Mothers at work : effects on children's well-being
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Mothers at work : effects on children's well-being
(Cambridge studies in social and emotional development)
Cambridge University Press, 1999
- : hardback
- : pbk
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Note
Includes bibliographical references (p. 313-326) and indexes
Description and Table of Contents
Description
This important 1999 volume examines the effects of the mother's employment on family life and children's well-being. It starts with a thorough review of previous research on this topic and then reports the results of a study designed to answer the key questions that emerge. The study focuses on 448 families, with an elementary school child, living in an industrialized city in the Midwest. They include both one-parent and two-parent families, African Americans and Whites, and a broad range of economic circumstances. Extensive data have been obtained from mothers, fathers, children, teachers, classroom peers, and school records. The analysis reported reveals how the mother's employment status affects the father's role, the mother's sense of well-being, and childrearing patterns and how these, in turn, affect the child. The book provides an intimate picture of urban life and how families cope with mothers' employment.
Table of Contents
- Preface
- 1. Introduction and review of the literature
- 2. Methodology
- 3. Children's daily lives: the after-school day interview
- 4. The husband-wife relationship
- 5. The mother's well-being
- 6. Childrearing
- 7. Maternal employment and child outcomes: the direct relationships
- 8. The father's role, gender attitudes, and academic outcomes
- 9. The mother's well-being and child outcomes
- 10. Childrearing patterns and child outcomes
- 11. Nonmaternal care and supervision: prevalence and effects of child-care arrangement on child well-being
- 12. Summary and overview.
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