• Title/Summary/Keyword: 가족역할

Search Result 690, Processing Time 0.027 seconds

A Study on the Satisfaction with Life and Family Role Salience Perception through Types of Family Rituals - Mainly for unmarried males and females - (가족의례유형에 따른 생활만족도와 가족역할중요도 인식에 관한 연구 - 미혼남녀를 중심으로 -)

  • Kim, Eun Young;Park, Jeong Yun
    • Journal of Family Resource Management and Policy Review
    • /
    • v.17 no.3
    • /
    • pp.105-124
    • /
    • 2013
  • This study investigated the influence that the family rituals of unmarried males and females have on satisfaction with life and family role salience, recognizing the necessity to illuminate perceptions related to the original families of unmarried males and females through more diverse perspectives. Questionnaires were given to 601 unmarried male and female adults over 20 years of age. For data analysis, SPSS Win 18.0 was used, and the results are summarized as follows. First, the males and females were divided into three groups: "family with inactive family rituals", "family with active family rituals" or "family with moderate family rituals". There was a significant difference in family role salience depending on family type. Second, family type was classified as a degree of "relation" through common points of two variables, and each group was named as having a family with "satisfying relations," "general relations," or "deficient relations." Third, in the case of males, life satisfaction was high when the level of family economy was high, when parents' first marriage and family actively participated in family rituals.

  • PDF

A Study on Family Support Service for Adoptive Families in terms of Necessity and Role of the Family Center (가족센터(구 건강가정지원센터)의 입양가족 대상 서비스 제공의 필요성과 역할 정립에 관한 연구)

  • Lee, Sunhyung;Bae, Jiyeon
    • Journal of Family Resource Management and Policy Review
    • /
    • v.26 no.2
    • /
    • pp.1-17
    • /
    • 2022
  • This study provides a critical analysis of the Family Center's programs for adoptive families by interviewing employees at these centers and at Adoption Agencies who have experiences with adoption programs. For this study, nine such workers from three separate Family Centers and three such workers from two separate Adoption Agencies have (voluntarily) engaged in in-depth interviews. Major findings from the interviews are that the Family Centers were initially motivated to carry out adoption family programs for three principal reasons: they located many families (in need of adoption family program); potential adoptees were interested in the program; adoption families participated in the pre-existing programs such as Self-help Group and Co-parenting Space. Workers in the study also reported that they approach to an adoption family and their contemplation on ways to provide better services to the adoption families. They don't have any official and formal manual or guidelines from the Government Ministries and offices such as Korean Institute for Healthy Family; as a result, the workers at Family Centers have endeavored to gain connection with Adoption Agencies in hopes of cooperation with them and to improve the services at Family Centers. For benefits of Family Centers as a delivery system, they mentioned nationwide infrastructure, family professional, and arrangement of integrated program for family. For improvements, they listed awareness education based on a thorough consideration of adoptee's varied characteristics, close cooperation with adoption institutions, provision of basic operational manual from Korean Institute for Healthy Family, and governmental efforts to enlarge the consideration pool for families.