The division of labor among families within the family depends on the environment. Society creates gender ideology and influences the roles of women and men in families. In the second transformation of Early Russell, she detailed the three different gender ideologies. Traditional, transient, and equalityist ideologies will determine men and women 's areas of discrimination, areas of families, or workplaces. But it depends on the period of time you live and what society is like. And that determines the "normative" gender ideology that affects the division of labor of the family.
Project 2 - Analyze family division of labor You can use your own family or people you know. If you are living alone, sharing housework, and taking care of other people and children, please assign this assignment to your family. Also try using families including or including children. * 1 Please describe your family, such as gender, race, social class, age. * 2 What is the proportion of time each person spends on paid work? * 3 What is the proportion of the income of all family members engaged in paid labor? * 4 Who will pay the invoice? Who decides how to use the surplus or disposable income of the family? * 5 Who went through most of the next work? (How many times a week do you do if you share it?) Infant - Feeding, bathing, changing clothes, sleeping, playing, going to school or going to school
When paid labor, childcare and domestic affairs are combined, the parents of double income families are more equally singles than parents. In double income households, the average father worked 58 hours a week, while the mother worked for 59 hours. In a family whose father is the only bread winner, his total work will exceed his spouse or partner for about 11 hours (57 vs. 46 h per week). In a family whose mother is the only Breadwinner, her total workload exceeds her spouse or partner about 25 hours (58 hours per hour).
Mothers and fathers have different views on the division of labor of families, but it is widely believed that people within families are more focused on work and occupation. For example, in parents' families whose mothers and fathers are working full-time, 62% answered that they were both focused on work, about 1/5 (22%) answered that their fathers were more concentrated, 15% have a mother. In this type of family, there is a difference between mother and father in answering this question.