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Public concern about the effects of maternal employment


Problem:

How can I make notes with bullet points in this paragraph? Public concern about the effects of maternal employment is decreasing. Two-thirds (66 percent) of adults in 1977 agreed that "It is much better for everyone involved if the man is the achiever outside the home and the woman takes care of the home and family," declining to 32 percent by 2012 (Donnelly et al., 2016). As Kathleen Gerson reported in her book The Unfinished Revolution (2010), almost 80 percent of young adults whose mothers worked outside the home did not believe that they would be better off if their mothers had stayed home. Many appreciated being the beneficiaries of their mother's outside labor. Researchers have found that adult daughters of employed mothers are more likely to be employed, more likely to hold supervisory responsibility if employed, work more hours, and earn marginally higher wages than women whose mothers stayed home full time. Sons raised by an employed mother spend more time caring for family members than men whose mothers stayed home full time, and daughters raised by an employed mother spend less time on housework than women whose mothers stayed home full time (McGinn et al., 2015). Children of mothers who worked outside the home have more egalitarian views of gender roles, and, in middle-class families higher educational and occupational goals (Hoffman, 2000). Need Assignment Help?

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Other Subject: Public concern about the effects of maternal employment
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