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- catalog abstract "A research team of scientists from eleven states representing each region of the United States was assembled, and a collaborative research project was established in 1977 under the Regional Research program of the United States Department of Agriculture (NE-113). The project included three proposals: to establish a data bank for urban and rural families on time use for household, paid, and volunteer work, and nonwork activities, to compare time use among urban and rural populations in various geographic areas in the U.S., and to determine changes in time use over the past decade. The 1967-1968 time use study conducted in Syracuse, New York was the catalyst for this collaborative effort. Recognizing the interest in this subject and the limitations of the existing knowledge base provided the idea of a national research study. Those interested in measurement and valuation of nonmarket work use time as a factor in their models. Allocations of time between obligations and leisure are reflected in the time use of family members, as are the effects of role-sharing in dual-career families. At the micro-level, a better picture of the quality of life can be seen if time use of all family members is analyzed. This approach allows the study of distribution of work loads, interaction of household members, and trade-offs that can be made in a family household unit. The states which participated in the study include: California, Connecticut, Louisiana, New York, North Carolina, Oklahoma, Oregon, Texas, Utah, Virginia, and Wisconsin. Support was also received from Ohio. All participating household units contained four persons, two adults and two children under the age of 18 who were full-time residents of the household. The sample in each state was stratified according to urban or rural residence and age of the younger child. Louisiana was the one state containing an urban sample only. North Carolina was the one state containing a rural sample only. A total of 2,100 families participated through the use of questionnaires and time use charts. 1,050 of these were classified as urban families, and 1,050 were classified as rural families.".
- catalog contributor b3300030.
- catalog contributor b3300031.
- catalog contributor b3300032.
- catalog created "[198-?]".
- catalog date "1980".
- catalog date "[198-?]".
- catalog dateCopyrighted "[198-?]".
- catalog description "105,000 records, with a physical record size of 80 characters; 50 records per case; approximately 1,200 variables.".
- catalog description "A research team of scientists from eleven states representing each region of the United States was assembled, and a collaborative research project was established in 1977 under the Regional Research program of the United States Department of Agriculture (NE-113). The project included three proposals: to establish a data bank for urban and rural families on time use for household, paid, and volunteer work, and nonwork activities, to compare time use among urban and rural populations in various geographic areas in the U.S., and to determine changes in time use over the past decade. The 1967-1968 time use study conducted in Syracuse, New York was the catalyst for this collaborative effort. Recognizing the interest in this subject and the limitations of the existing knowledge base provided the idea of a national research study. Those interested in measurement and valuation of nonmarket work use time as a factor in their models. Allocations of time between obligations and leisure are reflected in the time use of family members, as are the effects of role-sharing in dual-career families. At the micro-level, a better picture of the quality of life can be seen if time use of all family members is analyzed.".
- catalog description "Special Issue: Home Economics Research Journal, Dec. 1983, Vol. 12, No. 2.".
- catalog description "This approach allows the study of distribution of work loads, interaction of household members, and trade-offs that can be made in a family household unit. The states which participated in the study include: California, Connecticut, Louisiana, New York, North Carolina, Oklahoma, Oregon, Texas, Utah, Virginia, and Wisconsin. Support was also received from Ohio. All participating household units contained four persons, two adults and two children under the age of 18 who were full-time residents of the household. The sample in each state was stratified according to urban or rural residence and age of the younger child. Louisiana was the one state containing an urban sample only. North Carolina was the one state containing a rural sample only. A total of 2,100 families participated through the use of questionnaires and time use charts. 1,050 of these were classified as urban families, and 1,050 were classified as rural families.".
- catalog description "United States.".
- catalog extent "1 data file (105,000 logical records) +".
- catalog isPartOf "ICPSR (Series) ; 8240.".
- catalog isPartOf "ICPSR ; 8240".
- catalog issued "1980".
- catalog issued "[198-?]".
- catalog language "und".
- catalog publisher "Ann Arbor, Mich. : Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research [distributor],".
- catalog spatial "United States".
- catalog spatial "United States.".
- catalog subject "Households United States Longitudinal studies.".
- catalog subject "IV. ECONOMIC BEHAVIOR AND ATTITUDES. B. Surveys of Economic Attitudes and Behavior.".
- catalog subject "Time management United States Longitudinal studies.".
- catalog title "Family time use [computer file] : an eleven-state urban/rural comparison, 1978 / principal investigators, Robert O. Sinclair and B. A. Lewis.".