Black Family Benefits The African-American family is defined as a family network related to blood, marriage, or function and provides families' basic tools and expressions to members of these networks (Hill, 1999). This is one of the most powerful institutions in history, as it is now. Family superiority is not considered adaptation or response to contemporary ethnic or economic oppression but is considered a cultural asset passed down from generation to generation by socialization (McDaniel 1994; Hill 1999).
Current status of black families Many studies point to the important and important role of the family in the success and achievement of children before and after childbirth (Brooks-Gunn & Markman, 2005; Joe & Davis, 2009). Especially when compared with early childhood education and teachers, widely-defined families are often permanent facilities in the life of children. Family contributions are far beyond meeting the basic needs of children - food, shelter and healthcare. Families, especially parents, especially mothers, are the primary role of children's first attachment. The early years of safe attachment of children and their parents provides a basis for children to explore the environment and other uncertainties (Ainsworth, 1969; Bowlby, 1988), the importance of child development and success It was a trading process (Bronfenbrenner & Morris, 1998).
The power and intimacy of the white family society, the black family, the relationship between Black Americans and Black Africa, this was the theme of the slums family family story in the southern part of the working class, the Chicago from the late 1940s to the early 1950s. Play includes conflicting dreams. Family, son's identity crisis, claiming to daughter's liberation of women
As you know, the black family is very unstable and almost completely collapsed. The first advantage the black family repeatedly admits is the expansion of strong relatives and family relations. Achievement-oriented problems in black families often confuse Caucasian Caucasians. They believe they are not consistent with their own cultural expectations (Boyd-Franklin). Education is seen as a departure from poverty for many black families and other countries. Many black families think that treatment is a process calling them "crazy". In many cases, they are afraid of the reactions of big families, friends, communities. As pointed out elsewhere, many families are experiencing social service workers invading their private territory.