Lecture Note - Chapter 12 - Family
Lecture Note - Chapter 12 - Family
Lecture Note - Chapter 12 - Family
Copyright 2022 © McGraw Hill LLC. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of McGraw Hill LLC.
Because learning changes everything. ®
Chapter 12
The Family and Household Diversity
Copyright 2022 © McGraw Hill LLC. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of McGraw Hill LLC.
Inside
© McGraw Hill LLC Sources: Bureau of the Census, 2017d:Figure AD-3a.; American Community Survey, 2019a: B09021. 7
Composition: What Is the Family 2
© McGraw Hill LLC Sources: Buchholz, 2019; Bureau of the Census, 2019a; Eurostat, 2020; Kopf, 2020. Flags: admin_design/Shutterstock 21
Courtship and Mate Selection 1
© McGraw Hill LLC Sources: Bureau of the Census 2008a:56; 2019f: Table C3. 29
Child-Rearing Patterns 1
© McGraw Hill LLC Source: Bureau of the Census 2019g. Hand: Jamie Grill/Getty Images 32
Child-Rearing Patterns 3
Adoption:
Adoption: the transfer of legal rights, responsibilities, and
privileges of parenthood to a new legal parent or parents.
• Every year, about 125,000 children are adopted.
• Functionalist perspective: government has a strong interest in
encouraging adoption because it offers a stable family
environment.
• Interactionist perspective: adoption may require a child to adjust
to very different family environment and parental approach to
child rearing.
Adopting a child is a big adjustment, particularly when the
child comes from another culture.
Dual-income families:
Among couples with children under 18, 93 percent of the
men and 71 percent of the women were in the labor force in
2018.
Factors in the increase in the number of dual-income
couples:
• Economic need.
• Desire by both members of the couple to pursue their careers.
Commuter marriages have risen.
• Today the woman’s job is often the one that creates the
separation.
Single-parent families:
Single-parent families: only one parent is present to care
for the children.
• In 2019, a single parent headed about 19 percent of white
families with children, 29 percent of Hispanic families, and 53
percent of Black families.
Although life in a single-parent family can be stressful, it is
not inevitably more difficult.
• Interactionists observe that for low-income teenage women, a
child may provide a sense of motivation and purpose.
Stepfamilies:
Rising rates of divorce and remarriage have increased the
number of stepfamily relationships.
The nature of blended families has social significance for
adults and children.
Children may not be better off than children of divorced,
single-parent households.
Children raised in families with stepmothers are less likely to
have health care, education, and money spent on their food.
© McGraw Hill LLC Sources: Bureau of the Census 1975:64; Centers for Disease Control and Prevention 2012b, 2017. 39
Statistical Trends in Divorce 2
Applying Sociology:
• Functionalists say that family leave is important as a means of
facilitating the parent–child interaction crucial to socialization.
• Interactionists look at family leave policies’ impact on everyday
relations at work and at home.
• Conflict theorists note the inherent class bias in family leave
policy, which benefits a relatively small number of relatively
affluent workers.
• Even when family leave plans exist, companies seem to
stigmatize the use of these policies.
• Feminist scholars content this results from a flexibility stigma:
the devaluation of workers who see or are presumed to need
flexible work arrangements.
Initiating Policy:
• The Family and Medical Leave Act (1993) entitled some
employees to unpaid, job-protected leave.
• Some private corporations have adopted family friendly-policies.
• In 2015, Facebook announced employees would receive 4
months of paid maternal and paternal leave.
• Parental leave enjoys wide public support, but debate continues
over what should be covered and who should pay for it.
© McGraw Hill LLC Source: Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, 2020b. Flags: admin_design/Shutterstock 53
Because learning changes everything. ®
www.mheducation.com
Copyright 2022 © McGraw Hill LLC. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of McGraw Hill LLC.
HOW MODERN FAMILIES
INCREASE
SOCIAL INEQUALITY
Link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hSmAYUnZyxE
Produced by The Economist
(20 minutes)