1 / 13

Family Functions and Forms

Family Functions and Forms. Grade 12 Family Studies. What is a Family?. The Vanier Institute of the Family defines “family” as:

nieve
Download Presentation

Family Functions and Forms

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Family Functions and Forms Grade 12 Family Studies

  2. What is a Family? The Vanier Institute of the Family defines “family” as: • Any combination of two or more persons who are bound together over time by ties of mutual consent, birth and/or adoption or placement and who, together, assume responsibilities for variant combinations of some of the following …”

  3. Family Functions • Addition of new members through procreation or adoption • Society has to maintain itself to survive • Population growth = increased wealth • Physical maintenance and care of group members • Including adults, children, dependent elderly members • If families don’t care for their members society must be organized to replace the family • Socialization of children • Teach skills, knowledge, values and grow into well adjusted adults.

  4. Family Functions • Social control of members • Control behavior and maintain order in society • Monitor and evaluate behavior and provide feedback  protects reputation within society • Affective nurturance — love • Meeting emotional needs, Maintaining morale, participating in society, • Production, consumption, distribution of goods and services • Earn income

  5. Family Forms • Families can take on a number of different forms. • Dual Career Family • Two parents with offspring living in a common household where both parents work. • Strengths • Good income  Higher quality of life • Shared household tasks and responsibilities • Weaknesses • Dependence on outside support for childcare, meal preparation, etc. • May cause disharmony due to activities and ambitions of both partners.

  6. Family Forms • Single Parent Family • One parent with children under 18 years old • Strengths • Greater self-expression (parent is only accountable to the children and not a partner) • More stable home environment (if there was previously hostility or abuse) • Opens door for children to seek positive role models outside home • Weaknesses • Need for support systems • Strained finances • Jeopardized parent role (socialization  peers)

  7. Family Forms • Single Career Family • Two parents with offspring living in a common household where one person is the financial provider. • Strengths • Primary source of socialization is by parent(s) • Fits demands of corporate jobs asking employees to travel, work long hours, evenings, etc. • Weaknesses • Difficult to maintain middle class quality of life financially

  8. Family Forms • Remarried Nuclear Family (Blended Family) • Two parents and offspring from previous marriage living in a common household. • Strengths • Encourages shared parenting (may have been single parent prior) • Improves economic status • Weaknesses • Can be stressful blending two independent households together • May need economic help, counselling • Previous relationship commitments (economic and social)

  9. Family Forms • Extended Family • Family includes members of different generations living in the same household (grandparents, aunts, uncles, cousins, other relatives) • Strengths • Maintains family values  generation to generation • Lots of adults to fill socialization and household responsibilities • Weaknesses • Harder to move with more people in family

  10. Family Forms • Experimental Family • Consists of individuals in multi-adult households (communes) or cohabitating. • Strengths • Many individuals to support individual needs  good for people in transition • Allows people not ready to commit to long-term relationships to share economic and social resources • Weaknesses • Tends to lack clearly defined responsibilities

  11. What is to come … • Now - December 15th – Complete Families Unit (Only 5 classes) • December 17th – Review for Test #2 (Independent Study #3 Due – Ss) • December 21st – Test #2 (Hand out Last Independent Study)

  12. What is on Test #2 • The Single Life • The Single Life Lesson 1 • Work and Education • Relationships, Dating, Love, Breaking Up • Marriage • Mate Selection • History of Marriage • Marital Roles / Division of Labor • The New Family • Family Functions and Forms • Choosing to Parent • Parenting and Childbirth • Childrearing • Managing Work and Family • Resource Management

  13. Practicum • By Winter Break: • Gs – You should have 28 practicum hours completed. • Ss – You should have 13 hours completed. • Journals • Gs – I decided you will only have to complete 12 Journals. If you haven’t done any by now, now is the time. I will not mark Journals 1-3 anymore so if you haven’t done 1 yet, start with Journal #4. • Ss – Same for you, I will not mark Journals 1-3 so start with #4. Ss only have to complete 8 Journals. • Use the rest of the class to work on your journals for this week.

More Related