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Family Update, Online!

Volume 07  Issue 36 5 September 2006
Topic: Labor Day

Family Fact: Working

Family Quote: Learning

Family Research Abstract: Quantity Is Quality

Family Fact of the Week: Working TOP of PAGE

"151 million:  Number of people age 16 or older in the nation's labor force in May 2006. Among the nation's workers are 81.2 million men and 69.8 million women.

(Source:  "Facts for Features: Labor Day 2006: Sept. 4," United States Census Bureau, CB06-FF.12, July 6, 2006; http://www.census.gov; from "Bureau of Labor Statistics News," united States Department of Labor, USDL 06-1542, September 1, 2006; http://www.bls.gov.)
Family Quote of the Week: Learning TOP of PAGE

"Labor is God's education"

(Source:  Ralph Waldo Emerson, Speech, before the Mechanics' Apprentices' Library Association, Boston, Massachusetts, January 25, 1841, in "Man the Reformer," Nature, Addresses, and Lectures, 1849, in Andrews, Robert; Biggs, Mary; and Seidel, Michael, et al., The Columbia World of Quotations, New York: Columbia University Press, 1996; http://www.bartleby.com/66/13/20413.html.)
For More Information TOP of PAGE

The Howard Center and The World Congress of Families stock a number of pro-family books, including Day Care: Child Psychology & Adult Economics, edited by Bryce Christensen. Please visit:

    The Howard Center Bookstore   

 Call: 1-815-964-5819    USA: 1-800-461-3113    Fax: 1-815-965-1826    Contact: Bookstore 

934 North Main Street Rockford, Illinois 61103

Family Research Abstract of the Week: Quantity Is Quality TOP of PAGE

For years, mothers that work full-time outside the home have argued that, even though they spend less time with their children than their stay-at-home peers, they enjoy "quality" time that allegedly compensates for the reduced attention. Yet a recent study on the extent and nature of family dinners in the lives of teenagers commissioned by the National Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse (CASA) at Columbia University clearly shows that quality time with children doesn't happen without large quantities of time.

CASA conducted a telephone survey of 1,000 teens, ages 12 to 17, and 829 parents of teens in the spring of 2005 to identify factors that increase the risk of adolescent use of cigarettes, alcohol, and illegal drugs, including marijuana. Confirming a more statistically rigorous study at the University of Minnesota (see NEW RESEARCH, September 2004, p. 2) that documented the protective nature of regular family meals in tempering risky behaviors, CASA discovered that teens who are home for dinner at least five times per week - relative to teens who have no more than two family meals per week - are also more likely to rate their family dinners as high quality.

Of teens that dine infrequently with their parents, 45 percent say the television is usually on when they do eat together, 29 percent say the family does not talk very much, and 16 percent lament that their dinners are often cut short. But among the teens who frequently eat with the family at home, only 34 percent say the television is on, only 12 percent say the family does not talk much, and only 5 percent think that their dinners do not last long enough.

The frequency of family dinners also appears to improve the quality of family relations, not just the dinners. Relative to teens who have infrequent family meals, their peers from families with a regular dinner time not only report less tension in the home, but are also more likely to approach their mother or father or both when confronting a serious problem. They also are more likely to say that their parents are "very proud" of them.

These documented benefits of the dinner table suggest that, building on the adage about the family that prays together, the family that dines together binds together.

(Source: "The Importance of Family Dinners II," The National Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse at Columbia University, September 2005.)
 

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