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      When Does Time Matter? Maternal Employment, Children’s Time With Parents, and Child Development

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      Demography
      Springer Science and Business Media LLC

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          Abstract

          This study tests the two assumptions underlying popularly held notions that maternal employment negatively affects children because it reduces time spent with parents: (1) that maternal employment reduces children's time with parents, and (2) that time with parents affects child outcomes. We analyze children's time-diary data from the Child Development Supplement of the Panel Study of Income Dynamics and use child fixed-effects and IV estimations to account for unobserved heterogeneity. We find that working mothers trade quantity of time for better "quality" of time. On average, maternal work has no effect on time in activities that positively influence children's development, but it reduces time in types of activities that may be detrimental to children's development. Stratification by mothers' education reveals that although all children, regardless of mother's education, benefit from spending educational and structured time with their mothers, mothers who are high school graduates have the greatest difficulty balancing work and child care. We find some evidence that fathers compensate for maternal employment by increasing types of activities that can foster child development as well as types of activities that may be detrimental. Overall, we find that the effects of maternal employment are ambiguous because (1) employment does not necessarily reduce children's time with parents, and (2) not all types of parental time benefit child development.

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          Social Capital in the Creation of Human Capital

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            Talking to children matters: early language experience strengthens processing and builds vocabulary.

            Infants differ substantially in their rates of language growth, and slow growth predicts later academic difficulties. In this study, we explored how the amount of speech directed to infants in Spanish-speaking families low in socioeconomic status influenced the development of children's skill in real-time language processing and vocabulary learning. All-day recordings of parent-infant interactions at home revealed striking variability among families in how much speech caregivers addressed to their child. Infants who experienced more child-directed speech became more efficient in processing familiar words in real time and had larger expressive vocabularies by the age of 24 months, although speech simply overheard by the child was unrelated to vocabulary outcomes. Mediation analyses showed that the effect of child-directed speech on expressive vocabulary was explained by infants' language-processing efficiency, which suggests that richer language experience strengthens processing skills that facilitate language growth.
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              Are Parents Investing Less in Children? Trends in Mothers’ and Fathers’ Time with Children

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Demography
                Demography
                Springer Science and Business Media LLC
                0070-3370
                1533-7790
                October 2014
                October 4 2014
                October 2014
                : 51
                : 5
                : 1867-1894
                Article
                10.1007/s13524-014-0334-5
                25280840
                b2e60450-2c5b-4e58-bbf7-79e275cf72aa
                © 2014

                http://www.springer.com/tdm

                History

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