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Balancing Work and Family Life

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Title: Choices in Relationships Author: Krissy Last modified by: Stacy SCHOOLFIELD Created Date: 4/7/2004 10:34:57 PM Document presentation format – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Balancing Work and Family Life


1
Chapter 12
  • Balancing Work and Family Life

2
Chapter Outline
  • Meanings of Money
  • Dual-Earner Marriages Considerations for Spouses
  • Dual-Earner Marriages Considerations for
    Children
  • Balancing Demands of Work and Family
  • Balancing Work and Leisure Time

3
True or False?
  • Young attorneys who take time out to have and
    raise their children are just as likely to make
    partner in their firm as attorneys who did not
    take out time to have/rear children.

4
Answer False
  • Noonan and Corcoran (2004) found that lawyers who
    took time out for child responsibilities were
    less likely to make partner and to earn less
    money if they did make partner.

5
True or False?
  • An employed unhappy wife is more likely to
    divorce than a happy employed wife.

6
Answer True
  • An employed unhappy wife is more likely to
    divorce than a happy employed wife.

7
Meanings of Money
  • Security
  • Money represents security most people want.
  • Self-Esteem
  • In our society human worth is often equated with
    financial achievement.
  • Power in Relationships
  • The more money a partner makes, the more power
    they have in the relationship.

8
Meanings of Money
  • Love
  • To some individuals, money means love.
  • Conflict
  • Couples argue about what to spend money on and
    how much money to spend.

9
Love and Money
  • Pg. 350
  • A large diamond ring is regarded as signifying
    much love hence the association of love and
    money.

10
Question
  • Who has more power in relationships?
  • both partners when they are earning the same
    amount
  • the partner with more leisure time
  • the partner who is more physically dominant
  • the partner with more money

11
Answer D
  • The partner with more money has more power in
    relationships.

12
Poverty
  • Poverty
  • Poverty is the lack of resources necessary for
    material well-being.
  • Absolute poverty
  • The lack of resources that leads to hunger and
    physical deprivation.

13
Distribution of Income Level in U.S. Families
Income Level of Family at This Level
Less than 15,000 9.6
15,00024,999 11.1
25,00034,999 11.4
35,00049,999 15.0
50,00074,999 20.1
75,00099,999 13.3
100,000 or more 19.4
14
2006 HHS Poverty Guidelines
Size of Family 48 States, D.C. Alaska Hawaii
1 14,700 18,375 16,905
2 19,800 24,750 22,770
3 24,900 31,125 28,635
4 30,000 37,500 34,500
5 35,100 43,875 40,365
6 40,200 50,250 46,230
7 45,300 56,625 52,095
8 50,400 63,000 57,960
15
Dual-Earner Marriages
  • Effects on the Couples Marriage of Having Two
    Earners
  • Employment wont affect a happy marriage but it
    can do an unhappy one in.
  • Effects of the Wifes Employment on the Children
  • Children do not appear to suffer cognitively or
    emotionally as long as positive consistent
    child-care alternatives are in place.

16
Three Types of Dual-career Marriages
  • HER /his career
  • Where the wifes career takes precedence.
  • HIS/her career
  • Where the husbands career takes precedence.
  • HIS/HER career
  • When the careers of both partners are given equal
    status in the relationship.

17
Dual Career Marriages
  • This man has a full-time career as an accountant
    his wife is a PhD English Professor.
  • They both have demanding careers.
  • Pg. 353

18
Effects of Wifes Employment on the Wife
  • Women without children or older children, working
    in jobs they enjoy and married to egalitarian
    husbands who are much happier than their
    counterpart.
  • Employed women in dual earner households that are
    not equal in the division of labor are less
    likely to be happily married and more likely to
    divorce.

19
Role Overload
  • Whether a wife is satisfied with her job is also
    related to the degree to which the job takes a
    toll on her family life.
  • Most women with young children prefer to be at
    home and view home as their primary haven of
    satisfaction.
  • Role overload occurs when women dont have the
    time or energy to meet the demands of role
    (wife/parent/worker) responsibilities.

20
Role Conflict
  • The role of the employed mother is to stay late
    and get a report ready for tomorrow.
  • The role of the mother is to pick up the child
    from day care at five P.M.
  • When these roles collide, there is role conflict.

21
Role Strain
  • The anxiety that results from being able to
    fulfill only a limited number of role
    obligations.
  • Occurs for both women and men in dual-earner
    marriages.
  • There is no one at home to take care of housework
    and children while they are working, and they
    feel strained at not being able to do everything.

22
INSERT VIDEO
  • All-Female Fire Department (Run time 449)

23
Question
  • What is role overload?
  • not having time or energy to meet the demands of
    role responsibility
  • being on the second shift
  • getting too much into one's role as parent
  • taking on both gender roles of parent

24
Answer A
  • Role overload is not having time or energy to
    meet the demands of role responsibility.

25
Question
  • Being confronted by incompatible role obligations
    is referred to as
  • role reversal.
  • role overload.
  • role conflict.
  • role modeling.

26
Answer C
  • Being confronted by incompatible role obligations
    is referred to as role conflict.

27
INSERT VIDEO
  • Being a Mom Is Staying Home Selling Out?(Run
    Time 832)

28
Effects of Wifes Employmenton Her Husband
  • Husbands report benefits from their wives
    employment
  • Being relieved of the sole responsibility for the
    financial support of the family
  • Having more freedom to quit jobs, change jobs, or
    go to school.

29
Day-Care Considerations
  • Priorities in day-care selection include
  • health and safety issues
  • caregiver quality
  • the childs social and educational development

30
Day Care
  • Parents are sometimes apprehensive about dropping
    off their child at day care.
  • Essentially, they are leaving their children with
    paid strangers.
  • Pg. 357

31
Your Opinion
  • Why do you think that the U.S. lags behind other
    industrialized nations in terms of paid leave for
    parents?

32
Employed Mothers By Age Of Child
Age of Child of Employed Mothers
Child age 1 and under 54.7
Child age 2 61.3
Child age 3 63.6
Child age 4 64.1
Child age 5 66.9
Child age 6-13 75.1
Child age 14-17 81.2
33
Question
  • What is a major concern of an employed parent?
  • pleasing their employer
  • juggling demands of work and family
  • making enough money
  • finding time for the spouse

34
Answer B
  • A major concern of an employed parent is juggling
    demands of work and family.

35
Your Opinion
  • Argue for and against
  • Childfree workers should work later and on
    holidays so that parents can be with their
    children.

36
Superperson Strategy
  • Involves working as hard and efficiently as
    possible to meet the demands of work and family.
  • Supermom
  • The term superwoman or supermom is a cultural
    label that allows the woman to regard herself as
    very efficient, bright, and confident.

37
Cognitive Restructuring
  • Viewing a situation in positive terms.
  • Exhausted dual-career earners often justify their
    time away from their children by focusing on the
    benefits of their labor.

38
Second and Third Shift
  • Second shift
  • The housework and child care that employed women
    do when they return home from their jobs.
  • Third shift
  • The third shift is the expense of emotional
    energy by a spouse or parent in dealing with
    various issues in family living.

39
Question
  • The expense of emotional energy in dealing with
    family issues is called
  • the fourth shift.
  • the third shift.
  • the second shift.
  • the first shift.

40
Answer B
  • The expense of emotional energy in dealing with
    family issues is called the third shift.

41
Leisure
  • Functions
  • relieve work-related stress and pressure
  • facilitate social interaction and family
    togetherness
  • foster self-expression, personal growth, and
    skill development
  • enhance overall social, physical, and emotional
    wellbeing

42
Barriers to Leisure
  • Demands of the Workplace
  • A major barrier to leisure has been the rising
    demands of the workplace.
  • Materialistic Values
  • Couples get caught up in a vicious cycle of
    working long hours to achieve a certain standard
    of living, only to find that this standard of
    living no longer satisfies them.

43
Barriers to Leisure
  • Traditional Gender Roles
  • Women tend to spend their leisure time engaged in
    hobbies related to household tasks, such as
    cooking, preserving fruits and vegetables, and
    sewing.
  • Leisure as a Commodity
  • Many leisure activities cost money that families
    do not have in their budget.

44
Leisure Time
  • Pg. 359
  • For many people, leisure is not an option. This
    man has worked at this position as clerk of a
    hotel for 10 years.

45
Leisure as Work
  • Leisure is being used as a means to other ends
    stress reduction, therapy, fitness, and
    self-actualization.
  • Some people are reluctant to take time off for a
    vacation.

46
Leisure Time
  • Pg. 363
  • These spouses work hard in heir respective
    professions but balance off their careers with
    frequent relaxing vacations.
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