1 / 17

Becoming Parents

Becoming Parents. Chapter 7 Sharla CarmencitA Elizabeth. Transition Of Parenthood. Approach the decision of divorce more slowly Major readjustments take place Parenting is becoming harder. Influenced by:. Benefits of children Costs of children Broad economic factors

rafal
Download Presentation

Becoming Parents

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Becoming Parents Chapter 7 SharlaCarmencitA Elizabeth

  2. Transition Of Parenthood Approach the decision of divorce more slowly Major readjustments take place Parenting is becoming harder

  3. Influenced by: Benefits of children Costs of children Broad economic factors Individual life-style factors Societal norms Policies

  4. Falling Fertility Average of two births per woman is referred to as the replacement value Average # of births per Canadian woman is 1.6 Average age of first child is 29.7 (2004)

  5. Fertility Baby boom: post WWII , unanticipated rise in birth rate Why?

  6. Page content follows Chart 4Births, Canada, 1921 to 2007 Previous Fertility Chart 1921-2007

  7. Child Spacing Low birth weight is highest among children born shortly after the end of their mother’s last pregnancies 1 or 3 year spacing between siblings was more positive or children’s self esteem than a two year spacing

  8. Childless Marriages All couples --- 7,482,780 Married with kids 3,443,775 Married without kids 2,662,130 Common-law with kids 618,150 Common –law without kids 758,715

  9. Births Outside of Marriage Unwed parenthood is no longer most prevalent among teenagers More than half of all unmarried mothers now are 25 or over Unmarried births are highest in Quebec Figure 7.5 in Page 194

  10. Adolescent Pregnancy Lower in 1994 than in 1974 ( almost as many adolescent pregnancies end in abortion as in live births) When compared to women in the 20-35 year age group, teen moms are most likely to postpone prenatal care, have children with low birth weights and have higher infant mortality

  11. Question Do you believe that birth control clinics should be required to notify parents when their teenage children have requested contraceptive or abortion information?

  12. Adoption Is a process where someone assumes parent responsibility and transfers all legal rights Infertility is the main reason couples seek to adopt Decline in children being placed in adoptive homes between 1980 to 1990 See p. 198 figure 7.7

  13. Family Size 2001 228,590 (total) 2006 215,075 (total) 2 persons 93,710 or 41% 3 “ “ 42,200 --- 18% 4 “ “ 47,960 --- 21% 5 “ “ 28,885 ---12% 6 “ “ 11,430 --- 5 % 7 & up 4,400 --- 1.9% Average is 3.3 2 persons 99,580 or 46% 3 “ “37,550 --- 17% 4 “ “ 41,850 ---- 19% 5” “ 24,445 ---- 11% 6 “ “8,035 ------ 3.7% 7 & up 3,615 ------- 1.7% Average is 3.2

  14. Birth Order and Sibling Relationships First-borns tend to be intellectual achievers and have high levels of self esteem Female first- borns tend to be more religious, sexually conservative, traditionally oriented to feminine roles, and associates with adults

  15. Birth Order and Sibling Relationships • Middle born: -lower levels of self- esteem, first and last get recognition, compete for resources with older siblings close in age • Last born: • - tend to be more sexually permissive, more likely to engage in social activities, visit with friends frequently, are high media consumers, and are less traditional

  16. Sex Control Choosing the sex of the child Would it create unbalanced sex ratio? Boys preferred over girls in Africa, Asia, Middle East, Swiss, Belgians, Italians, and Jews and Catholics in U.S

  17. Question If you had an option, would you choose the sex of your child?

More Related