In Bringing Democracy Home, author Shere Hite discusses how the family is changing and how society needs to accept this change as well as to accommodate this change to give our children a better life. Hite points out how the process of democratization has finally caught up with private life. The “holy family” is all too often thought to be how the family structure is still set up today. However this thought couldn’t be more wrong. Society needs to accommodate the changes in family structure as well as bring the family together showing more love and acceptance.
I believe that society’s views of the family are exactly as Hite described them where the father is the breadwinner and the mother is the caregiver to the children. I also agree with Hite that this is not the standard anymore in many cases. I know one family who has the roles exactly the opposite where the father doesn’t work and stays home with the children and the mother is the financial supporter of the family. I agree with the fact that families need to display love for each other. I grew up in a family where, not until recently, did my father tell me he loves me very much and he never gave me a hug. I now know that I actually missed that as a child. I believe that families who show more love and who are not afraid to occasionally say “I love you” will yield more loving children who are more gentle and caring for others.
The Term Paper on Contemporary American Family Families Children
Contemporary American Families: Changes That Affect The Structure And Functioning Contemporary American Families: Changes that Affect the Structure and Functioning Did you know in a national study of high school seniors, 76 percent said it was "extremely important" to have a good marriage and family life Did you know a husband-wife family in the U. S. may spend as much as a third of their annual ...
After reading Hite’s article I now realize that single parent families are not so bad for children. I previously thought that the single parent would always be gone and the child wouldn’t have much support but I know that this is not the case at all. I, however, do not agree with Hite when she offers the evidence showing that sometimes single parent families are better than families where both parents raise the children together. I have grown up in a family where both parents are there rising me and I would not trade that for anything. I think that even though some statistics that single parent families may be better, other traits were not studied in those same families. The biggest thing that the child would miss out on is the view of both parents. It is important for children to experience the view of both a father and a mother to get a well rounded education from their parents. A male child who only grew up with his mother would be very feminine and may have trouble dealing with some situations that only men encounter. And a girl who grew up with her father would have trouble dealing with female situations especially during puberty where the father is not experienced in that field at all.
I would be interested in knowing the statistics of the children in single parent families and those in multiple parent families. This would let me fully make up my mind on whether multiple parent families are better than single parent families. Society needs to change its beliefs to fit today’s family structure and also look forward to the family structures of the future.