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Maternal Employment and Children's Development Longitudinal Research
Título:
Maternal Employment and Children's Development Longitudinal Research
ISBN:
9781489908308
Edición:
1st ed. 1988.
PRODUCTION_INFO:
New York, NY : Springer US : Imprint: Springer, 1988.
Descripción física:
XXIV, 292 p. online resource.
Serie:
Springer Studies in Work and Industry
Contenido:
I. Introduction -- 1 Maternal Employment and Children's Development: An Introduction to the Issues -- II. Longitudinal Studies -- 2 Maternal Employment, Family Environment, and Children's Development: Infancy through the School Years -- 3 The Influences of Maternal Employment across Life: The New York Longitudinal Study -- 4 Maternal Employment and the Transition to Parenthood -- 5 Maternal Employment When Children Are Toddlers and Kindergartners -- 6 Maternal Employment and Sex Typing in Early Adolescence: Contemporaneous and Longitudinal Relations -- 7 Maternal Separation Anxiety: Its Role in the Balance of Employment and Motherhood in Mothers of Infants -- III. Maternal Employment: Integration of Findings, Corporate Applications, and Social Policies -- 8 Balancing Work and Family Lives: Research and Corporate Applications -- 9 Maternal Employment and Children's Development: An Integration of Longitudinal Findings with Implications for Social Policy.
Síntesis:
In a review written in 1979, I noted that there was a paucity of research examining the effects of maternal employment on the infant and young child and also that longitudinal studies of the effects of maternal em­ ployment were needed (Hoffman, 1979). In the last 10 years, there has been a flurry of research activity focused on the mother's employment during the child's early years, and much of this work has been longi­ tudinal. All of the studies reported in this volume are at least short-term longitudinal studies, and most of them examine the effects of maternal employment during the early years. The increased focus on maternal employment during infancy is not a response to the mandate of that review but rather reflects the new employment patterns in the United States. In March 1985, the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported that 49.4% of married women with children less than a year old were employed outside the home (Hayghe, 1986). This figure is up from 39% in 1980 and more than double the rate in 1970. By now, most mothers of children under 3 are in the labor force.
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