Too old for child care? Too young for self-care? Negotiations between preteens and their employed parents

Too old for child care? Too young for self-care? Negotiations between preteens and their employed parents

Too old for child care? Too young for self-care?

Negotiations between preteens and their employed parents

Polatnick

M. Rivka

Polatnick, M. Rivka

Author

Author

University of California, Berkeley

Center for Working Families

University of California, Berkeley. Center for Working Families

Sponsor

Sponsor

text

working paper

Berkeley, CA Center for Working Families, University of California, Berkeley 1999 1999 monographic

Berkeley, CA

Berkeley, CA

Center for Working Families, University of California, Berkeley

1999

1999

monographic

English eng

English

eng

electronic application/pdf 32 p. born digital

electronic

application/pdf

32 p.

born digital

Issues of work/family conflict and child care have been addressed mainly with regard to families with young children. When children advance to middle school at age ten or eleven, families usually must make new after-school arrangements, in a context of limited options and lack of consensus about appropriate care. Based on interviews with thirty-six preteens and with forty-two of their working-class through upper-middle-class parents in a California city, this paper examines their negotiations about the after-school hours. The transition to middle school entailed an abrupt decline in school-based care resources and school-to-parent communication and emboldened most of the preteens to assert more autonomy. Some working families pieced together complicated plans for after-school coverage; others slipped into “self-care” arrangements, usually despite parents' misgivings. In analyzing ideological and structural factors that affect the negotiations, I employ the concepts growing-up schedule and care reduction schedule. Four short case studies illustrate how preteens and parents tried to speed up or slow down these schedules. Proposing the concept of an optimal care mix, I discuss how middle schools and their communities can become more responsive to the needs of working families.

M. Rivka Polatnick is a Senior Postdoctoral Researcher at the Center for Working Families. I wish to acknowledge the community of thinkers at the Center for Working Families, with particular thanks for input from Arlie Russell Hochschild, Barrie Thorne, Elaine Bell Kaplan, Christopher Davidson, Terry Arendell, Allison Pugh, Anita Garey, and Karen Hansen. Thanks also to Patricia Guthrie, Barbara Paige, and Colleen Fong for comments on an early draft and to Bonnie Kwan for support and assistance.

Berkeley Center for Working Families Working Paper No. 11

Berkeley Center for Working Families Working Paper No. 11

Berkeley Center for Working Families Working Paper

No. 11

Use of this resource is governed by the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons "Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States" (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/us/)

wfn_bwpaper_47.pdf

wfn_bwpaper_47.pdf

MChB English eng

MChB

English eng

English

eng