense Fund to make preventive investment in children and families the cornerstone of domestic policy, and to make decent, affordable child care services available nationwide. (MW)
Descriptors: Blacks, Child Development, Child Welfare, Children
Stater, Florence K. – Vocational Education Journal, 1989
Minnesota technical institutes developed a curriculum that can be used in regular adult classes or customized for workplace seminars. The curriculum covers management of work-family stress, time management, communication skills, decision making, concerns of dual career families, unemployment concerns, and other aspects of balancing work and family…
Descriptors: Adult Education, Contract Training, Corporate Education, Dislocated Workers


