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- catalog contributor b1953177.
- catalog created "c1936.".
- catalog date "1936".
- catalog date "c1936.".
- catalog dateCopyrighted "c1936.".
- catalog description "I. Families and family behavior : Why study family behavior? ; What do we mean by family? ; What do we mean by behavior? : Mating behavior ; Family behavior toward neighbors and neighborhood problems ; Economic behavior ; Leisure behavior ; Educative behavior. -- II. How shall we study the family? : Common beliefs about the family : Mothers' aid laws ; The children's charter ; Foster home care. Experimental studies checking beliefs : How foster children turned out ; A follow-up study of delinquents ; Opinions concerning successful families ; Studies of relationships between home backgrounds and personal adjustments : Parent attitudes and child adjustment ; Child attitudes and child adjustment. Autobiographies as source materials : Impressions of poverty unexplained ; Impressions of promises made and broken ; Suggestions of "atmosphere".".
- catalog description "III. Neighbors : Variations of national and racial origins : Foreign-born neighbors and their children ; Racial prejudice among neighbors. Variations in belief : Neighbor reactions to variations in belief. -- IV. More neighbors : Variations in socio-economic status ; Variations in intelligence ; Variations in intelligence among families in different occupational groups ; Socio-economic level and intelligence ; Mental ratings of racial and nationality groups. Neighborhoods also vary. -- V. Neighborhoods : The community's newspapers : Vagaries of newspaper readers. The community's radios ; The community's picture theaters ; The community's schools : Notations and comments of a school principal -- E. The community's churches.".
- catalog description "IX. Maintaining healthy minds : Wanting to "get along" : Habits in conflict ; Daydreaming ; Losing oneself: identification : Making excuses: rationalization ; Protecting oneself: projection ; Wants denied: "sour grape" and "sweet lemon" mechanisms ; Capitalizing handicaps ; Inconsistencies: "logic-tight". Providing for individual needs : Resemblances ; Differences. Recognizing common human wants : Wanted: experiences which make one feel secure ; Wanted: an assured place in a group ; Wanted: proof of personal integrity. -- X. Careers for parents : Background study of parents : Learning to get along together ; Learning to behave as parents. Rating scales and score cards for parents : Traits of a homemaker ; Score cards for parents. Is parenthood a satisfying career? : Parenthood and security ; Parenthood and a sense of belonging ; Parenthood and personal integrity. -- ".
- catalog description "VI. Working and sharing income : Earning a living in a modern setting ; Personal adjustments to the family's work and income : Providing satisfactions for the provider ; Housewives "not gainfully employed" ; Children's "rights". The home school of personal economics : Homemade attitudes toward work ; Homemade attitudes toward money ; Prevocational and vocational guidance. -- VII. Using leisure : Changing attitudes toward leisure ; The new leisure challenges the family : Does the average adult have much leisure?. Common ways of spending leisure : Going places. Needed in the family: a philosophy of leisure : Time-killers and pastimes ; Leisure as a means of escape ; Leisure for self-enlargement : Leisure for contacts with a world of reality. -- VIII. Adjusting to community life : Adapting to neighbors : Susceptibility to tradition ; Susceptibility to modern influences ; Differences prove interesting. Adapting to newer influences in the community : Developing a critical attitude toward propaganda ; Developing a critical interest in motion pictures ; An experiment in motion picture appreciation. Contributions of schools to social progress ; An ancient institution serving a modern age : Contributions of the church to individuals ; Trends in the church and the "new social order". Building family standards : "Right" versus "wrong" ; Modern standards are ill-defined and variable ; Levels of adjustment to conflicting standards : Families organized for aggressive action.".
- catalog description "XI. Children and their parents : Being cared for: habits of dependence : Routine care and habits of dependence ; Emotional dependence. Investigating: and being thwarted ; Being afraid ; Wondering why : Adult reactions to children's questions ; Parent-child relations and "sex education". Experiencing companionship. -- XII. Growing up : Growing up: whose responsibility : Habits of dependence critically examined ; Opinions in conflict ; Companionable relationships ; An experimental approach to adulthood ; Getting ready to leave home. Facing realities outside the family : Realities of work : Leisure issues : Neighbor and community issues ; Realities of human relations. -- ".
- catalog description "XIII. Families of tomorrow : Who is concerned about marriage and family life? ; How may children be educated for marriage and family adjustment? : Education for family adjustment beginning in the nursery ; The nursery school and kindergarten in the school of family adjustment ; The education of the school child for family adjustment ; Education of the adolescent for family adjustment ; Educating oneself: a fact-seeking approach : Do the sexes differ in intelligence? ; Sex differences noted in childhood ; Nature and nurture ; Facts about direct inheritance. Educating oneself: through experiences.".
- catalog extent "471 p.".
- catalog hasFormat "Family behavior; a study of human relations.".
- catalog isFormatOf "Family behavior; a study of human relations.".
- catalog issued "1936".
- catalog issued "c1936.".
- catalog language "eng".
- catalog publisher "Philadelphia, Saunders,".
- catalog relation "Family behavior; a study of human relations.".
- catalog subject "Families.".
- catalog subject "Family.".
- catalog subject "HQ 728 C973f 1936".
- catalog subject "HQ728 .C8".
- catalog tableOfContents "I. Families and family behavior : Why study family behavior? ; What do we mean by family? ; What do we mean by behavior? : Mating behavior ; Family behavior toward neighbors and neighborhood problems ; Economic behavior ; Leisure behavior ; Educative behavior. -- II. How shall we study the family? : Common beliefs about the family : Mothers' aid laws ; The children's charter ; Foster home care. Experimental studies checking beliefs : How foster children turned out ; A follow-up study of delinquents ; Opinions concerning successful families ; Studies of relationships between home backgrounds and personal adjustments : Parent attitudes and child adjustment ; Child attitudes and child adjustment. Autobiographies as source materials : Impressions of poverty unexplained ; Impressions of promises made and broken ; Suggestions of "atmosphere".".
- catalog tableOfContents "III. Neighbors : Variations of national and racial origins : Foreign-born neighbors and their children ; Racial prejudice among neighbors. Variations in belief : Neighbor reactions to variations in belief. -- IV. More neighbors : Variations in socio-economic status ; Variations in intelligence ; Variations in intelligence among families in different occupational groups ; Socio-economic level and intelligence ; Mental ratings of racial and nationality groups. Neighborhoods also vary. -- V. Neighborhoods : The community's newspapers : Vagaries of newspaper readers. The community's radios ; The community's picture theaters ; The community's schools : Notations and comments of a school principal -- E. The community's churches.".
- catalog tableOfContents "IX. Maintaining healthy minds : Wanting to "get along" : Habits in conflict ; Daydreaming ; Losing oneself: identification : Making excuses: rationalization ; Protecting oneself: projection ; Wants denied: "sour grape" and "sweet lemon" mechanisms ; Capitalizing handicaps ; Inconsistencies: "logic-tight". Providing for individual needs : Resemblances ; Differences. Recognizing common human wants : Wanted: experiences which make one feel secure ; Wanted: an assured place in a group ; Wanted: proof of personal integrity. -- X. Careers for parents : Background study of parents : Learning to get along together ; Learning to behave as parents. Rating scales and score cards for parents : Traits of a homemaker ; Score cards for parents. Is parenthood a satisfying career? : Parenthood and security ; Parenthood and a sense of belonging ; Parenthood and personal integrity. -- ".
- catalog tableOfContents "VI. Working and sharing income : Earning a living in a modern setting ; Personal adjustments to the family's work and income : Providing satisfactions for the provider ; Housewives "not gainfully employed" ; Children's "rights". The home school of personal economics : Homemade attitudes toward work ; Homemade attitudes toward money ; Prevocational and vocational guidance. -- VII. Using leisure : Changing attitudes toward leisure ; The new leisure challenges the family : Does the average adult have much leisure?. Common ways of spending leisure : Going places. Needed in the family: a philosophy of leisure : Time-killers and pastimes ; Leisure as a means of escape ; Leisure for self-enlargement : Leisure for contacts with a world of reality. -- VIII. Adjusting to community life : Adapting to neighbors : Susceptibility to tradition ; Susceptibility to modern influences ; Differences prove interesting. Adapting to newer influences in the community : Developing a critical attitude toward propaganda ; Developing a critical interest in motion pictures ; An experiment in motion picture appreciation. Contributions of schools to social progress ; An ancient institution serving a modern age : Contributions of the church to individuals ; Trends in the church and the "new social order". Building family standards : "Right" versus "wrong" ; Modern standards are ill-defined and variable ; Levels of adjustment to conflicting standards : Families organized for aggressive action.".
- catalog tableOfContents "XI. Children and their parents : Being cared for: habits of dependence : Routine care and habits of dependence ; Emotional dependence. Investigating: and being thwarted ; Being afraid ; Wondering why : Adult reactions to children's questions ; Parent-child relations and "sex education". Experiencing companionship. -- XII. Growing up : Growing up: whose responsibility : Habits of dependence critically examined ; Opinions in conflict ; Companionable relationships ; An experimental approach to adulthood ; Getting ready to leave home. Facing realities outside the family : Realities of work : Leisure issues : Neighbor and community issues ; Realities of human relations. -- ".
- catalog tableOfContents "XIII. Families of tomorrow : Who is concerned about marriage and family life? ; How may children be educated for marriage and family adjustment? : Education for family adjustment beginning in the nursery ; The nursery school and kindergarten in the school of family adjustment ; The education of the school child for family adjustment ; Education of the adolescent for family adjustment ; Educating oneself: a fact-seeking approach : Do the sexes differ in intelligence? ; Sex differences noted in childhood ; Nature and nurture ; Facts about direct inheritance. Educating oneself: through experiences.".
- catalog title "Family behavior; a study of human relations, by Bess V. Cunningham.".
- catalog type "text".