Here is the synopsis of our sample research paper on Changes In Parenting. Have the paper e-mailed to you 24/7/365.
Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 5 page paper. The writer presents an argument that parenting may have changed but it has not resulted in more well-adjusted children. The argument is based on two articles, Building Better Dads by Jerry Adler and There's No Place Like Work by Arlie Russell Hochschild along with divorce statistics. Both authors point out that divorce statistics have risen since the 1950s when fathers supported their families with their paychecks and discipline and they stayed married. Bibliography lists 4 sources.
Page Count:
5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: MM12_PGchnpr.rtf
Buy This Term Paper »
 
Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
that was the last generation where that particular configuration was the norm (2000). Dads went to work to support their families. They meted out discipline. They most often spent weekends
with their families. Depending on geographic locations, visiting with extended families and/or friends was a frequent activity on weekends and holidays. Adler noted that the so-called Baby Boomer generation changed
the nature of parenting as well as other institutions in America (2000). At some point for reasons yet to be explained by sociologists, attitudes towards parenting changed and fathers became
more involved in their childrens rearing (Adler, 2000). This was supposed to result in better children but, as Adler also points out, the research thus far has failed to provide
any proof of this expectation (Adler, 2000). Fathers have become more active in the parenting process, some to the point that they give up lucrative careers or they even stay
home part- or full-time to rear their children (Adler, 2000). According to attachment theory, psychologists say that the child develops an attachment to dad as well as to mom in
the first months of life (Adler, 2000). Having dad "there" should have resulted in more well-balanced, constructive children but it hasnt. It does not work. Consider: since the Baby
Boomers changed the institutions of work and parenting, divorce has soared and there are more children living without a dad than ever before in American history. By 1998, 51 marriages
out of 100 ended in divorce (Fagan and Rector, 1999). Each year, more than one million children move from an intact home to one where their parents have divorced (Fagan
and Rector, 2000). As of 1999, more than 8 million children in America were living with their divorced single parent (Fagan and Rector, 2000). When the numbers of divorce and
...