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TIME: Almanac of the 20th Century
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TIME, Almanac of the 20th Century.ISO
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1990
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90
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oct_dec
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1108584.000
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<text>
<title>
(Nov. 08, 1990) The Great Experiment
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
Nov. 08, 1990 Special Issue - Women:The Road Ahead
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
THE CHANGING FAMILY, Page 72
The Great Experiment
</hdr>
<body>
<p>Today's parents are raising children in ways that little
resemble their own youth. The question that haunts them: Will
the kids be all right?
</p>
<p>By Philip Elmer-Dewitt--Reported by Deborah Edler Brown/Los
Angeles and Michele Donley/Chicago, with other bureaus
</p>
<p> In Houston a stay-at-home dad kisses his pregnant wife
goodbye as she heads for the office, and then turns back to the
task of getting their four children fed, washed and ready for
the day ahead. In Long Branch, N.J., parents work alternate
shifts--she during the day at a hospital accounting office;
he at night, as a security guard--so that their three kids
won't be left with strangers. In Lincoln, Neb., a divorced
mother of four--one of the nation's 9.3 million single parents--depends on her eldest daughter to fill in while she is at
work. In cities from Providence to Portland, both parents dash
to work in the morning, handing their kids off to a variety of
nannies, sitters, schools, day-care centers, neighbors and
relatives.
</p>
<p> These families generally have three things in common. The
parents are not raising their children the way they themselves
were raised. None have any idea how it will all turn out. And
all live in perpetual fear that some piece of their carefully
crafted child-care structure will fall out of place and bring
the fragile edifice of their lives tumbling down like a
toddler's tower of blocks.
</p>
<p> Child care in America has become a kind of vast social
experiment. Not only has the archetypal nuclear family of the
1950s (working father, stay-at-home wife) given way to a myriad
of customized arrangements, each as unique as a baby's toeprint,
but this historic shift has been accompanied by a new awareness
of the importance of attachment and family ties in the emotional
development of a child. Parents today, primed by racks of
best-selling child-care manuals, are haunted by questions about
their changing roles. What kind of bonding takes place when a
child is passed from one paid caretaker to another? What are the
risks of growing up without a stable nuclear family or any real
community support? How do values get passed from one generation
to the next when the dominant cultural influences on children
are television, pop music and Nintendo?
</p>
<p> Not that the workadaddy-housewife family is dead. Homemaking
mothers married to breadwinning fathers still make up the
largest category of families with young children. The "Ozzie and
Harriet" arrangement represents one-third of the nation's 14.8
million families with preschool children, although dual-income
households (28.8% as of 1987) are rapidly catching up. Also
gaining is the single-parent family, because of divorce and the
explosive rise in births to unwed mothers: up from 5% of all
births in 1960 (and 22% of all black births) to 22% in 1985 (60%
of blacks).
</p>
<p> But a family of any type is subject to sudden change. Social
historian Barbara Dafoe Whitehead, writing in the journal Family
Affairs, points out that just as today's at-home mother may be
tomorrow's working mom, today's career woman may soon be
pregnant and thinking about remaining at home. "One day the
Ozzie and Harriet couple is eating a family meal," says
Whitehead. "The next day, they are working out a joint-custody
arrangement."
</p>
<p> As a result, no parent is immune to the uncertainty and
guilt that make the child-rearing dilemma the No. 1 topic of
conversation among young mothers today, and of more than passing
interest to fathers. The job is a tangle of double binds. Should
a mother stay at home, providing the values, discipline and
security her children need, and let her hard-earned job skills
go fallow? Or should she take a chance that her kids will be
O.K. and pursue a life that brings more personal satisfaction
and economic advantages? "It's very hard," says Stephanie
Burchfield, a Los Angeles public-relations executive and mother
of an 8-month-old. "I see her only an hour in the morning and
an hour in the evening. I don't have a single friend who has
worked full time who doesn't regret how little time she's spent
with her children."
</p>
<p> Nor does it help that in subtle ways--a look across the
grocery aisle, a comment at the nursery school--the two kinds
of moms exacerbate each other's guilt. Debbie Ippolito of
Lakewood, N.J., seethes whenever a working mother makes a
comment about all the "free time" she has. "People think you're
eating bonbons all day," she rails. "I had a baby, not a
lobotomy!" Heightening the rivalry, some of those who gave up
the fast track pursue full-time parenting with a competitive
drive honed in the business world. "It's not O.K. to just have
an average child; you must have an improved child," complains
psychologist Shari Thurer, of Boston University.
</p>
<p> Much of the turmoil felt by parents in the '90s derives from
the fact that so many are children of the '50s. Their image of
an ideal family comes from TV shows like Father Knows Best;
their notion of the ideal mother is the one played by Jane
Wyatt: never rattled, always at home. The irony is that this
"family of nostalgia," as Madeleine Stoner at the University of
Southern California calls it, was largely an aberration that
flourished for only a couple of decades after World War II.
</p>
<p> In colonial America, according to Maris Vinovskis, professor
of history at the University of Michigan, the job of raising
children was shared by the two parents. Mothers swaddled the
baby and put food on the table, but fathers were responsible for
the child's intellectual and moral upbringing. The majority of
women have worked throughout U.S. history, first in the home,
then in the shop and factory. With wave after wave of cheap
immigrant labor available during the late 19th and early 20th
centuries, even middle-class families had nannies. Nor is there
anything new about day-care centers. In the 1820s 40% of all
three-year-olds in Massachusetts were going to "infant
schools," though such institutions fell out of favor within a
decade.
</p>
<p> The deeper change, according to Penelope Leach, author of
the popular parenting manual Your Baby and Child, stems from the
Industrial Revolution, which forced a split between the home and
the workplace. "Home and its surrounding community used to be
everybody's operating base, with work and play and family pretty
much intermixed," she says. "Now work has moved into
geographically separate production centers and takes the form
of specialized jobs that cannot be shared, swapped or carried
on with a baby strapped to your back." Home has been left an
impoverished place, little more than a dormitory, a spot for a
shower and a change of clothes. And as mothers have
increasingly departed for the office or factory, children's
isolation from the adult world has accelerated dramatically.
</p>
<p> How will these marginalized kids turn out? Experts caution
that it is difficult to generalize, but a study by the American
Academy of Pediatrics describes some pitfalls. Children from
single-parent homes face an array of risks, ranging from mild
cognitive delays in preschoolers to withdrawal and depression
in older kids. Children pressured by aggressive scheduling often
show signs of chronic stress. "With the amount of anxiety and
juggling," suggests San Francisco clinical psychologist Jeree
Pawl, there is a risk that the next generation could grow up
"thinking that they're nuisances. An unhandy bundle, a shelf for
which is not always easy to find."
</p>
<p> America's two most famous pediatricians, T. Berry Brazelton
of Harvard and Benjamin Spock, worry about the disappearance of
discipline, particularly when both parents work. "Parents don't
want to spend what little time they have with their children
reprimanding them," says Spock. "This encourages children to
push limits and test parental authority." Brazelton is also
concerned that working mothers are so overwhelmed by guilt that
they "detach from the baby, because it's the only way they have
of coping."
</p>
<p> The feminist movement has always insisted that women's
liberation must go hand in hand with changing roles for men,
particularly at home. Such changes are coming about, though
women still do the lion's share of the den keeping. Not only are
fathers present in the birthing room (90% are there, as opposed
to 10% twenty years ago) and willing to change diapers, but
their entire job has been reinterpreted from passive bill payer
to activist player. "It's no longer seen as unmasculine to be
caring for young children," says Hanne Sonquist, a family
therapist in Santa Barbara, Calif.
</p>
<p> There is also a movement afoot to extend to American parents
the kind of government support--in day care, parental leaves
and tax deductions--that their European counterparts have long
enjoyed. Sweden, for instance, provides parents 90% salary
reimbursement for the first nine months after birth. But the
battle in the U.S. for even limited family programs remains an
uphill march: industry lobbied so hard against legislation that
would have required most businesses to provide 12 weeks of
unpaid parental leave that President Bush vetoed it last June.
</p>
<p> Though that veto was lamented by many parents, the debate
over government policies does not necessarily touch what Barbara
Whitehead calls "the emotional core of family concerns." These
are centered, she says, not on the material needs of parents,
but on the moral education of their children. Parents fear that,
in the absence of more benevolent influences, children are
adopting the values of the aggressively materialistic,
consumerist culture portrayed on TV. "In their eyes," says
Whitehead, "children are no longer acquiring an identity at
home, as much as they are attempting to buy one in the
marketplace."
</p>
<p> What's to be done? Subsidized child care and tax credits
would ease the pressure on parents to leave home before they
want to. What is more difficult is finding a way to undo the
damage to the family done by a century of economic and social
upheaval. As Penelope Leach puts it, the most important question
for parents is "not what day care to choose or when to go back
to work, but how to reintegrate our children into our world."
That is a challenge that is likely to be with the nation when
today's children are preparing to have kids of their own.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>