Family Issues In The Modern Family

800 Words2 Pages

The dictionary defines family in many ways. One definition is "a significant social group in society typically consisting of one or two parents and their children.” While such definition is a good starting point, some modern family structures are excluded by such definition. In her essay, “Family: Idea, Institution, and Controversy,” Betty Farrell apparently assumes that the traditional family has dramatically changed, and the dynamics of change—altered the definition of a “family.” A family is no longer a picture of a particular image of the mythic past, referring to the golden days of the “1950s.” It is no longer a father, mother and their biological children living together under one roof (and certainly not with the a breadwinner father and a stay-at-home mother). In today 's modern society, it is now common to see women raise their …show more content…

Also, because 99.9 percent of divorced parents’ children ended up staying with their mothers, a vast number of single-parent households are subjected to poverty because of the lack of two-parent income. According to Farrell, such factors prompt the rise of “working mothers consumed with worry about childcare,” and statistically, some of the major problems with busy working mothers and one parent household are the lack of supervision and attachment of parents with their children. Consequently, unsupervised teenagers seek the emotional attachment of family ties among peers and gangs that are found lacking in their own homes. Such consequence could also be the outcome of the negative behavior among youth. Additionally, since behavior is the primary cause of socialization through interaction with others, teenagers who became "family-attached" to friends and gangs and with violent behaviors tend to behave violently as

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