Saturday, May 25, 2019

Family Life Course Development

Family keep Course Development Focus & Scope Assumptions These are the assumptions that provide the home for Family Life Course Development Theory. 1. Developmental processes are inevitable and important in understanding families. Individual family members, Interaction between family members, Structure of family, and The norms composing expectations roughly family roles all change over time. These changing roles and expectations for different stages of family are viewed as essential to an understanding of the family. . The family group is affected by all the levels of analysis. Social schema (Institutional norms and conventions to the highest degree the family) e. g. legal expectations like child abuse laws Aggregate Clusters (Families and norms structured by class and ethnicity) Social group Family Sub-group Relationships (e. g. Husband -Wife, Siblings, etc. ) Individual These familiar social norms represent the level of analysis of the family as a social institution.This i nstitutional level of analysis is generally the one we refer to when we talk about The Family and is the level on which we often conduct cross-cultural comparisons (the U. S. family compared with the Japanese family). 3. Time is Multi-Dimensional Periodicity An equal interval of time between each event on the clock. (e. g. jewel movements of a wrist watchs gears) However, our experience of time is perhaps not as regimented as periodicity would lead us to believe.Social Process Time- Family and personal experiences are used as a separate way to divide up time. (e. g. When we first married or out front your sister was born) Social norms are tied more closely to this social process dimension of time than to calendar or wristwatch time. Subsequently, for Family Life Course Development Theory, the family process dimension of time is critical to understanding and explaining family change because it provides the marker events for analyses. (E. g. births, weddings, deaths, etc. )

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