A Study of the Relationship among Expectation on Father’s Role, Conduct of Fatherhood and Marital Quality of Parents with Preschool Children in Central Taiwan

碩士 === 國立臺中教育大學 === 幼兒教育學系碩士在職專班 === 103 === The purpose of this study was to investigate expectation of father’s roles and performance of father’s roles and how each of them is correlated with marital quality among parents of preschool children in central Taiwan. The questionnaire survey method was...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: CHAN, YU-HAN, 詹雨涵
Other Authors: Chiang, Tzu-Yi
Format: Others
Language:zh-TW
Published: 2015
Online Access:http://ndltd.ncl.edu.tw/handle/cu86um
id ndltd-TW-103NTCT0096008
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-TW-103NTCT00960082019-05-15T21:51:45Z http://ndltd.ncl.edu.tw/handle/cu86um A Study of the Relationship among Expectation on Father’s Role, Conduct of Fatherhood and Marital Quality of Parents with Preschool Children in Central Taiwan 中部地區學齡前幼兒家長的父職角色期望及父職角色實踐與婚姻品質之相關研究 CHAN, YU-HAN 詹雨涵 碩士 國立臺中教育大學 幼兒教育學系碩士在職專班 103 The purpose of this study was to investigate expectation of father’s roles and performance of father’s roles and how each of them is correlated with marital quality among parents of preschool children in central Taiwan. The questionnaire survey method was adopted. The instrument was a self-developed “Questionnaire on Expectation of Father’s Roles, Performance of Father’s Roles, and Marital Quality”. Based on stratified random sampling, a total of 1400 parents of 700 preschool children between 2-6 of age were selected from kindergarten students in central Taiwan. From these parents, 1160 valid responses were obtained. Data were later analyzed using methods including descriptive statistics, paired-sample t-test, one-way ANOVA, Pearson’s product-moment correlation, and multiple regression. The main findings were as follows: 1. The parents of preschool children in central Taiwan showed a high level of expectation of father’s roles, with the expectation of “economic support” being the highest, followed by “instruction on learning”, “care and guidance”, and “care of daily living needs”. In terms of mother’s expectation of father’s roles, the expectation of “instruction on learning” was the highest, followed by “care and guidance”, “economic support”, and “care of daily living needs”. 2. As to overall expectation of father’s roles, fathers’ views varied significantly by their “average monthly income”, “socioeconomic status”, and “number of hours spent on house chores” and mothers’ views varied by their “number of children in the family”, “occupation”, “average monthly income”, and “socioeconomic status”. In both gender groups, “age”, “education degree”, “number of work hours” or “family structure” were not the variables that would significantly affect expectation of father’s roles. 3. The parents of preschool children in central Taiwan reported a high performance of father roles. Both gender groups showed that father’s performance was highest in the “economic support” dimension, followed by “instruction on learning”, “care and guidance”, and “care of daily living needs” dimensions. 4. As to the overall performance of father’s roles, both genders' perceptions varied significantly by “education degree”, “occupation”, “average monthly income”, and “socioeconomic status”. Significant differences existed between father’s “numbers of hours spent on house chores” and mother’s “family structures”. In both gender groups, differences between “ages”, “numbers of children”, and “work hours” were not significant. 5. Both expectation of father’s roles and performance of father’s roles were correlated with marital status, but the greater the gap between expectation and performance of father’s roles, the worse the marital quality. 6. It was also found that fathers tended to perceive positive and better marital quality when they had higher performance in “instruction on learning”, “economic support”, “care and guidance”, and “care of daily living needs”, and their child could live with their grandparents; mothers tended to perceive positive and better marital quality when their husbands had higher performance in “instruction on learning”, “economic support”, “care and guidance”, and “care of daily living needs”, and they had a healthy family structure. Based on the above findings, this study also proposed suggestions to parents of preschool children, authorities concerned, kindergartens, and future researchers. Keywords: central Taiwan, parents of preschool children, expectation of father's role, conduct of fatherhood, marital quality Chiang, Tzu-Yi 蔣姿儀 2015 學位論文 ; thesis 266 zh-TW
collection NDLTD
language zh-TW
format Others
sources NDLTD
description 碩士 === 國立臺中教育大學 === 幼兒教育學系碩士在職專班 === 103 === The purpose of this study was to investigate expectation of father’s roles and performance of father’s roles and how each of them is correlated with marital quality among parents of preschool children in central Taiwan. The questionnaire survey method was adopted. The instrument was a self-developed “Questionnaire on Expectation of Father’s Roles, Performance of Father’s Roles, and Marital Quality”. Based on stratified random sampling, a total of 1400 parents of 700 preschool children between 2-6 of age were selected from kindergarten students in central Taiwan. From these parents, 1160 valid responses were obtained. Data were later analyzed using methods including descriptive statistics, paired-sample t-test, one-way ANOVA, Pearson’s product-moment correlation, and multiple regression. The main findings were as follows: 1. The parents of preschool children in central Taiwan showed a high level of expectation of father’s roles, with the expectation of “economic support” being the highest, followed by “instruction on learning”, “care and guidance”, and “care of daily living needs”. In terms of mother’s expectation of father’s roles, the expectation of “instruction on learning” was the highest, followed by “care and guidance”, “economic support”, and “care of daily living needs”. 2. As to overall expectation of father’s roles, fathers’ views varied significantly by their “average monthly income”, “socioeconomic status”, and “number of hours spent on house chores” and mothers’ views varied by their “number of children in the family”, “occupation”, “average monthly income”, and “socioeconomic status”. In both gender groups, “age”, “education degree”, “number of work hours” or “family structure” were not the variables that would significantly affect expectation of father’s roles. 3. The parents of preschool children in central Taiwan reported a high performance of father roles. Both gender groups showed that father’s performance was highest in the “economic support” dimension, followed by “instruction on learning”, “care and guidance”, and “care of daily living needs” dimensions. 4. As to the overall performance of father’s roles, both genders' perceptions varied significantly by “education degree”, “occupation”, “average monthly income”, and “socioeconomic status”. Significant differences existed between father’s “numbers of hours spent on house chores” and mother’s “family structures”. In both gender groups, differences between “ages”, “numbers of children”, and “work hours” were not significant. 5. Both expectation of father’s roles and performance of father’s roles were correlated with marital status, but the greater the gap between expectation and performance of father’s roles, the worse the marital quality. 6. It was also found that fathers tended to perceive positive and better marital quality when they had higher performance in “instruction on learning”, “economic support”, “care and guidance”, and “care of daily living needs”, and their child could live with their grandparents; mothers tended to perceive positive and better marital quality when their husbands had higher performance in “instruction on learning”, “economic support”, “care and guidance”, and “care of daily living needs”, and they had a healthy family structure. Based on the above findings, this study also proposed suggestions to parents of preschool children, authorities concerned, kindergartens, and future researchers. Keywords: central Taiwan, parents of preschool children, expectation of father's role, conduct of fatherhood, marital quality
author2 Chiang, Tzu-Yi
author_facet Chiang, Tzu-Yi
CHAN, YU-HAN
詹雨涵
author CHAN, YU-HAN
詹雨涵
spellingShingle CHAN, YU-HAN
詹雨涵
A Study of the Relationship among Expectation on Father’s Role, Conduct of Fatherhood and Marital Quality of Parents with Preschool Children in Central Taiwan
author_sort CHAN, YU-HAN
title A Study of the Relationship among Expectation on Father’s Role, Conduct of Fatherhood and Marital Quality of Parents with Preschool Children in Central Taiwan
title_short A Study of the Relationship among Expectation on Father’s Role, Conduct of Fatherhood and Marital Quality of Parents with Preschool Children in Central Taiwan
title_full A Study of the Relationship among Expectation on Father’s Role, Conduct of Fatherhood and Marital Quality of Parents with Preschool Children in Central Taiwan
title_fullStr A Study of the Relationship among Expectation on Father’s Role, Conduct of Fatherhood and Marital Quality of Parents with Preschool Children in Central Taiwan
title_full_unstemmed A Study of the Relationship among Expectation on Father’s Role, Conduct of Fatherhood and Marital Quality of Parents with Preschool Children in Central Taiwan
title_sort study of the relationship among expectation on father’s role, conduct of fatherhood and marital quality of parents with preschool children in central taiwan
publishDate 2015
url http://ndltd.ncl.edu.tw/handle/cu86um
work_keys_str_mv AT chanyuhan astudyoftherelationshipamongexpectationonfathersroleconductoffatherhoodandmaritalqualityofparentswithpreschoolchildrenincentraltaiwan
AT zhānyǔhán astudyoftherelationshipamongexpectationonfathersroleconductoffatherhoodandmaritalqualityofparentswithpreschoolchildrenincentraltaiwan
AT chanyuhan zhōngbùdeqūxuélíngqiányòuérjiāzhǎngdefùzhíjiǎosèqīwàngjífùzhíjiǎosèshíjiànyǔhūnyīnpǐnzhìzhīxiāngguānyánjiū
AT zhānyǔhán zhōngbùdeqūxuélíngqiányòuérjiāzhǎngdefùzhíjiǎosèqīwàngjífùzhíjiǎosèshíjiànyǔhūnyīnpǐnzhìzhīxiāngguānyánjiū
AT chanyuhan studyoftherelationshipamongexpectationonfathersroleconductoffatherhoodandmaritalqualityofparentswithpreschoolchildrenincentraltaiwan
AT zhānyǔhán studyoftherelationshipamongexpectationonfathersroleconductoffatherhoodandmaritalqualityofparentswithpreschoolchildrenincentraltaiwan
_version_ 1719120930280570880