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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 7 page research paper describing how the modern family has changed now that so many women are working full-time and not spending entire days with their children. The writer analyzes the effect that this social phenomenon has had on relationships between mothers and children-- arguing that mothers who work all day are not as apt to understand all needs communicated by their children and are consequently, unavoidably neglectful in some areas. Children do, however, often regard their maternal working parent much in the same light that they once did their father -- as a strict disciplinarian. Bibliography lists 7 sources.
Page Count:
7 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_Workngmo.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
with their children. The father should be the head of the family, earn the familys income, and give his name to his wife and children. The mothers main
tasks were to support and facilitate her husbands, guide her childrens development, look after the home, and set a moral tone for the family. Marriage was an enduring obligation
for better or worse and this was due much to a conscious effort to maintain strong ties with children. The husband and wife jointly coped with stresses. As parents, they
had an overriding responsibility for the well-being of their children during the early years-until their children entered school, they were almost solely responsible. Even later, it was the parents
who had the primary duty of guiding their childrens education and discipline. Of course, even in 1960, families recognized the difficulty of converting these ideals into reality. Still, they
devoted immense effort to approximating them in practice. As it turned out, the mother, who worked only minimally--was the parent most frequently successful in spending the most time with
her children. Consequently, youngsters were almost always around a parental figure -- they were well-disciplined and often very close with the maternal parent who cooked for them, played with
them, and saw them off to and home from school each day. Over the past three decades these ideals, although they are still recognizable, have been
drastically modified across all social classes. Women have joined the paid labor force in great numbers stimulated both by economic need and a new belief in their capabilities and
right to pursue opportunities. Americans in 1992 are far more likely than in earlier times to postpone marriage. Single-parent families--typically consisting of a mother with no adult male and very
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