1 / 11

The American Family

The American Family. 12.2. Introduction. “Image of Typical American Family”: working father, a stay-at home mother, and two or three children Other examples: married couple who have decided not to have children, one parent present, no parents present—live with grandparents or relatives.

peyton
Download Presentation

The American Family

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. The American Family 12.2

  2. Introduction • “Image of Typical American Family”: working father, a stay-at home mother, and two or three children • Other examples: married couple who have decided not to have children, one parent present, no parents present—live with grandparents or relatives

  3. Courtship and Marriage • Why do People Marry in the United States? • Emotionally and physically attracted to one another • Similar social characteristics to their own: homogamy—based on age, socioeconomic status, religion and race • Marry close to their age • Marry of the same socioeconomic background • Marry of the same Protestant demolition (uncommon to marry non-Protestants • Only 2.4 % of marriages are between individuals of a different race • Heterogamy: marriage between individuals who have different social characteristics---changing more and more each day; function of changing social conditions

  4. Family Violence • Most devastating family disruption • Only recently not considered a rare phenomenon • Serious problem between all social classes and racial and ethnic groups • 1975 study: nearly1/3 of those interviewed exeperienced family violence; ¾ reported hitting their child • 10 years later: numbers have decreased

  5. Divorce • One out two marriages end in divorce • 4.2 divorces per 1,000 people in the U.S.-highest in the world • Couples who marry in teenage years more likely to divorce • Education-couples with college education less likely to divorce • Varies by race: African American women is higher than Hispanic or Caucasian women—tend to marry young and have low incomes • Men vs. Women: emotional adjustments—suicide, alcoholism, drug abuse, depression and anxiety are all higher among men than women • Children: studies suggest that children of divorced parents have more emotional problems and are lower achievers • Dual-earner families: financially possible for women to remove themselves from an unhappy marriage

  6. Family Disruptions in Later Life • Children are leaving the home later in life • Empty nest • Loss of a spouse

  7. Trends in American Family Life • Delayed Marriage: getting married later in life • Being single is acceptable alternative to being married • Finish education and launch careers • Couples living together outside of marriage • Delayed Childbearing: having children later in life • Allow time to complete education and to establish a career • Sandwich generation: couples having young children to raise and care for aging parents; feel overwhelmed

  8. Trends in American Family Life • Childlessness: married couples who never had children • Waited too long • Cannot have children due to infertility • Voluntary childlessness: conscious choice not to have children; high levels of education and income • Value career, spending time together, financial security and freedom

  9. Trends in American Family Life • Dual-Earner Marriages: both husband and wife have full time careers • Economic necessity • More women in colleges and university • Higher pay and more attractive jobs • Increased concern over women in the workforce • Negative consequences for the children; no meaning ful research

  10. Trends in American Family Life • One-Parent Families: increase in one parent families in America • Separation, divorce, death, births to unwed mothers or adoption by unmarried couples • 3 common “problems”: • Responsibility overload for parent • Task overload for parent • Emotional overload • Major source of stress is lack of money • Effects on children: • Higher drop out rate • Higher Teen-pregnancy rate • Higher Arrest rate

  11. Remarriage • Remarriage: increase rate of remarriage • Stepfamilies, blended families • Periods of adjustments—source of conflict • Having step mom or dad, brother or sister • Takes patience, understanding, and a willingness to work together • 60% end in divorce

More Related