CAFF321book.pdf

Resource Management for Individuals

and Families

FiFth Edition

Elizabeth Goldsmith Florida State University

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Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

Goldsmith, Elizabeth B. Resource management for individuals and families / Elizabeth Goldsmith.—5th ed. p. cm. ISBN-13: 978-0-13-295514-0 ISBN-10: 0-13-295514-8 1. Life skills. 2. Lifestyles. 3. Resource allocation. 4. Stress management. 5. Time management. 6. Work and family. I. Title. HQ2037.G65 2013 646.7—dc23 2012021630

10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

ISBN-10: 0-13-295514-8 ISBN-13: 978-0-13-295514-0

iii

Theory and Management 52 • Application of Systems Theory to Households 54 • Human Ecology and Ecosystems 55

Economic Theory 57 Optimization and Satisficing 57 • Risk Aversion 60

Summary 61

Key Terms 61

Review Questions 62

References 62

For Further Reading 63

3 Values, Attitudes, Goals, and Motivation | 65 Main Topics 65

Values and Attitudes 68 Types of Values 71 • Values, Lifestyles, and Consumption 75 • Societal and Cultural Values 76 • Families, Values, Standards, and Households 77 • Value Chains 79 • Attitudes 80

Goals and Motivation 81 Goals Versus Habits 82 • Goal Attributes 82 • Types of Goals 83

• Goals and Performance, Creativity, and Learning 84 • Setting Goals 86 • Disengaging from Goals 90 • College Students’ Values, Goals, and Life Outcomes 92 • Motivation 95

Summary 97

Key Terms 97

Review Questions 98

References 98

4 Resources | 101 Main Topics 101

Resources Defined 104 Types of Resources 106 • Economics and Resources 108 • Resource Attributes and a Model 115 • Resource-Advantage Theory 116 • Other Resource

Preface vii About the Author xii

1 Management Today | 3 Main Topics 3

What Is Family Resource Management? 4 Introduction to Family and Household Trends 5 • Management as

a Process 9 • Successful Plans: Putting Management into Action 13 • Why Manage? 14 • Who Manages? 14 • Influences on Management Styles 15 • Interdisciplinary Foundation 17

Life Management for Individuals and Families 20 Managing the Second Half of Life 20 • Singles, Households, Nonfamily Households, and Families 22 • Changes in Family and Household Composition 26

What Lies Ahead? 28

Summary 28

Key Terms 28

Review Questions 29

References 29

2 Management History and Theories | 31 Main Topics 31

History of Management 33 The Early Years of Management 33 • Household Production/Consumption System I: Premodern (Early 1900s) 38 • Household Production/Consumption System II: Modern (1950s to 1990s) 40 • Household Production/Consumption System III: Postmodern (Early 21st Century) 40 • Four Eras of Management 42

Theory Overview 45 Functions of Theory 46 • Theories Ahead 46

Systems Theory 47 Open and Closed Families 47 • Subsystems and System Elements 48 • The Personal System 52 • Family Systems

contents

iv contents

Allocation Factors: Utility and Accessibility 119 • Decision Making and Resources 119 • Knowledge, Education, and Health: Vital Resources 120 • Cultural Perceptions of Resources 120

Resources, Families, and Households 122 Consumption: China Using More Resources 123 • Strategy and the Conservation of Resources Theory 125

Summary 125

Key Terms 126

Review Questions 126

References 126

5 Decision Making and Problem Solving | 129 Main Topics 129

Decisions Defined and Explored 132 Decision Making as Part of Management 133 • Steps in Decision Making 135 • Self-Doubt, Self- Ambivalence, and Decision Making 137 • Models, Rules, and Utility 138 • Reference Groups 140 • Personal Decision Making 141

Family Decision Making, Including Division of Household Work 144

Consumer Decision Making in Families 149 • Getting Out of the House 151

Problem Solving 152 Definition, Analysis/Timing, and Plan of Action 153 • Uncertainty, Risk, and Success 156 • The GO Model: Visualization of a Problem- Solving Process 159

Summary 161

Key Terms 161

Review Questions 161

References 162

6 Planning, Implementing, and Evaluating | 165 Main Topics 165

What Is Planning? 169 The Planning Process and Task 170 • Need Fulfillment 171 • Time, Stress, and Planning 171 • Planning in Families and Other Groups 176 • Standard Setting 178 • Scheduling, Sequencing, and Multitasking 179 • Attributes of Plans 181 • Types of Plans 182

What Is Implementing? 185 Actuating 186 • Checking and Controlling 186

What Is Evaluating? 187

Summary 190

Key Terms 190

Review Questions 190

References 191

7 Communication | 193 Main Topics 193

Communication as Part of the Management Process 195 Channels, Noise, and Setting 197 • Sending and Receiving 199 • Listening 200 • Messages 202

• Channels and Feedback 205

Communication Conflicts 206 In Families 207 • Cultures and Subcultures 212

Communication in Small Groups 215 Group Discussions and Cohesion 215

Information and Communications Technology 216 Social Networks and Social Network Sites 216 • Information Overload and Habitual Decision Making 218 • The Internet and the Human Capacity to Process Information 219 • The Role of the Home and the Individual 220

Summary 221

Key Terms 222

Review Questions 222

References 223

8 Managing Human Needs | 225 Main Topics 225

Changes in Population 226 Population Terms and Trends 228 • Population Age and Composition 230 • Households and Families 232

The Nature of Change 232 Mobility 233 • Managing Change 233

Meeting Individual, Family, and Societal Needs 235 Two-Earner Families 235 • Child

Care 236 • Caregiving for Older Persons and the Elderly 239 • Adjusting to Retirement 243 • The Homeless 244 • Individuals with Disabilities 246 • Single-Parent, Remarriage, and Stepfamilies or Blended Families 248 • Poverty and Low-Income Families 251

contents v

Summary 253

Key Terms 253

Review Questions 253

References 254

9 Managing Time | 257 Main Topics 257

Time as a Resource 263 Discretionary Versus Nondiscretionary Time 264 • Children, Adolescents, and Time 265 • Adults and Time 265 • Modern Tools of Time Management 269 • The ABC Method of Time Control and Goals 270 • Time Perceptions 272 • Perceptions of Time across Cultures 274 • Biological Time Patterns 277

Quantitative and Qualitative Time Measures 277 Demands, Sequencing, and Standards 280

Summary 285

Key Terms 285

Review Questions 285

References 286

10 Managing Work and Family | 289 Main Topics 289

Introduction to Work and Family Research 291

Overview of Work and Family 292 Work and Family Conflicts 293 • Benefits of Work and Spillover to Families 295 • Resolving Work and Family Conflicts 296 • Social Support and Work and Family 299 • Family-Supportive Workplace Policies 300

The Meaning of Work and Leisure 303 Feeling Overworked 304 • Work Ethic 305 • Workaholism and Vacations 306 • The Three Ps: Procrastination, Parkinson’s Law, and Pareto’s Principle 308 • Workforce Trends 309 • Home- Based Work and Telecommuting 311 • Volunteer Work 314 • Leisure 314

Summary 316

Key Terms 317

Review Questions 317

References 317

11 Managing Stress and Fatigue | 321 Main Topics 321

Theoretical Frameworks 323

Stress Research 324 Crises and Adaptation to Stress 326 • Planning and Organizing 328 • Outsourcing 329 • Decision Making and Stress 332 • The Body’s Response to Stress 334 • Diet, Exercise, and Stress 335

Stress Management 336 Type A and Type B Personalities 337

• Techniques for Reducing Stress 338 • Job Stress 340 • Burnout 342 • Stress and Nonevents 344 • Parents, Children, Stress, Burnout 345 • College Students and Stress 347

Fatigue 350 The Body and Fatigue 351 • Systems Theory: Sleep, Energy, and Fatigue 351

Summary 356

Key Terms 357

Review Questions 357

References 358

12 Managing Environmental Resources | 361 Main Topics 361 • Sustainability 362

The Ecosystem and Environmentalism 366 Problem Recognition 368 • Biodegradability 369 • Biological Diversity 370 • Individual and Family Decision Making 370 • Incorporating Agriculture into Communities 371

Environmental Problems and Solutions 373

Water Quality and Availability 373 • Energy 376 • Noise 384 • Waste and Recycling 385 • Air Quality 387

Summary 390

Key Terms 390

Review Questions 390

References 391

vi contents

13 Managing Finances | 393 Main Topics 393

Financial Management and Security 397

Family Economics: Avoiding Economic Fallout, Building Toward the Future 398 The Business Cycle and Inflation 398 • Individuals and Families as Producers and Consumers 402

Income, Taxes, Net Worth, Budgets, and Saving 403

Managing Credit and Reducing Debt 408 • Banking, Investments, and Insurance 412 • Children, Expenses, and Financial Literacy 414 • Saving for College 416 • College Students, Starting Out 417

Retirement and Financial Planning 419 Financial Planning 423

Further Family Economic Issues 425 The Gender Gap, Earnings Gap, and the Glass Ceiling 425 • Wealth and Poverty 426

Summary 428

Key Terms 428

Review Questions 428

References 429

14 Managing Tomorrow | 431 Main Topics 431

Technology and Innovation 432 Visionary Leadership and Managerial Judgment 434 • Household Innovations 436 • Adopting Innovations and Applying Technology 439 • The 5S Management Concept 440 • Information and Innovation Overload 442

Family, Home, and Global Change 443

Quality of Life and Well-Being 445 • Multiculturalism 447 • Sustainability, Environment, and Consumption 447 • Health Care and the Food Supply 449

Summary 449

Key Terms 450

Review Questions 450

References 450

Glossary 453 indEx 459

vii

Oh, how things have changed since the last

edition of Resource Management for Individuals

and Families. The latest census reveals that

Americans are within mere percentage points of

being a majority single nation. Only 51 percent of

adults today are married. Twenty-eight percent of

all households have just one person—the highest

level in U.S. history.

The economy worldwide continues to strug-

gle. Everywhere, families make sacrifices and

postpone expenses. More than ever before, people

want to know what actions to take and what goals

to pursue. The word “sustainability” has taken on

new meaning in people’s lives.

This fifth edition continues to pay close atten-

tion to meeting the standards and criteria for the

Certified Family Life Educator (CFLE) designation

of the National Council on Family Relations (NCFR).

My thanks are extended to NCFR for their recog-

nition of how important it is to know and apply

management principles. In this edition, there are

many more cases, photos, charts, solo and family

examples, and critical thinking exercises designed

to engage students in their search for insightful

solutions.

I wrote this edition of Resource Management

for Individuals and Families to capture the nuances

of managing today. The study of resource man-

agement is relevant to an individual’s everyday life

and provides insight into how others behave.

When visiting with instructors and students in

Europe, Australia, Asia, Africa, Central and South

America, the United States, the Caribbean, and

Canada, it became clear that making informed

choices is a universal concern. Stress, fatigue, and

financial and time management problems have no

national boundaries.

Making choices—those made yesterday

and those to be made today and tomorrow—and

how those choices affect lives is a central theme

in the book. People can improve. This edition has

much more on the steps needed to achieve goals.

Happiness, social networks, and well-being are

explored in new ways.

Thanks are extended to all who took the

time to tell me how they are using the book from

Australia to Singapore. The latest census data and

world population statistics are included in this

edition along with the newest technologies impact-

ing households. An updated and extended Human

Development Index is included in the last chapter.

Individuals continue to search for the best

ways to balance work and personal life. In recogni-

tion of this, more coverage is devoted to how every-

one is responding to change in the world of work

as well as on the home front. You will find theories

and models such as value chains, Conservation

of Resources Theory, the Resource-Advantage

Theory, and the GO model in this edition. The GO

model is a goal-oriented problem-solving model.

In response to requests by instructors, the

finances chapter is extended to include more on

managing debt and on the value of diversification.

The stress and fatigue chapter has been expanded

with more on the importance of sleep and how

to improve its quality. Researchers are finding

more evidence of how sleep impacts our ability

to reason and function effectively. The chapter

on managing human resources is given the new

title of “Managing Human Needs” to better reflect

the content and to differentiate it from the way the

term “human resources” is often used to mean

personnel management in organizational settings.

My Fulbright awards to Malta and Trinidad

and Tobago allowed me the privilege of teach-

ing family resource management to students at

the University of Malta and the University of the

West Indies. Their insights coupled with those

of my students at Florida State University have

enriched this edition. The students, reviewers, and

instructors said time and time again that they did

not want the basic structure of the book (i.e., the

chapter flow from theory and history to applica-

tion to future challenges) changed, but that they

wanted expanded coverage on certain topics. The

most popular chapters with students are those on

time, stress, and fatigue management. Often this

book is referred to as the time management book

because how you spend your time is reflective of

everything else you manage and value in life. In

addition, students find the application-oriented

chapters on work and family, the environment, and

finances to be extremely useful.

Inclusion is a hallmark of each edition

of Resource Management for Individuals and

Families. I recognize the choices one makes in

personal life within the greater context of family,

friends, and the environment. The first edition of

this book set itself apart from others in its empha-

sis on the management problems faced by singles

and single parents as well as on those faced by

two-parent families. This approach is even more

relevant today as indicated in the opening para-

graph of this preface.

More students are graduating and return-

ing to live at home with their parents or with

siblings or establishing themselves in new places

in careers and living alone in apartments enjoying

friendships with other singles. In 1950, 1 percent

of Americans in their 20s lived alone; now it is

over 10 percent. Instructors like historical per-

spective and the historic homes section of this

book and references to the past are a way to give

perspective to what is currently happening. Every

effort is made to speak to a wide variety of stu-

dents, capturing their interests and taking into

account their concerns. More has been added on

preface

viii preface

positive psychology, leadership, and success and on

the challenges of managing the second half of life

and the retirement years.

organization of this text Resource Management for Individuals and Families

contains 14 well-organized chapters divided into

four parts to introduce students to the best of man-

agement thinking and practice.

Part I begins with an explanation of manage-

ment as a process of using resources to achieve

goals and adds in quality aspects such as success

and happiness. It establishes the foundation and

introduces the management process model used

throughout the book.

Chapter 1 gives basic definitions and

addresses three questions:

• What is management?

• Why manage?

• Who manages?

Chapter 2 covers the interdisciplinary, histori-

cal, and theoretical foundations of the field.

The history of the home continues to fascinate,

and the public is interested in improving

home environments as evidenced by home

improvement shows and networks and supply

stores and websites devoted to homes. This

emphasis on home and environment as a

context within which individuals and families

operate sets this book apart from books that

focus strictly on family relations.

Part II examines the basic concepts underlying

the field of management. These concepts, such as

values, resources, and plans, are timeless and pro-

vide the foundation for the more application-oriented

chapters that follow.

Chapter 3 focuses on values, attitudes,

and goals with a special section on college

students’ values and goals.

Chapter 4 goes right to the heart of the subject

by exploring resources and resource strategy.

Conservation of Resources Theory is added to

this edition.

Chapter 5 provides the steps in decision

making and explains how to solve problems.

The effect of moods and the concept of self-

ambivalence have been added.

Chapter 6 analyzes planning, implementing,

and evaluating. This chapter helps the reader

visualize the steps necessary for success.

Chapter 7 explores communication, social

networks, and the feedback part of the

management process. Plans often fail because

they are not properly communicated.

Part III is about management applications and

each chapter begins with the verb “managing.”

This is a “how-to” section with many practical sug-

gestions. The text goes beyond merely stating the

problems and suggests possible solutions.

Chapter 8 explores population shifts and how

they impact management and resource use.

Chapter 9 shows ways to use time more

effectively.

Chapter 10 discusses workaholism and the

problems associated with balancing work and

family.

Chapter 11 explains what we know from

stress research and how to reduce fatigue.

Sleep and the vagaries of human energy are

also explored.

Chapter 12 brings up environmental problems

and provides solutions. Sustainability, water,

energy, noise, waste and recycling, and air

quality are all discussed.

Chapter 13 on managing finances, is one of

the most important chapters. Students are

setting up their credit and financial patterns

and establishing households. The chapter

explores how to make money stretch further in

a changing economy.

Part IV is about the future of management,

issues, and probabilities.

Chapter 14 concludes the text with an innova-

tive analysis of technology, quality of life, and

family and global change. This section brings

the book full circle—from the introductory

discussions of the history of the study of

management and the problems of contem-

porary families to the management issues on

the horizon.

distinctive Features Resource Management for Individuals and Families

offers a new, interactive approach to teaching

resource management through special features that

are specifically designed to reflect the themes of

choice and decision making, supporting students’

interest and learning. To engage the reader, many

chapters begin with a case or story from the news

about families.

• Management as a Process Approach

Throughout the book, a five-step model is used

to illustrate the thinking and action parts of the

management process. The model begins with

identifying problems, needs, wants, or goals,

then progresses to clarifying values and iden-

tifying resources. Next it moves on to deciding,

planning, and implementing, and ends with

accomplishing goals and evaluating. The

model takes place within an environmental

context and is held together by feedback.

• An Emphasis on Systems and Economic

Theories Rather than relying on only one

theory, this text applies many theories to

decision-making behavior. No particular area

of the field is overemphasized at the expense

of others.

This text is meant to be introductory yet inclusive.

• Pedagogy Current research and managerial

implications are presented in a readable and

interesting style. Examples and photos are

included to stimulate student interest.

• Each chapter begins with two Did You Know?

statements and an epigraph.

• Critical Thinking activities are woven into

each chapter that encourage students to react

to the material presented. They are asked to

agree or disagree and explain their reasoning.

preface ix

Critical thinking, essential for a thoughtful

life, adds a values-based or an evaluation

component.

• Many chapters contain a feature, Suggested

Activities, with ideas for class or group dis-

cussion or for individual reflection, such as

recording sleeping patterns for three days

and comparing one’s sleeping pattern to the

content in the text. The Suggested Activities are

provided in response to instructors’ demand for

more ideas about how to apply the text to their

students’ lives. Professors have told me that

they use this feature to stimulate class discus-

sion or provide in-class activities.

Each chapter ending has the following study aids:

• Summary. A brief review of the major topics

discussed.

• Key Terms. A list of important concepts dis-

cussed in each chapter. To help the reader

locate them, the key terms appear in boldface

type within the chapter text.

• Review Questions. A list of questions meant to

provide the basis for a review of textual mate-

rial and to encourage thought and discussion

on the chapter’s content.

• References. Full details of references cited in

the chapter. An additional list of relevant his-

toric and classic books appears at the end of

Chapter 2.

• The book concludes with a Glossary of the key

terms defined in the chapters and an Index.

x preface

Acknow ledgme

nts

Resourc e Mana

gement for Ind

ividuals and Fa

milies w ould no

t have b een pos

sible wi th-

out the inspira

tion fro m colle

agues, instruc

tors, stu dents, a

nd my own gr

aduate experie

nce

at Mich igan St

ate Un iversity

. Profes sors Ta

hira Hi ra of Io

wa Sta te Univ

ersity, S uzanne

Piscopo of the

Univers ity of M

alta, Ca rlisle Pe

mberto n of the

Univer sity of

the We st Indie

s,

Rachel Pettigr

ew and Ruth B

erry of the Un

iversity of Ma

nitoba, France

s Lawre nce of

Louisia na Sta

te Univ ersity, a

nd Jing Xiao of

the Un iversity

of Rho de Isla

nd hav e added

to

the con cepts in

this bo ok as le

aders in financ

ial liter acy an

d resou rce

manag ement.

Sue M cGrego

r of Mo unt Sa

int Vinc ent Un

iversity in

Canad a provi

ded ins ight int

o the e volution

of the manag

ement process

model. Anita

Subram aniam

, forme rly of M

ontclai r State

Univer sity

and Pu rdue U

niversit y and n

ow in I ndia, a

dded h er stud

ents’ vi ews on

manag ement

. Shelb y Hun

t of Tex as Tech

Univer sity an

d I hav e had

wonde rful con

versatio ns abo

ut his R esourc

e-Adva ntage T

heory and

the wa ys it is

compa tible w

ith fam ily reso

urce th eory. S

herma n Han

na

of Ohi o State

Unive rsity pr

ovided update

s on ec onomic

theory and ri

sk.

Holly H unts of

Mont ana St

ate Un iversity

teache s probl

em-so lving

techniq ues wh

ich are origin

al to th e field.

Much of the

cross- cultura

l

and hi storica

l conte nt of t

he boo k was

influen ced by

my Fu lbright

s

and sa bbatica

ls in W ashing

ton DC and a

broad. I am

indebt ed to B

etty

Monk man, c

urator emeri

tus of the Wh

ite Ho use, fo

r her g uidanc

e rega rding

techno logy a

t the W hite H

ouse in Chap

ter 1, a nd cur

ators o f the N

ationa l

Museu m of A

merica n Hist

ory at the S

mithso nian I

nstitut ion for

their c ritique

of the three s

ystem s of ho

usehol d prod

uction /consu

mption given

in Cha pter 2.

I am t hankfu

l for th e resea

rch su pport

from t he Visi

ting Fe llow P

rogram at

the H oover

Institu tion at

Stanf ord Un

iversity , the F

inanci al Ind

ustry Regula

tion

Autho rity In

vestor Educa

tion F ounda

tion (F INRA

), the Smith

sonian Instit

ution Office

of Fell owship

s and Grant

s, Duk e Univ

ersity, and t

he He rbert H

oover Presid

ential Librar

y.

Mem bers o

f the P earson

staff should

be re cogniz

ed for their

work and en

thusia sm. S

pecial

apprec iation

is exte nded t

o Sara Eilert

, Doug Greiv

e, and Vern

Antho ny, Ed

itor-in -Chie

f.

preface xi

Especia lly note

worthy are the

review ers for

this edi tion: Pa

tti Fish er, Virg

inia Tec h

Univers ity; Jud

y Hans com, U

niversit y of M

aine–O rono; H

olly Hu nts, Mo

ntana S tate

Univers ity; Ire

ne Leec h, Virgi

nia Tec h Unive

rsity; S usan R

eichelt, Winthr

op Uni versity;

D e b o r a h S u l l i v a n , A s h l a n d U n i v e r s i t y ; P a t W h i t t i n

g t o n , O h i o S t a

t e U n i v e r s i t y ; a

n d

Baome i Zhao,

Univer sity of

Akron.

Al so to b

e thank ed are

the rev iewers

for the fourth

edition : Judy

L. Han scom

of the Univer

sity of Maine

, Charl es B. H

ennon of Mia

mi Un iversity

, Mich ael N.

Mbito

of And erson U

niversit y, and

Sally M . McCo

mbie o f India

na Un iversity

of Pen nsylvan

ia.

Review ers of t

he first edition

of the text w

ere Ma ria Can

abal, I llinois S

tate of Unive

rsity

(now a t Texas

State Univer

sity–S an Ma

cros); E lizabet

h Carr oll, Eas

t Caro lina Un

iversity ;

Lillian Cheno

with, T exas W

oman’s Unive

rsity; J anice H

ogan, U niversit

y of M inneso

ta; Rut h

H. Lyt ton, Vir

ginia P olytech

nic Ins titute a

nd Sta te Univ

ersity; Teresa

Mauld in, Uni

versity

of Geo rgia; M

ary An n Payn

ter, De laware

State Univer

sity at Dover;

and A lice Pe

coraro ,

Nichol ls Stat

e Univ ersity. F

or keep ing the

mome ntum

going i n the s

econd edition

, specia l

thanks are ex

tended to Cel

ia Ray Hayh

oe, Virg inia Te

ch Un iversity

; Janic e L. H

eckroth ,

Indian a Stat

e Univ ersity

of Pen nsylva

nia; El len La

cey, B all Sta

te Uni versity

; and T erri

Walter s, Syra

cuse U niversi

ty. For the fr

esh ide as in t

he thir d editio

n, the followi

ng rep eat an

d

new re viewer

s are w armly

thank ed: Pa

t McC allister

(first e dition

and th ird edi

tion), E astern

Illinois Unive

rsity; J eanne

Hilton (secon

d and third e

dition) , Unive

rsity o f Nev

ada, R eno; L

inda

Simps on, Ea

stern I llinois

Univer sity; M

ichelle Mead

ows, E astern

Illinoi s Univ

ersity; Edwa

rd Me l

Marko wski, E

ast Ca rolina

Univer sity; D

eana W eibel, C

aliforn ia Stat

e Univ ersity,

Lon g Beac

h;

and W endy R

eibolt, Califo

rnia S tate U

niversi ty, Lon

g Beac h.

M y deep

appre ciation

goes t o my

family : my m

om, B etty A

melia Beard

, a bel iever

in the value o

f highe r educ

ation a nd sup

portive throu

ghout my ca

reer; m y husb

and, R onald

E.

Goldsm ith, th

e Rich ard M

. Bake r Prof

essor o f Mar

keting at Flo

rida S tate U

niversi ty; an

d my

sons, D avid a

nd An drew,

who h ave gr

own fr om ch

ildren to you

ng me n in th

e cour se of t

hese

edition s. I’m

please d to a

nnoun ce the

newe st add

ition t o my

family , my g

randso n Woo

drow, who

along with h

is olde r broth

er Orv ille an

d my daugh

ter-in -law J

essica , make

me a ppreci

ate m ore

than e ver the

value and c

ontinu ity of

family .

xii

About the Author

Elizabeth B. Goldsmith is a Fulbright Scholar, a

former White House Domestic Policy Advisor on

Women’s and Girls’ Economic Education, and

current member of the Leon County Commission

on the Status of Women and Girls. Presently or in

the past she has been an advisor to the Florida

Commission on the Status of Women, the United

Nations, the National Park Service, The Wall Street

Journal Classroom Edition, the U.S. Department of

Justice and the Department of Labor, the University

of the West Indies, U.S. Department of Agriculture,

and various government agencies and task forces.

Her presentations and research focus on personal

finance, women and money, consumer educa-

tion, sustainability, and the history and function-

ing of homes including the White House. She has

served on the Board of Trustees of the National

Association of Insurance Commissioners and the

Florida Motor Vehicle Repair Advisory Council.

For over a decade she has been a member of

the editorial boards for the International Journal

of Consumer Studies and the Journal of Family

and Economic Issues. She has given keynote

addresses and papers in Australia, the Bahamas,

Brazil, Canada, Finland, Germany, England,

Ireland, Japan, Malta, Mexico, Northern Ireland,

Sweden, South Africa, Switzerland, Trinidad and

Tobago, and Wales. Dr. Goldsmith is a professor

in the College of Human Sciences at Florida State

University, where she has won teaching awards.

Her Ph.D.-granting alma mater, Michigan State

University, named her an Outstanding Alumna.

She is the author of numerous book and encyclo-

pedia chapters, over 50 journal articles, and other

books including Consumer Economics: Issues and

Behavior, second edition, also with Pearson.

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3

Give curiosity freedom.

—Eudora WElty 1

Today ManageMenT

Main Topics

What Is Family Resource Management? Introduction to Family and Household

trends Management as a Process Successful Plans: Putting Management

into action Why Manage? Who Manages?

Influences on Management Styles Interdisciplinary Foundation

Life Management for Individuals and Families Managing the Second Half of life Singles, Households, Nonfamily Households,

and Families Changes in Family and Household Composition

What Lies Ahead?

DiD you know that . . .?

. . . The average person goes on 100 dates before getting married.

. . . The average age at first marriage in the United States is 28 for men and 26 for women.

4 chapter 1

what is Family Resource Management? Life is propelling us forward in paths we would never have imagined. The study of family

resource management is about how individuals and families decide, plan, and act in order to

progress, to fulfill their needs, and accomplish goals in an increasingly complex, technological

society. The word “management,” whether applied to business or the family, implies a working

together. Management fulfills this task in a family by enabling it to engage in collective deci-

sion making and by providing a framework that supports and maximizes the benefits to family

members. The National Council on Family Relations sums it up this way:

Family resource management is an understanding of the decisions individuals and fami-

lies make about developing and allocating resources including time, money, material

assets, energy, friends, neighbors, and space, to meet their goals.

Individual and family resource management raises a lot of questions about how life is

managed, such as:

How can I find a fulfilling career?

Where should I live?

Should I go to graduate school?

What should I be doing with my life?

How can I succeed?

Where do I fit in?

Surely you would have asked yourself at least some of these questions. This book is about

time management, thinking and planning, and making decisions and choices as an individual

and as a member of a family or group. Much of our planning is a sorting-out process, which

leads to automatic actions like removing spam from email or more complicated life decisions

such as choosing where to live, whom to marry, and if and when to have children. When you

choose, you are accountable for the resources used and the paths selected such as applying

to a school or for an award.

Choice is the act of selecting among alternatives. When we choose, we rely on

what  we have or what we can most easily access. For example, there is no sense search-

ing for a $300-a-month apartment or an entry-level job that pays $100,000 a year if it

doesn’t exist.

Risk is a factor in choice as well. Risk is the possibility or perception of harm, suffering,

danger, or loss. Let’s say a new housing development is being built in your town. The roads

haven’t even been put in yet, but people buy lots at a certain price based strictly on maps they

are shown and their knowledge of the area, developer, and potential services. They are taking

a huge risk. The purchase contract may include a time factor: Perhaps the lots will have to

be built on within three years or sold back to the developer at the original purchase price,

thus  limiting the time in which the purchaser’s investment can increase. The development

may or may not grow in three years and as we have seen in recent years, the real estate

market could be in turmoil. Buying an existing house at a low price rather than building a new

one in a proposed development may stretch money further.

A basic principle in management is that where there is risk, there is opportunity. In the

aforementioned housing development example it is possible that it could be a good opportunity

Management Today 5

given location and other factors. Some people are more risk averse (or the flip side, risk

attracted) than others, so another factor in management is your personality. Decisions are not

made in a vacuum; environment and time play roles, too. For example, stores are part of our

environment and store layouts affect how quickly people can shop and how enjoyable they

find the experience (Skogster, Uotila, & Ojala, 2008). Have you ever been in a confusing store

where nothing seemed to be in its logical place? People’s lives can also seem in confusion,

with little logic or organization.

Here is an example of massive choice from Japan: Beverage makers there, trying to

keep pace with Japan’s fad-driven culture, launch more than a thousand new drinks each

year, many claiming to boost energy or provide other health benefits (Terhune & Kahn, 2003).

Vending machines provide easy access to the many beverages, but does anyone really need

a thousand more beverage choices a year? How are decisions made in this frenzied atmo-

sphere? One explanation is as follows:

Riho Yamanaka, a 29-year-old Tokyo hotel manager, consumes up to four drinks a day

and says she switches brands all the time. “When the new drinks come out, I probably

try them at least once or so,” says Ms. Yamanaka. “But I don’t go for one particular

brand.” (Terhune & Kahn, 2003, p. B4)

Through our choices, we define our lives and influence other people’s lives and the

world in which we live. “Our most meaningful and significant thoughts, feelings, and behav-

iors in our everyday lives occur in relation to the things we value and strive for, and much of

our action is in the service of the attainment of valued goals” (Grant & Gelety, 2009, p. 78).

No decision is made in total isolation; we are constantly being influenced and influencing

others. According to Stephen Covey, author of The Seven Habits of Highly Effective People,

“Our basic nature is to act, and not be acted upon. As well as enabling us to choose

our  response to particular circumstances, this empowers us to create circumstances”

(1989, p. 75).

The study of management explores how human beings react to change and how they

cause change to happen. It has been said that the only thing humans can rely on is that things

will change. Family life and household functioning, for example, have undergone enormous

changes in the last 50 years. More women are working outside the home than ever before and

are more highly educated.

Introduction to Family and Household Trends The United States is growing older, more suburban, more diverse, with more multi-genera-

tions living under one roof, with more single-headed households, and with more Hispanics

and Asians. As an example of the aging population, the 85-plus population nearly doubled

from 1990 to today. The number of Hispanics surpassed the number of blacks in 2003. Once

driven by immigration, the Hispanic growth is more fueled now by births. This group has

increased 43 percent since 2000. The majority of blacks live in the south and the trend is

upward as many return south in retirement, and as young professionals they seek jobs in

the urban centers of the south. A growing number of Americans are claiming more than one

race. The website Census.gov provides further information on these trends and others to be

discussed in this chapter.

6 chapter 1

Particularly relevant to the study of family resource management is that less than 25 per-

cent of households have a mother, a father, and children living at home, yet the nation’s

housing stock is geared to this family constellation. The percentage of U.S. babies born

outside of marriage continues to rise, according to government statistics. The age at first

marriage also continues to rise, averaging 28 years of age for men and 26 for women. In the

2010 U.S. Census, married couples represented 48 percent of all households, which is down

from 52 percent in 2000.

There are over 113 million households, with 79.95 million classified as family households

(see Table 1.1). There are fewer people per household and part of this increase is due to an

aging population besides the postponing of marriage for reasons such as money and attaining

further education. Divorce levels are leveling off, with more couples likely to reach their 10-year

wedding anniversary. Divorce rates peaked in the United States in the 1980s. According to the

2010 Census there are more couples cohabitating. In 2010 opposite-sex unmarried couples

living together jumped 13 percent (7.5 million) from 2009.

More important than memorizing the percentages and the numbers is to reflect on what

it all means. How are people living and managing their lives, not just in North America but

around the world? Accelerated changes in families and households are happening in Asia,

Australia, South America, Europe, and Africa.

Sharing a multi-generational family dinner is a cherished tradition.

Households Between 1990 and 2010 Family

Households nonfamily

Households Total number

1990 64.5 million 27.4 million 91.9 million

2000 71.8 million 33.7 million 105.5 million

2010 79.95 million 33.46 million 113.4 million

Source: U.S. Census Bureau.

Table 1.1

Management Today 7

Given the changes already made in—and still to come to—marriages, sustainability, the

Internet, biology, medicine, social values, demographics, the environment, and international

relations, what kind of world is emerging? Will people be happier and healthier in the future?

Happiness is not so easily defined, but most would agree that it is the degree of hap-

piness with which one judges the overall quality of his or her life as favorable. When this

chapter went to press, Britain’s government was compiling a national happiness index and

France’s president suggested that France’s gross domestic product measure include subjec-

tive aspects such as happiness levels.

A key question in the regularly conducted General Social Surveys (GSS) of the United

States is:

Taken all together, how would you say things are these days—would you say that you

are very happy, pretty happy, or not too happy?

How would you answer that question? When Americans answer this question,

the top choice is “pretty happy,” followed by “very happy,” and then “not too happy.”

Psychologists draw a distinction between overall happiness and well-being as this question

Buckingham Palace serves as the setting for this wedding photo of Prince William and Kate Middleton.

Case Study The new Royals Of course, the lives of royals are atypical but the 2011 marriage of Britain’s Prince William and Catherine Middleton is a case in point. William did things differently than his father by picking someone older (though only six months), who went to the same university, and whom he dated for a long time. Kate is not of royal blood and was not brought up around royals. Her parents own a party store

business and her mother used to be a flight attendant. She may become the first English queen with a university degree. Some say this is more a marriage of equals, and the couple represents changes in marriages overall. In the Western world, brides and grooms tend to be older and more similar in socioeconomic and educational levels than 25 or 50 years ago.

8 chapter 1

measures reactions to specific events or single areas of life such as an individual’s financial

life (Blanchflower & Oswald, 2004). Daniel Gilbert, author of Stumbling on Happiness, says

that money itself doesn’t make you happy but what makes people happy is what they do with

the money. He says that experiences such as travel produce more satisfaction than durable

goods. What do you think of that?

Population shifts affect management patterns. It is important to know where humans are

living now and where they will be living. The worldwide trend is for populations to become

increasingly urban and mobile. Today, about half of the people on Earth (3 billion out of almost

7 billion) live in or around cities. By 2050, the world population according to the United Nations is

projected to be 9.3 billion. The U.S. population will be over 500 million. An estimated 75 percent

of the world’s population will be urban dwellers. This switch will have enormous implications

for the environment, employment, transportation, and other factors affecting the quality of

daily life. For example, the average age of the U.S. population is about 36.4 years and rising.

Critical Thinking

Pick one of these implications (environment, employment, or transportation) and explain how you think increased urbanization will impact how families function.

Populations throughout the world are aging, too. By 2025, according to estimates made

by the U.S. Census Bureau’s International Database on Aging, more than half of Japan’s

population will be over the age of 50 (Terhune & Kahn, 2003). Table 1.2 shows the most

populous countries currently and projected for 2050.

This chapter introduces the fundamentals of management as they relate to individuals,

families, and households. It begins by asking, “What is management?” Some answers will

emerge as we examine the management process and see how management can be put

into action. Other important questions to be explored include “Why manage?” and “Who

manages?” Management styles are influenced by several factors, and the study of manage-

ment draws upon a number of other disciplines. Of necessity, life management must be both

versatile and dynamic, for it applies to single adults as well as to families and must adapt to the

changing composition of families.

World’s Most Populous Countries countries

current 2050 (estimated)

1. China India

2. India China

3. united States united States

4. Indonesia Indonesia

5. Brazil Nigeria

Table 1.2

Management Today 9

Let’s briefly talk about young single adults. Some of their life choices are moving to a city,

hunting for an apartment, and joining friends for dinner out and happy hours, but what happens

when the job opportunity is in a suburb or a small town? “Working in the suburbs can rule out

the use of public transportation to get around, possibly forcing you to incur the costs of buy-

ing a car, gasoline and car insurance and paying for parking. When Rochelle Kleter, 24 years

old, accepted a position as an analyst at Citibank’s Short Hills, N.J., branch, she traded her

15-minute commute to the bank’s Manhattan office for a 1½ hour drive, for which she had

to buy a car” (Mattioli, 2008, p. B8). She also noticed that she was the youngest person in

her office; colleagues ran home to families. On the plus side of a smaller office and a smaller

place, you don’t get lost in the shuffle. Ms. Kleter says, “In New York, you get lost in the crowd

because there are so many people and it’s harder for upper managers to get to know you.”

This chapter will examine some of these life changes and show how the study of manage-

ment has adapted to them. As with all chapters, this chapter concludes with a Summary, Key

Terms, Review Questions, and References.

Management as a Process Management is the process of using resources to achieve goals. In other words, manage-

ment is the process of using what one has to get what one wants. The process includes the

functioning, actions, thinking, and events that occur over time. Although situations change,

the basic principles integral to management remain the same.

Management includes both thought and action. The importance of knowledge man-

agement, the “thought” part, cannot be underestimated. We all struggle to learn from past

experiences, especially mistakes and failures, and we struggle even more to apply the

knowledge gained to new situations. Thus, we face several challenges when trying to initiate

knowledge management; among them are

• Arrogance (the feeling that there is nothing new to learn)

• Previous failed attempts (why try again?)

• Lack of commitment, drive, and awareness (why should I?)

• Lack of empathy, support, energy, or enthusiasm (who cares?)

These and other challenges, concepts, and themes recur throughout the book. They

are reflected in the titles of the first seven chapters: values, attitudes, goals, resources, deci-

sion making, problem solving, planning, implementing, evaluating, and communication.

Chapters 8–14 then apply these concepts to the specifics of managing human needs, time,

work and family, stress, fatigue, environmental resources, and finances. Central to the discus-

sion in each chapter is the way different personalities and situations affect how choices are

made and acted upon.

The management process involves thinking, action, and results. Because it is results-

oriented, management is considered an applied social science. Management specialists

evaluate the knowledge obtained through the study of management in terms of its ability to

make an individual’s or family’s management practice more effective. People need results. It is

inherently satisfying to commit to and work toward a goal.

Although management is practical, it is not necessarily simplistic. It becomes complex

because individuals’ and families’ choices are constrained by limited resources. How people

handle these constraints is what makes the study of management so stimulating. If every-

one had equal resources and abilities, the same dreams and wishes, and the same drive

10 chapter 1

and ambition, then there would not be much to discuss. Everyone would lead identical lives.

How boring that would be! In actuality, each individual has his or her own set of resource

mix—attitudes, talents, and skills that are brought to bear on situations. Additionally, individu-

als vary in the way they respond to external and internal forces. Internal forces are the personal

drive behind our actions. External forces include the ups and downs of the economy, the

condition of the environment, and the rules and laws of society. Consequently, we must view

management within the context of the greater environment, which changes constantly, as

does the individual or group attempting to manage life within that environment.

The purpose of this chapter is to provide an overview of the management process; each

aspect of the process will be examined in depth later in the book. Figure 1.1 provides a model of

the management process and indicates the chapters in which each step is discussed. Each part

of the model plays a critical role in the reinforcing circle, or loop, of the management process.

The process begins with a problem, need, want, or goal. The person initiating the man-

agement process identifies a problem or something that he or she desires. Problems are

questions, dilemmas, or situations that require solving, such as “Should I buy or rent a home?”

Needs are what we need to survive or sustain life, such as food and shelter. Wants are things

that we desire, such as an expensive sports car, but that are not necessary for us to survive.

In general conversation, the words needs and wants are sometimes used interchangeably, but

in management they are viewed as distinct. Needs can include the need for wellness, social

interaction, financial support, and information. Regarding the latter, we want to know what is

going on around us, what is in the news, and what the weather will be like so we can plan

our actions. We have a need to satisfy intellectual curiosity, which is why you are reading this

book, and to engage in cognitive activity. For example, people need food, air, and shelter to

survive. Wants are more specific; they are things or activities that make people feel comfort-

able and satisfied. Thus, a person may be hungry (a need) but may want to satisfy that hunger

with a specific food, such as a burrito or a slice of pizza.

Goals are end results that require action for their fulfillment. Goals connect individuals to

situations, providing a sense of meaning and control over events and environments. A college

diploma is a goal of most college students. Passing courses and applying for graduation are

the actions required to reach that goal. In the greater scheme of life, goals are arranged in a

hierarchy from fairly ordinary to extraordinary.

Once individuals or families have identified the problem, need, want, or goal, they move

to the next step, which is the clarification of values. What do they really want, and does it fit

into their value system? Values are principles that guide behavior, such as honesty or loyalty.

Chapters 1 and 3

Step 1

Chapter 3

Step 2

Chapter 4

Step 3

Chapters 5 and 6

Step 4

Chapter 6

Step 5

Decide, plan, and implement

Accomplish goals and evaluate

Identify resources

Identify problem, need, want, or goal

Clarify values

Environment

Feedback

Chapters 2 and 7

Chapters 2 and 12

Figure 1.1 The management process.

Management Today 11

Clarification means to make clear, to make easier to understand, or to elaborate. As they

move through the management process, people need to clearly identify what they want to

achieve and to ensure that their goal-seeking behavior is compatible with their values. For

example, an individual may desire more money, but robbing a bank probably doesn’t fit the

person’s or society’s value system. Management is based on values and goal-seeking behav-

ior; without these, the process would be aimless and misdirected. Behavior has consequences.

The next step in Figure 1.1 involves identifying resources: finding out what one has to

work with. Resources are whatever is available to be used, such as information, time, skills,

human and mechanical energy, Internet access, and money. Consider the situation described

by writer Ruth Davis Konigsberg in the case study:

Case Study Time Problems If there was one time in my marriage when life felt the most unfair, it was during the witching hour. When our children were young and I was working from home, I would relieve our babysitter at 5 p.m. and start to feed and bathe our 3-year-old and 6-month- old and begin various pre-bedtime rituals. By 6 p.m., this thought would be running through my head: If my husband doesn’t

come home from the office soon to help, I’m going to be losing my mind. By 7 p.m., my panic turned to anger: Do I have to do everything? Each minute before his arrival seemed like an eternity, my task much more onerous than the pressure he was facing to make daily deadlines. Was our parenting arrangement altering my perception of time. . .

Source: Konigsberg, R. D. (2011, August 8). Chore Wars. Time, p. 45.

Can you relate to the family situation in the Time Problems case study or can you project

that this may be a problem in your future?

The quantitative and/or qualitative criteria that reconcile resources with demands are

known as standards. Standards are set by individuals and families for themselves; they are

also set by friends, employers, schools, and governments. For example, governments estab-

lish speed limits (a standard) as part of their traffic management in order to preserve life and

property, and schools and businesses establish appearance or dress codes for their students

and employees. During the management process, standards may have to be adjusted such

as moving mealtimes around based on changed schedules. Standard setting is dynamic,

meaning that it is subject to change, and flexibility is key. What is acceptable one year may not

be acceptable the next. For example, a school may set school uniforms as the standard one

year and do away with the practice the next.

Critical Thinking

Do you think school uniforms are a good or bad idea? Explain why. Did you or anyone you know wear school uniforms? What were the pros and cons of wearing uniforms from the students’ and parents’ points of view? Consider factors like cost.

12 chapter 1

The next step in the process has three aspects: deciding, planning, and implementing.

Decision making refers to choosing between two or more alternatives. Planning requires

making a series of decisions that lead to action, and implementing means putting plans into

action. Plans give focus and direction to the pursuit of wants, needs, and goals. In working

through this step, a manager evaluates and adjusts decisions and plans as needed. For

example, an individual planning a trip may select a new route or time of arrival as circum-

stances change.

The last step of the management process sees goals accomplished or fulfilled and the

process as a whole evaluated. Individuals are pleased when they achieve their hard-sought

goals, but they often overlook evaluation, which in many ways is the most important step in

the process.

• Was the problem solved?

• What was learned?

• Which decisions or plans worked and which ones failed?

• What adjustments should have been made?

The answers to these questions are part of the feedback (information that returns to the

system) that enables the individual’s overall management knowledge and ability to grow.

The management process is never stagnant. One learns from and grows with each deci-

sion. New situations provide opportunities for advancement and self-learning. By evaluating

past experiences, people learn how to approach the world and discover where their skills and

talents lie. In many ways, the study of management is a discovery of self and of how others

relate to the world.

So far we’ve looked at the management process primarily as an internally driven system

(people’s problems, wants, needs, and goals motivate them to act), but in fact the process

takes place in the larger context of the external environment. For example, a person at a busy

fitness center may want to use the treadmill but will have to wait if someone else is using it.

The environment, therefore, can present limitations or barriers to an individual’s or family’s

course of action. As previously noted, the rules and laws of society also affect how wants

and needs are fulfilled and what goals are feasible. Thus, the management process must be

viewed within an environmental context as Figure 1.1 indicates. Environment refers to every-

thing outside the individual.

Let’s note two other features of the management process. First, in certain situations and

decisions (especially hurried ones), the steps may not progress in exactly the order shown

in Figure 1.1; sometimes several steps may occur simultaneously. Second, although under-

standing the individual components of the process is important, the management process is

far more than a set of concepts.

The essence of the process is that the concepts are interrelated. The process may start

with a problem or a need and end with a solution, but the critical element is what happens in

between. From the first step to the last, management knowledge, skills, and tools are used.

Management tools are measuring devices, techniques, or instruments that are used to

arrive at decisions and plans of action; examples include clocks, lists, forms, calendars, bud-

gets, and timetables. Are you a list maker? Are you very conscious of what time it is? Did you

know that the mechanical clock was invented 700 years ago in the 14th century? Before that,

people did not think of time in fixed units, but more as a progression, a cycle based on nature.

Of course, nature is not linear; it ebbs and flows in an inexact way. For example, depending on

where you live, the first day of spring (March 21) may find the ground covered with snow. The

Management Today 13

calendar says it is spring; nature says it is not. In this case, using weather as a time measure

may be more appropriate than using a calendar.

Successful Plans: Putting Management into Action Planning is the operationalization of choices; often, it means making a list of steps to be taken.

This is the stage when people ask, “Okay, we know what we want; now how are we going to

get there?” So a particularly critical management skill is the ability to create and execute an

effective plan. Planning helps individuals to

• Highlight important problems and opportunities

• Invest resources in the right tasks

• Encourage the development of goals

• Make decision making more efficient and effective

• Motivate and coordinate efforts

• Provide a feeling of growth and accomplishment

• Involve others

How much planning is necessary? The answer depends on the situation and individual’s

goals, resources, levels of motivation, and abilities. One fundamental management principle

is that planning skill increases with knowledge, practice, and effort. The more individuals

plan, listen to feedback, and evaluate their decisions, the stronger their management

skills become.

To be successful, a plan needs to be realistic, clear, flexible, and well-thought-out and

executed. The experience of job hunting provides a good example of how planning works and

how feedback can help individuals make adjustments to their plans. Most college students

want to graduate and get a good job that uses their skills, education, and training. Beyond

this generalization, an individual student’s career goals become more specific. For example,

Jennifer’s goal is to be employed in a government job in human services when she graduates.

Her Bachelor of Science degree and senior-year internship provide her with knowledge, skills,

contacts, and a tools base. She knows how to analyze data and reports. In terms of values,

she wants to serve people in a meaningful and caring way, and she especially likes working

with children. As part of her career plan, she wants a job that will start soon after her gradua-

tion in May. In January she begins filling out applications, sending out résumés, including an

online portfolio, and interviewing. But many of her letters and applications go unnoticed, and

she receives very few responses. By April she begins adjusting her plan to include more than

government jobs. She applies for jobs in nearby states, in the human resources departments

at various companies, and at other places through the career services center on campus. At

Jennifer’s first interview, the interviewer tells her (provides feedback) that she should rewrite

her résumé so that it highlights her past work experiences more clearly. So Jennifer rewrites

it and has three more interviews. In June she is hired and begins work in July. Her job is not

what she had envisioned, but it does use her skills and provides potential for growth. She is

pleased to be working with families and children, and in hindsight she is glad she has had two

months off between graduation and the start of her new job. Jennifer feels that managing this

first professional job search has taught her skills, such as the need to be flexible and listen to

interviewers’ feedback, that will help her the next time she looks for a job.

14 chapter 1

Why Manage? The answer to the question, “Why manage?” is that people have no other choice. Certainly life

involves nonmanaged actions such as everyday activities that do not require a lot of thought or

planning (getting up in the morning and brushing one’s teeth), but the bigger things that most

people want, such as a job and a family life, require management skills. Essentially, management

takes people from where they are to where they want to go. Having a future to work toward is

integral to people’s sense of well-being. Humans need to feel in control of their lives. But being

in control is only one of the many benefits management offers. Management also provides new

ways of critiquing life situations and offers new perspectives on the nature of change. When

people are frustrated or confused, management supplies constructive order, reduces chaos,

and suggests steps to follow. For example, familiarity with the management process helped

Jennifer plan, make adjustments, and overcome discouragement in her job search.

As a field of study, management is exciting and challenging because it is

• Change oriented

• Economically, culturally, and socially significant

• Dynamic, intriguing, and complex

• Personally and professionally rewarding

• Integral to developing leadership and teamwork skills and receptive to community

involvement

Furthermore, the study of management provides a great deal of insight into a major area of

human behavior—the decisions people make and the actions taken based on those deci-

sions. Knowledge of management will help students of human behavior to better understand

themselves and the actions of those around them.

Few subjects are more positive and more encouraging than management, or more appro-

priate for college students who are about to embark on new life paths. Most college students at

some time in their lives will be in a position of managing others or working in teams, so studying

management while in school is a skill-building asset. Management applies to all stages of life.

The ever-changing environment, coupled with their own changing needs, impels individuals to

constantly search for new courses of action, goals, and solutions to problems. It is important

to realize that despite difficulties, new ideas do spread and new options open up all the time.

Who Manages? The answer to the question “Who manages?” should be obvious by now: Everyone does.

Management is such a natural and normal part of life that few people stop to think about how

they do it. The management process should be employed every time someone makes a deci-

sion involving school, career, or personal life. Using this process, individuals consider their

needs and wants, their resources, their preferences, the situation, the other people involved,

and so on. Then they create a plan of action and implement it. The decision making of the

individual lies at the heart of the management experience.

As Figure 1.1 illustrates, however, management is much more than decision making; it is a

multifaceted process involving many concepts, actions, and reactions. Besides those already

mentioned, management includes organizing, scheduling, synthesizing, analyzing, resolving

tension, negotiating, reaching agreement, mediating, problem solving, and communicating. In

other words, although management is fundamental to human life, it is often a difficult process.

Management Today 15

Throughout this book, most examples will involve individuals, households, and families,

but the basic principles are applicable to all walks of life. As we’ve seen, however, manage-

ment is particularly applicable to career situations. Being on time, organizing and finishing

work, and scheduling appointments are behaviors that take place in the office as well as

at home.

Influences on Management Styles Whether at home or at work, people are constantly searching for ways to do things more effi-

ciently and effectively. Commuters try to find routes that will cut 10 minutes off their travel time,

and retirees try to find ways to stretch their dollars further. Although everyone manages, each

person has his or her own management style, or characteristic way of making decisions

and acting.

Five factors influence management styles:

1. History influences the way a person makes decisions and the options he or she considers.

“History” can apply to individuals, families, and societies.

2. Biology dictates basic physiological needs such as food, shelter, air, and water.

3. Culture provides a systematic way to fulfill needs. As social beings, people care about

each other.

4. Personality is the sum total of individual characteristics, enduring traits, and ways of inter-

acting. For example, personality affects how a person interacts with the environment.

5. Technology applies methods and materials to the achievement of objectives. Technology

includes laws, techniques, tools, material objects, and processes that help people get

what they want.

Maslow’s HierarcHy of Needs Of these factors, the most fundamental is biology. According to psychologist Abraham Maslow

(1908–1970), physiological needs must be met before higher-order needs are considered.

He hypothesized that each individual has a series of needs ranging from low-order needs to

higher-order needs (see Figure 1.2). In Maslow’s hierarchy of needs, physiological needs (e.g.,

thirst, hunger) must be at least partially met before higher-order needs such as safety and love

(Maslow, 1954).

Critical Thinking

Jason has graduated but doesn’t have a job and is living with his parents while he searches for a job. Should he continue to stay at home after he finds a job and build his savings, or should he rent an apartment and try to make it on his own even though the rent will take nearly all of his savings? If he decides to live with his parents, should he stay for a year? Two years? What factors should Jason consider besides money in making his decision? What other options does he have?

16 chapter 1

The highest level of need, self-actualization, is fulfillment of one’s highest potential. Self-

actualizers fully integrate the components of their personality, or self. In other words, they

attain self-realization, the process by which individuals have the opportunity to invest their

talents in activities that they find meaningful.

Of the other factors influencing management style, history, culture, and personality help

define human needs and aspirations. Technology provides the means by which humanity

progresses.

TecHNology Although we’ll look at technology in more detail later in the book, it’s important to consider it

briefly here because it plays a significant role in management and will play an even larger role

in the future. It’s important to study technology because it is playing an increasingly larger role

in our daily lives in forms ranging from cell phones to email to e-commerce. We are so used to

searching for information on the Internet that it is difficult to imagine life before Google.

Technology differs from the other influences on management style (i.e., history, culture,

and personality) in that it is usually visible; technological advances are easily observed and

measured. For example, one television set per household used to be the norm and now

several would be more typical.

Today, most Americans have cell phones and update them regularly. This costs money,

of course, and since 2007 consumers in the United States are spending 31 percent more on

cell phone services. It is one of the fastest growing expenditure categories. This occurred at a

time of overall reduced consumer spending. From 2003 to 2007 it was 14 percent and from

2007 to 2011 it was 3 percent according to the U.S. Department of Commerce. Cell phone

use varies by age group; the younger the age, the more likely the person will have cell phones.

And this is not an American phenomenon. Japan and most of Europe are well ahead of the

United States in cell phone use.

Telephones are both time-savers and time-users. Before the invention of the cell phone,

how did people reach each other, and how did they spend the time now spent on the phone?

In addition, email, instant messaging, and the Internet have added new dimensions to

Self- actualization

Esteem

Belongingness and love

Safety

Physiological needs

Figure 1.2 Maslow’s hierarchy of needs.

Management Today 17

communication. Most American households have personal computers and Internet access.

The average American spends three hours a day online.

The use of technology determines its worth. The most documented house in the United

States, the White House, provides some examples of this phenomenon. In 1879, President

Rutherford B. Hayes had the first telephone installed in the White House, but it was rarely used

because hardly anyone else in Washington had a telephone, so there was no one to call or to

call in; thus telephone is an obvious example of shared technology. When the typewriter was

introduced to the White House in 1880, it was put to more immediate use. Previously, all presi-

dential correspondence had to be handwritten by a clerk, so the typewriter was clearly a useful

innovation. In 1891, during Benjamin Harrison’s administration, electric lights were installed in

the White House. The president was afraid of getting a shock, however, so he refused to oper-

ate the electric lights and summoned servants to turn them on or off. To show the progression

of technology, over a hundred years later during the Bill Clinton administration, the White House

was rewired so that computers could be used more readily and television interviews could take

place in a variety of locations without the necessity of dragging around long, heavy cables.

When microwave ovens were introduced in the 20th century, many people were not sure

that they were really safe and useful. Today, microwave ovens are pervasive. Technology

is more than a system of machines; it can refer to ideas or ways of doing things. Today’s

technologies crisscross many fields so that an invention in one industry, such as computers,

can revolutionize another, such as retail. It is becoming increasingly important, then, to be

knowledgeable in a variety of fields and to keep up with developments in other disciplines.

Interdisciplinary Foundation As the previous section explained, various factors (e.g., history, biology, culture, person-

ality, and technology) influence individuals’ management style. But the field of resource

management is even broader than these factors suggest. Although the discussion here will

be  limited to the connections between management and some of the social sciences—

anthropology, psychology, sociology, and economics—other disciplines have also contributed

to the development of the field. These include geography, political science, agriculture,

philosophy, organizational behavior, marketing, biology, chemistry, engineering, and physics.

For example, philosophy contributes to our understanding of values, marketing to the con-

sumption decisions made by individuals and families, and engineering to the mechanics and

functioning of the home. Geography tracks regions, landscapes, and other spatial units. The

distribution of people, resources, and culture is a driving force in geography. Connections to

political science may seem obscure, but public policy affects individual and family life through

services offered, taxes, and the ultimate control of resources.

aNTHropology The word anthropology comes from the Greek anthropo (man) and logy (science). Simply

defined, anthropology is the science of human beings. Anthropologists seek to study and

interpret the characteristics of a particular population or activity in its place in time. This

includes communities, subcultures, and entire societies. Of anthropology’s many subfields,

cultural anthropology is the most relevant to management. Culture affects what people learn

and how they behave. Culture applies to management on two distinct levels: as a set of

general attributes of people in a society or group and as material culture, or the objects and

18 chapter 1

tools individuals, groups, and families use. (Because the family is the social group of interest in

this book, discussions of material culture will focus on objects associated with the family and

home use.) Occasionally a new group is found. In 2011, for example, a Brazilian tribe with 200

individuals was discovered.

Culture also refers to patterns. Those who study management are interested in repetitive

patterns of living. The characteristic way, or pattern, in which an individual conducts her or his

life is called lifestyle. Needs, wants, tastes, styles, and preferences all contribute to lifestyles.

psycHology The word psychology is formed by combining psyche (the mind) and logy (science). Psychology

focuses on how the individual thinks and behaves. Communication of meaning is a driving

force in psychology. Social psychology and cognitive psychology are particularly relevant to the

study of management. Two of the main constructs in social psychology are goals and attitudes

which both figure strongly in the study of management. Social psychology is the study of indi-

vidual behavior within a group; it examines attitudes, problem solving, social influences, leaders

and followers, and communication. These topics will be discussed in depth in future chapters.

Cognitive psychology explains the nature of human intelligence and how people think. It

is dominated by the information-processing approach, which analyzes thinking processes as

a sequence of ordered stages. Values, attitudes, and decision making are integral to cognitive

psychology as well as to management.

sociology Whereas psychology focuses on the individual or the individual operating in groups, sociology

emphasizes the collective behavior of social groups, including organizations and communities.

Sociology comes from the Latin socius (companion or associate) and logy (science).

Sociology applies the scientific method to the study of human society. It explores why

some groups function the way they do. For example, sociological studies investigate the

The White House is an innovator in household and communication technology.

Management Today 19

norms and roles of retired workers, schoolchildren, and employed women. Because the family

is a societal group, sociology coupled with family relations contributes much to our under-

standing of family managerial behavior. Families usually share common goals or purposes and

interact in pursuit of these objectives. Each member of the family is perceived by others as a

member, and all members are bound together by traditions and networks. Sociologists study

customs, structures, and institutions, as well as how individuals function in groups and organi-

zations. Sociologists research the connections between work and family. They are particularly

interested in conflict (social disorder) and cohesion (social order) as driving forces.

ecoNoMics Economics is the social science concerned with the production, development, and

management of material wealth at different levels: households, businesses, or nations. It

tracks markets, industries, and economies as key units of study. The driving forces of change

are economic value, worth, and scarcity (constraints).

Harvard economists Alberto Alesina and Paolo Giuliano say that strong family ties imply

more reliance on the family as an economic unit and that household production is important

versus over-reliance on government or the marketplace (2007). They stress the role of the

family as an economic unit.

Economists study human behavior within the context of the relationship between desired

end results and scarcity. Specifically, it covers human resource planning, labor market

changes, cost–benefit analyses, and resources such as land, natural resources, and capital

(human-made resources). For the purposes of resource management, the most relevant

topics are those related to human resource planning, financial management, households,

and specifically microeconomics, which focuses on the behavior of individual consumers. The

most basic economic problem is how individuals decide how to allocate scarce resources to

achieve the results they desire.

In conclusion, management works in tandem with other disciplines—the interdisciplinary

influences are noted in Table 1.3. It deals with people, their values, and their growth and

development; and in so doing, it concerns itself with the social structure and the community.

The Interdisciplinary Influences on the Study of Resource Management Discipline Units of analysis Focus/Drive*

anthropology Communities Culture

dominant cultures and subcultures

Societies

Psychology Individuals Communication, self-knowledge,

goals, attitudes

Sociology Social groups Conflict and cohesion

organizations

Communities

Families

Economics Households Value, worth, scarcity

Markets

Industries

Economies

*All these disciplines share an interest in understanding human behavior.

Table 1.3

20 chapter 1

Concepts and skills integral to management, such as attitudes, decision making, and

planning, are also integral to other disciplines. Knowledge from anthropology, psychology,

sociology, economics, and other disciplines provides direction and strength to management

research and theory. The next section shows how these theoretical aspects of management

can be applied to contemporary problems.

Life Management for individuals and Families Although management principles can be applied to individuals, families, groups, organiza-

tions, governments, and businesses, this book focuses on individual, family, and household

management—on what can be called life management. This section discusses life manage-

ment and provides definitions of several key family and household terms.

Life management encompasses all the decisions a person or family will make and the

way values, goals, and resource use affect decision making. It refers to more than just specific

goal achievement. In life management, people are seen as possessing a “self,” which helps

regulate their actions. They self-monitor, which means assess or alter their actions, language,

and reactions according to those around them. Someone engaging in road rage, telling off

others in surrounding cars or chasing them, is someone with low self-monitoring. Thus, life

management includes all the events (the good, the bad, and the ugly), situations, and decisions

that make up a lifestyle. Life management is a holistic approach that looks at management as

a process that evolves over a life span. The process takes place in a social context as part of

the environment that surrounds individuals and families.

Managing the Second Half of Life The second half of life presents its own unique challenges and opportunities. As examples,

a 62-year-old woman tries to swim from Cuba to the United States to attempt to set a new

record, and a 55-year-old attorney decides he would rather teach elementary school than be

a lawyer so he goes back for an education degree and a year later is teaching fifth graders.

Commitment to a newly defined goal or desired future has an energizing effect. Patterns

(personal, family, work, leisure) established in the first half of life may no longer suffice. Children

grow up and leave; some grownup children return home after a failed marriage or a financial

loss; jobs prove less challenging; an expected promotion does not come through; or an early

retirement buyout package is offered.

Examples of changes or new goals in midlife include the following:

• A seasoned runner decides to run in a marathon.

• A college graduate now 60 years old decides to contact her college friends through

Facebook.

• An educator takes accounting classes with the idea of opening up a side business.

You have probably heard of the midlife crisis. It has long been thought of as something that

afflicts men, but research indicates that many women also go through a midlife crisis, which

usually entails a substantial re-examination of their lives leading to changed outcomes. “By

age 50, even more women than men are reporting a turbulent midlife transition—36.1 percent

Management Today 21

of women, compared with 34 percent of men—according to

research by Elaine Wethington, a Cornell University associate

professor” (Shellenbarger, 2005, p. D1).

About early retirement buyout packages, one man in his

50s took advantage of a generous buyout package from a car

company and started his own scrap metal business with two

friends from the same industry. They knew there was a market,

they knew where the sources of scrap metal were, and they

put their expertise together. Although they are no longer in

the car industry per se, they are in a related industry in which

they travel the world buying up the metal and transporting it

to car factories. As owners of a new, smaller company, they

are enjoying the freedom of working closely together. Often the

most successful career transitions are made this way, by find-

ing a new way to use old skills, knowledge, and relationships.

As another example, four friends formed a partnership and

bought land on the side of a mountain where they are selling

off property and building retirement homes for themselves and

their families.

Individuals may find themselves having spent their first

25 years getting educated and the next 25–30 years on the job,

and then facing the prospect of 30–40 years of retirement. How they react to this scenario has

a great deal to do with their personality and the details of the actual situation, such as finances

and health. Even if they remain employed, work may be redefined by the workers themselves

or by the demands of the workplace. Baby boomers, born from 1946 to 1964, are a genera-

tion known for re-invention. They may be filled with worry and doubt and desperately seek a

change not only for themselves but also for their children. A Florida couple moved after retiring

from state employment and teaching after thirty years back to their home state of Montana.

They knew they would miss their friends but their children had grown and left and they felt the

need to start over.

Many people question the nature of their work at midlife; many do not want to stay in the

same job for 30 years, others hang on for the income and retirement benefits. In any event,

upcoming retirement will require a new plan formation. Unless they manage options or find

new opportunities, they may deteriorate, become bored, “retire on the job,” lose all joy in

work and in life, and become a burden to themselves and those around them (Drucker, 1999,

pp. 188–189). Some refuse to retire or to accept society’s definition of aging. When federal

judge Milton Pollack—at 96 years old, the third oldest federal judge in the United States—was

asked about retirement, he said, “Having a daily occupation keeps me active and I have no

plans to leave the bench” (Davis & Smith, 2003, p. C1).

Guitarist Joe Perry of Aerosmith, a member of 1970s rock ’n’ roll band that still performs,

says, “Society programs you to be a couch potato, and you don’t have to be. . . . This isn’t

about rock ’n’ roll: it’s about getting out there and living life instead of just watching it go

by. . . . I don’t think of myself as being 52; I just think of myself as being” (Umminger, 2003,

p. 4D). Another member of the band, bassist Tom Hamilton, says, “You have to make sacri-

fices. You can’t open a bag of potato chips whenever you want.” Joe responds, “You can but

you can’t eat it” (Umminger, 2003, p. 4D). The band members said they have to watch what

they eat and work out in gyms because fans don’t want to see a fat rocker. With aging and

Learning new skills in the later years.

22 chapter 1

growth come compromises; staying active is not easy. For those of us in less public profes-

sions than rock stars, possible solutions to workplace ennui include

• Enriching the present job by taking advantage of training opportunities or travel; teaming

up with colleagues on projects. A higher percentage of women than men want to travel

when they retire.

• Starting a second or a different career or moving to another organization or locale. As

an example of the twists and turns this can take, a woman sold her large urban interior

design firm after 20 years and downscaled to a corner of a fabric store in a small city. In a

few years, that store moved and joined forces with a leading furniture store, which led to

more work (and money) for the interior designer than ever before, but in an environment

shared with more people, a situation she enjoyed. Her overhead was low because her

rent was low, and the only person she had to pay was herself. She set her own hours,

decided how many clients to take, and used the furniture store to display her skills.

Another interior designer chose to work entirely out of her home thus saving any over-

head or travel costs except to client’s homes.

• Developing a parallel career: keeping the basic job, but adding another track such

as a part-time job, possibly an outgrowth of a hobby or interest area. Women want

to pursue hobbies more than they have in the recent past and you may have noticed

the subsequent growth in hobby and special interest stores or areas of stores to meet

these needs.

• Joining in a nonprofit activity such as community service, politics, school boards, or

neighborhood associations. Jennifer at age 60 and anticipating retirement joined two

community clubs, one economics-based, the other political, to see if she would like them

for when she had more leisure time and as a way to stay connected. As a people person

she knows she needs a lot of contacts and likes to follow issues.

In addition to the obvious changes that may occur during the second half of life in families,

health, or jobs, more subtle changes may take place, such as redefining success or determin-

ing what is important. People of all ages need to feel that they are making a contribution at

home, at the workplace, or in the community. Indeed, as more workers become knowledge

workers, the need to retire has become less evident than it was when most people were

manual laborers and the physical limitations of age prevented continued employment. Now

that work is less physically defined and people are living longer, and as more people work from

their homes (using computers and broadband connections), a societal redefinition of retire-

ment is under way.

Singles, Households, Nonfamily Households, and Families Living solo continues to grow in the United States, up from 25 percent in 1990 to 27 percent

in 2010. In many Western European countries the percentage is higher with more than

33 percent of households consisting of one person. In Paris, “the city of love,” there are more

singles than married couples. Traditionally, the study of management has focused primarily

on the family, but the growing number of single adults means that the field must pay equal

attention to their lifestyles and needs. The number of single adults is increasing for several

reasons. Populations are aging resulting in more empty-nest households and elderly singles.

Management Today 23

In addition, because the age at first marriage is rising, there are many more young adult singles

and more singles between marriages.

In contrast, there are more multigenerational households with adult children returning

home after college or military service or failed marriages or sometimes with a spouse and

children. Under one roof, there are more blended families with stepparents or stepchildren

and extended families including cousins, great-aunts, and grandparents. A wide variety of

nonrelated people are living together—unmarried partner couples, friends, and roommates

sharing expenses. As an example, 26-year-old John, who was restarting his life after being in

the military, found he could rent a room in a three-bedroom house for $350. He would rather

do that than spend $900 for his own apartment while he was going back to school.

In 1900, the average life expectancy in the United States was 47, and only 3 percent of

the population lived past 65. Now the average life expectancy is 78 years and two months. Of

course, many live well into their 90s and some into their 100s. By 2043 Americans age 65 and

older will be 20 percent of the population. As had been said before, we are an aging popula-

tion, and this is true for most of the developed world.

As mentioned before, the delay of marriage until a later age for both males and females

is a significant demographic change. Fewer people are getting married besides delaying

marriage. An American woman, on average, will have her first child at age 26; with college

educated women the average age is higher. This is later than the age at which her grand-

mother had her first child. Delayed childbearing is becoming more the norm and being

unmarried and giving birth is also becoming more typical. The share of births by unmarried

women is at 41 percent compared to 26 percent in 1990. In some European countries,

childbirth is even less attached to marriage with over half to two-thirds of children born to

unwed mothers.

To return to the subject of the single lifestyle, there is no doubt that from a management

point of view it has both pluses and minuses. For example, on the positive side, single adults

enjoy increased freedom of action, privacy, and solitude, whereas on the negative side they

may experience more loneliness. Solitude connotes a sense of enjoyment in being alone. Most

of us enjoy periods of peaceful, uninterrupted reading or time on the Internet. Solitude offers

the advantage of being restful and life-restoring. On the other hand, singles may feel bur-

dened by their inability to share responsibilities; single people have to take care of everything

by themselves such as grocery shopping and running errands. Generalizing about singles is

difficult, however, because many singles have children or live with friends or family members,

have pets, and enjoy the support of co-workers and neighbors.

Cohabitation has increased in this country. Most are heterosexual couples, but same-sex

couples are more visible and in the news. Same-sex marriage ceremonies are available in

some states and under consideration in others.

Many popular images of singles are incorrect or confused. Consider the common belief

that elderly singles choose to retire primarily in the Sunbelt states, especially Florida. Actually

Nevada’s elderly population grew by more than 70 percent during the 1990s and the early

2000s, whereas Florida’s grew only by 18.5 percent. Las Vegas, Nevada, was one of the

fastest growing cities in the United States during the decade of the 2000s. Census data

indicate that elders are flocking to North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, Alaska, Arizona,

New Mexico, Hawaii, Utah, and Colorado. The greatest rise in elderly population growth is

taking place in the suburbs going along with a national trend toward more living in the suburbs

and fewer in rural areas. Rural residents constitute 16 percent of the U.S. population vs.

20 percent in 1990.

24 chapter 1

Besides the suburbs, singles, young and old, are attracted to the towns and cities with

colleges and universities such as State College, Pennsylvania; Iowa City, Iowa; Bloomington,

Indiana; Madison, Wisconsin; Austin, Texas; and Chapel Hill and Raleigh-Durham, North

Carolina. Large numbers of elderly live in the rural Midwest. The phrase aging in place refers to

the phenomenon of people staying where they were brought up or spent most of their working

years—for example, in the Midwest or in the suburbs. More senior communities are forming

outside cities so people stay near families including grandchildren, friends, co-workers, and

services and stores they are used to versus starting all over again with relationships and inter-

ests. Eileen, age 50, moved her parents close to her in a southern state, but after three years

her parents moved back north to be with friends and family. Much as they liked the warmer

weather it was too difficult to adjust.

Census data reveal that working-age singles tend to cluster in cities such as New York,

Washington, Austin, Denver, Seattle, Boston, and San Francisco. If trends hold true, more

elders, along with the rest of the population, will migrate West and South in the future. It is also

not an unusual pattern to see active elders retire to warm-weather states and then when they

become older and frailer move back to the areas from which they migrated or move closer to

grown-up children. As the baby boomers become absorbed into the ranks of the elderly over

the next 25 years, the movements of vast numbers of elderly will have obvious impacts on

communities such as health services.

Critical Thinking

As you read these descriptions of singles and families, what do they tell you about how families and households are changing and what might happen in the future?

Generally speaking, the definition of household is broader than the definition of family.

People’s lifestyles are categorized by housing units rather than by marital status. According

to the Census Bureau, a household comprises all persons who occupy a “housing

unit”—that is, a house, an apartment or a cluster of rooms, or a single room that consti-

tutes “separate living quarters.” A household includes related family members and all the

unrelated persons, if any, such as lodgers, foster children, wards, or employees who share

the housing unit. A person living alone or a group of unrelated persons sharing the same

housing unit is also counted as a household. Household change generally parallels popula-

tion change. The smallest gains in the number of new households were in slow-growing

states, mainly in the Northeast. A nonfamily household is defined as those who live alone

or with nonrelatives.

Cohabitation, discussed earlier, contributes to the rising number of nonfamily households.

It is estimated that a quarter of the time, one cohabitating partner wants to marry, while the

other doesn’t. Although most people think of cohabitants as young adults, they may be older.

The majority of people who have experienced a divorce will try cohabitation before remarrying,

but the trial run may be quite short.

Management Today 25

No universal definition of the family exists; however, a number of definitions are considered

appropriate. According to Lamanna and Riedmann (2009), the family involves relationships in

which people usually related by ancestry, marriage, or adoption:

1. form an economic unit and care for any young,

2. consider their identity to be significantly attached to the group, and

3. commit to maintaining that group over time.

This definition combines some practical and objective criteria with a more social- psychological

sense of family identity (p. 9).

A narrower definition is provided by the Census Bureau, which says that the word family

refers to a group of two or more persons related by birth, marriage, or adoption and residing

together in a household. Child development and family experts try to find out how changes in

the family affect children. One study reported that “Research in the United States has shown

that children growing up in 2-parent households do better in school than children from single-

parent households” (Heveline, Yang, & Timberlake, 2010, p. 1362).

A free-form definition would indicate that the family is whatever an individual says it

is. The definition of immediate family used by the American Red Cross Disaster Services

Program includes mother, father, spouse, dependent children, dependent grandchild/

grandchildren, dependent stepchild/stepchildren, regularly financially supported significant

others, fiancés, housemates, and/or other family members. They use this definition to deter-

mine who qualifies for aid in a disaster. Setting parameters is important because when

money is involved, anyone may claim to be a fiancé or a long-lost relative: What happens,

for instance, when three women say they were fiancées of the same man? The American

Red Cross asks for verification before aid is disbursed. Examples of acceptable forms of

verification include

• Current joint ownership of a home

• Current joint rental/lease agreement

• Current joint bank account or credit cards

Family life includes love, affection, and joyful play.

26 chapter 1

• Current joint ownership or holding of investments

• Current utility bill with both names

• Joint obligation on a current loan

• Current joint renter’s or homeowner’s insurance policy

• Registration with a state or a local domestic partnership registry or certification of a union

celebrated overseas.

Immediately following the September 11, 2001, disasters in Washington, DC, and

New York City, the American Red Cross assisted families of the 3,333 deceased or seriously

injured, opened 55,370 cases, and made 131,185 disaster health contacts and 236,498 disas-

ter mental-health contacts. The American Red Cross is allied with the International Red Cross

and other groups who share a common goal of relieving suffering. The organization’s definition

of family is considered more inclusive than the U.S. Census Bureau’s definition. Besides

nonprofit organizations like the International Red Cross, businesses seek to define “family” for

their benefits programs. Who should be covered in a family health plan? Most Fortune 500 com-

panies offer domestic-partner benefits, as do several states.

From the Census Bureau’s point of view and for those who rely on census data, consis-

tent definitions of “family” and “household” are important because comparisons can be made

from decade to decade. A family includes among its members the householder. According to

the Census Bureau, the householder is the person (or one of the persons) in whose name

the home is owned or rented. If a home is owned or rented jointly by a married couple, either

the husband or the wife may be listed first. Prior to 1980, the husband was always consid-

ered the household head (householder) in married-couple households. The American Red

Cross has another definition of household. It says that a household is defined as a family or

other group of individuals who live together and act jointly in conducting most or all domestic

activities, or an individual who lives alone or lives with others but acts alone in conducting

most or all domestic activities. Examples of domestic activities are having meals together

and sharing responsibility for maintaining a home (e.g., jointly paying for utilities) (Goodman,

2002, p. 2).

To summarize much that has been covered in this chapter, according to the Census

Bureau, since 1980 the percentage of traditional family households has declined but the

number of non-traditional households has increased, and the percentage of people living

alone has risen. Included in this count of people living alone are the over 2 million Americans

who are in prison.

Changes in Family and Household Composition To conclude, the term “family” refers to relationships, usually by marriage or through children,

shared commitment, or shared resources over time, or to genetic relationships; and the term

“household” refers to housing units and the occupants who share the residence. Households

and families have fewer people on average with one of the notable exceptions of Hispanics as

discussed earlier. Hispanic fertility is 2.9 births per woman compared to the national average

of 2.1. Perhaps this content about families and households can seem confusing but the point

is that people are redefining what constitutes a family or a household. They are not less com-

mitted to the concept of family and television shows such as Modern Family portray diverse

family forms and everyone has to live somewhere.

Management Today 27

Statistics indicate significant changes in the composition and size of families. According

to the last census, in the United States:

• In the nation’s 3,142 counties, 760 are losing population.

• Ethnic and racial growth is uneven. Since 2000, Asians, although a small share of the

population, grew at a faster rate (4.2 million) than blacks (3.7 million).

• The percentage of households with children younger than 18 is declining but this varies

greatly by region and by group. Twenty-three states and Washington, DC, lost 10 percent

or more of their child population since 2000.

• The trend is toward more mixed marriages with one in seven new marriages of spouses

of different racial or ethnic backgrounds.

• Life expectancy is up with men making more gains than women (14 to 4 percent)

explained by better heart treatments and heart disease prevention and less smoking,

the less easily measured aspect of stress may also be a factor.

If you take all this information together a picture starts forming of today’s lifestyles. For a

woman, she may be single during her twenties, marry for a few years, have a child, divorce,

remarry, and then be widowed. When high school classes convene for their fortieth reunion, it

is not unusual to find several people who have been married three or four times.

Although the statistics given so far describe mostly conditions in the United States,

changes in the composition of families are a global trend. Timeworn traditions concerning the

proper age for marriage and to have children are being questioned.

Regardless of family stage or type, the main difference between individual and family

decision making is that decisions are more complex when made by two or more persons.

The bigger the family, the more complicated the decision-making process, because more

people’s needs have to be considered and resources have to stretch further. Family decision

making is an important area of study because the family provides the setting in which essential

resources are created, transformed, and transferred. In conclusion, managing life, whether

as an individual or as a member of a family, within the context of the mounting pressures

and stresses of everyday existence, is not an easy task. As we have seen, not only families

but also the society in which they live and the economy are undergoing dramatic changes.

People try to adapt to and influence these changing situations through the choices they make.

For example from 2008 to 2011 in the United States people became thriftier, spending less,

reducing debt load, and saving more. They revamped household budgets and focused on

what they really needed. Financial management, an aspect of the umbrella subject of family

resource management, provides the opportunities to shape future outcomes for the benefit of

individuals and families.

Critical Thinking

Have you or members of your family cut back on spending? If so, in what ways? Before the recession Americans saved less than 2 percent of disposable income and this went up to 5.4 percent in 2011. Have you or members of your family tried to save more?

28 chapter 1

what Lies ahead? This book is divided into four parts. Part 1 includes the present chapter and the next one on

management history and theories. These two introductory chapters provide a framework for

interpreting the management concepts and applications to come in subsequent chapters.

Part 2 covers management concepts and principles; values, attitudes, and goals; resources;

decision making; planning, implementing, and evaluating; and communication. Each chapter

in Part 2 will elucidate the steps in the management process model presented in Figure 1.1.

Part 3 on management applications has chapters on managing human needs, time, work and

family, stress and fatigue, environmental resources, and finances. The book concludes in Part

4 with a chapter on future challenges. Each chapter begins with the chapter outline, a “Did

You Know?” section and an epigraph, and concludes with a Summary, Key Terms, Review

Questions, and References. At the end of the book is a Glossary and an Index.

summarysummary Studying individual and family resource management provides a perspective, a way of thinking and acting. It is motivated by curios- ity and the desire to understand human behavior and, in particular, changes in family and household behavior. This chapter addressed the following questions:

• What is management? • Why manage? • Who manages?

Management is the process of using resources to achieve goals. Besides resources and goals, management involves many interacting elements, including problems, needs, wants, values, decision making, planning, implementing, communication, and feedback, all operating within an environmental context.

The unique contribution of management is the insight it provides into decision making and decision implementing.

Management is necessary because it provides a sense of direction and purpose. Everyone manages, some with more skill than others. Many of the principles of management are timeless, but the application of management to everyday life is constantly changing.

Examples of change include the dramatic increase in the num- ber of single adults and the trend toward marrying at a later age. We are an aging population with more diverse families. Different definitions of “family” and “household” were presented, with a recognition that there are various configurations.

The evolving nature of society and technology has made man- agement an increasingly necessary and far more complex subject. Given the health, environmental, economic, and social problems in the world today, the need for skilled managers at all levels has never been greater. Many challenges lie ahead for the thinker and the planner in all of us.

termskey terms choice 4 clarification 11 decision making 12 family 25 feedback 12 goals 10 happiness 7 household(er) 24

implementing 12 life management 20 lifestyle 18 management 9 management process 9 management style 15 management tools 12 needs 10

planning 12 problems 10 resources 11 risk 4 self-monitoring 20 standards 11 values 10 wants 10

Management Today 29

questions 1. Why does Daniel Gilbert, author of Stumbling on Happiness,

say that experiences might bring more satisfaction than durable goods? Do you agree or disagree?

2. Harvard economists Alberto Alesina and Paolo Giuliano say that strong family ties imply more reliance on the family as an economic unit that provides goods and services and less on outside institutions such as those found in the market- place and government. Why does household production (doing things together or making things within the home) activity have such an impact on family ties? Can you give an example from your own family?

3. Which fields of study have affected the study of manage- ment? Select one and explain its relevance to the field of resource management.

4. How does technology influence management style? Give an example of a technological change in the 20th or 21st century and explain how individual or family lifestyles were impacted.

5. Lamanna and Reidmann have given a definition of family which includes a list of three common characteristics. Does your family fit these three or would you add something to the list or take something away? Explain your answer.

referencesreferences Alesina, A., & Giuliano, P. (2007). The power of the family. NBER

Reporter, No. 4, p. 36.

Blanchflower, D., & Oswald, A. (2004). Money, sex and happi- ness: An empirical study. Scandinavian Journal of Economics, 106(3), 393–415.

Covey, S. R. (1989). The seven habits of highly effective people. New York: Simon & Schuster.

Davis, A., & Smith, R. (2003, July 3). Judge Pollack’s investor lectures. The Wall Street Journal, p. C1.

Drucker, P. F. (1999). Management challenges for the 21st century. New York: HarperCollins.

Gilbert, D. (2006). Stumbling on happiness. New York: Alfred A. Knopf.

Goodman, A. (2002, May 29). Testimony before the select com- mittee on lower Manhattan redevelopment. New York: New York City Council.

Grant, H., & Gelety, L. (2009). Goal content theories: Why differ- ences in what we are striving for matter. In G. B. Moskowitz & H. Grant (Eds.), The Psychology of Goals (pp. 77–97). New York: Guiford.

Heveline, P., Yang, H., & Timberlake, J. (2010). It takes a village (perhaps a nation): Families, States and Educational

Achievement. Journal of Marriage and Family, 72, 1362–1376.

Konigsberg, R. D. (2011, August 8). Chore Wars. Time, 45–49.

Lamanna, M., & Riedmann, A. (2009). Marriages and families (10th ed.). Belmont, CA: Thomson.

Maslow, A. (1954). Motivation and personality. New York: Harper & Row.

Mattioli, D. (2008, February 19). For some, suburban jobs prove subpar. The Wall Street Journal, p. B8.

Shellenbarger, S. (2005, April 7). The female midlife crisis. The Wall Street Journal, p. D1.

Skogster, P., Uotila, V., & Ojala, L. (2008). From mornings to evenings: Is there variation in shopping behavior between different hours of the day? International Journal of Consumer Studies, 32, 65–74.

Slack, C. (2011, Spring). Real needs: Real solutions. New York: Merrill Lynch Advisor, p. 17.

Terhune, C., & Kahn, G. (2003, September 8). Coke lures Japanese customers with cellphone come-ons. The Wall Street Journal, p. B4.

Umminger, A. (2003, August 18). They walk their way. USA Today, p. 4D.

review questions

31

If one can really penetrate the life of another age, one is penetrating the life of one’s own.

—T. S. ElioT 2

History and ManageMent

Main Topics

History of Management The Early Years of Management Household Production/Consumption System i:

Premodern (Early 1900s) Household Production/Consumption System ii:

Modern (1950s to 1990s) Household Production/Consumption System iii:

Postmodern (Early 21st Century) Four Eras of Management

Theory Overview Functions of Theory Theories Ahead

Systems Theory open and Closed Families Subsystems and System Elements The Personal System Family Systems Theory and Management Application of Systems Theory to Households Human Ecology and Ecosystems

Economic Theory optimization and Satisficing Risk Aversion

DiD you know that . . .?

. . . 43 percent of Americans say cooking is their favorite pastime—second only to watching television.

. . . In 1987 the average household had 7 battery-operated appliances; today that number is 27.

tHeories

32 chapter 2

“F amily life in the United States has undergone striking changes in the past 30 years” (Campbell & Parcel, 2010, p. 560). To support the changes in family life, homes and technology have changed greatly, too. To understand how far families and homes have come, read this advertising copy depicting the olden days:

When America was young—a patchwork of small towns connected by dusty roads and

wagon trails—it was the general store that stood at the heart of the community and

provided simple necessities for family life, work and home. It was a place for the whole

family to gather, to take time out to reach for their dreams—a jar of penny candy for the

children, a pretty dress for big sister, a new set of dishes for Grandmother’s dining room

table. Early Americans were steadied by their practicality, ingenuity, values and warm

sense of humor. They were sustained by their dreams for a better life for themselves and

their family. (JCPenney, AmericanLiving.com, 2008.)

Of course, this quote glamorizes America’s past, but there is no doubt that all of us, regard-

less of country, have some nostalgia for when times were simpler and everything seemed

possible. Today, restraint and solid judgment rule the day and convenience often wins out

over charm. Practical, time-saving methods outweigh sentiment. As a case in point, when

the first edition of this book came out in the ’90s it was only available in print in hard cover

and sold at campus bookstores. Since then it is also available electronically in several forms

including Kindle and from online sources. Book publishing has moved on as have families,

homes, workplaces, and traditions but as the opening quote by T. S. Eliot illustrates we

can learn from examining past developments, and this chapter opens with descriptions of

changes in homes which serve as the environmental and support sides of our daily lives,

the place we come home to. This chapter then explores the theoretical underpinnings of

the study of family resource management, including discussions of social exchange and

economic theories. In so doing, the chapter lays the foundation for what is to come in the

rest of the book, such as in-depth explorations of attitudes, values, and decision making.

Throughout the book, management serves as a roadmap or guide. Although many of the

examples will be from the United States, other countries could be substituted. No doubt the

past generations struggled, but the family remains strong and we still have our dreams of a

better future for our children and grandchildren.

We need to study the various theories that have been formulated about managerial behav-

ior to help us understand how and why people plan, decide, and act the way they do. This

chapter explores the nature of theory and its application to management. Worldwide, there

has been a revival of interest in green, or environmentally friendly, ways of doing things such

as ecotourism and a revisiting of traditional ways of managing a home and the environment

surrounding it. Some people collect household goods such as furnishings and appliances from

the past or reproductions. Here is an example regarding vacuum cleaners:

Store owners from Virginia to Oregon say they can barely keep them in stock. “As soon

as I get one, it just flies out the door,” says Istikar Ahmed, who runs a vacuum store in

the Washington suburbs. . . . Joe De Maria, for instance, has shelled out more than $900

for vacuums during the past four years—he’s got four—and each one has fallen short.

Not only do they break down but he says they don’t pick up the dirt left by his children

and two hairy dogs. “The attachments are so short, you can’t get under the couch,”

the Miami homeowner complains. What’s his dream machine now? “My mother’s old

metal Kirby, which you could bang into the furniture, or throw down the stairs,” he says.

(Fletcher, 2002, p. W9)

Management History and Theories 33

Common household objects such as vacuum cleaners are part of the larger picture of

how people live; although keeping a clean house may not be everyone’s number one concern,

it is something everyone has to deal with to some degree.

A knowledge of the evolution of management theory (the ways and whys of doing things)

provides a useful background for understanding the management process diagrammed in

Figure 1.1, which is repeated here as Figure 2.1. This chapter specifically addresses the feed-

back and environmental components of the model.

history of Management The Early Years of Management Although managers and management have existed since the beginning of organized civilization,

the earliest records of management are found on the walls of cave dwellings in Western Europe,

most notably France. These cave drawings indicate which members of the societal unit hunted,

gathered food, and reared children. Over time, around the globe, village centers sprang up as

people went from subsisting on wild resources to farming. This more settled approach led to

larger towns. Populations grew and with them the need for more advanced systems of food

storage and freshwater access. Homes lasted longer, and attention was paid to pottery and

other forms of food display and storage and to stone carving and other forms of decoration.

Moving up in time, we come to ancient Greece and Rome where home management

became the subject of philosophical discussions. Several Biblical verses refer to the importance

of keeping an orderly home. Since the Middle Ages, numerous books about household man-

agement have been published. A contemporary book summarizes the household accounts of

an estate in medieval England (Woolgar, 1993). Diaries and memoirs describe what it was like

to live in previous eras.

Much of what we know about these human ancestors and their households come from

archaeological digs that reveal the kinds of settlements people lived in, the cooking pots used,

foods eaten, and ornamentation. For example, in North Florida half of the area was covered by

pine forests and the early native people used pine for canoes, utensils, sculptures, and bowls.

Chapters 1 and 3

Step 1

Chapter 3

Step 2

Chapter 4

Step 3

Chapters 5 and 6

Step 4

Chapter 6

Step 5

Decide, plan, and implement

Accomplish goals and evaluate

Identify resources

Identify problem, need, want, or goal

Clarify values

Feedback

Chapters 2 and 7

Chapters 2 and 12

Environment

Figure 2.1 The management process model.

34 chapter 2

When the colonial Europeans came, they harvested pine for timber and used it in shipbuilding.

Later, pine was used for tar, pitch, rosin, turpentine, and paper pulp. Each culture saw the

same resource, pine trees, but used it differently.

In 18th century United States, standards of hygiene were undergoing a transformation.

After trying out her new shower in 1799, a Philadelphia woman named Elizabeth Drinker noted

in her diary that she tolerated the new experience “better than expected, not having been wet

for 28 years” (Crossen, 2002).

Simple beginnings, a log one room house with loft or attic above.

Critical Thinking

How many showers or baths would be normal where you live? Does it vary by age group? Why do you think standards of hygiene changed?

In rural areas, pioneer homes were often single-room (also called “single pen”) log cabins

with a fireplace. This was followed by a “dogtrot” structure consisting of two rooms joined by

a breezeway for ventilation in warm climates and an enclosed hall in cooler climates. A more

upscale home might be a “four-square” with four rooms joined by an enclosed central hallway

and stairs leading up to an attic, loft, or bedrooms and stairs leading down to a basement. In

the Midwest there were “I-houses,” so named for the states Iowa, Indiana, and Illinois, which

were typically two-story versions of the dogtrot, four rooms down and four rooms up (Haase,

1992). Some of these early homes were modest, whereas others became quite grand when

they added a porch out front supported by pillars.

Cooking may have been done in the house, or the kitchen may have been behind the

house in a separate building. Drinking and bathing water was brought in buckets from streams

Management History and Theories 35

and lakes, then wells, and later pumped from outside near the back door. A most welcome

addition to homes was running water usually in the form of a kitchen sink with cold water. Can

you imagine what a life-altering experience it must have been from going from hauling water to

being able to turn a spigot to get water? And, then later on, to add hot water from the spigot

that didn’t have to be heated on a stove for baths or whatever?

Ben Franklin (1706–1790), inventor of the Franklin stove, bifocals, and the lightning rod,

popularized the adage “time is money.” He was also deputy postmaster in charge of the mails

in the northern colonies. By 1792, the U.S. post office had a regular mail delivery schedule. In

the United States, today we have mail delivery once a day Monday through Saturday, but in

cities in colonial times, in the United States and also in England, twice a day service, morning

and afternoon, was not unusual. As this book went to press, in the United States there was

discussion of taking away Saturday delivery or to reduce delivery to three days a week in order

to save money and in response to changes in how people communicate.

In the 19th century, middleclass households commonly owned clocks, whereas in the

previous century only the wealthy had clocks. The stopwatch, a timepiece that can be instantly

started and stopped by the press of a button, was invented in the 1880s. New inventions were

altering the way homes functioned and looked. The first vacuum cleaners were hand-pumped

models of wood and canvas almost as big as coffee tables.

Home management, or domestic management, emerged as a formal subject of study in

the United States in the 19th century. High school and college courses covered a wide range

of management topics. These courses and the home care books written for the general public

offered advice for healthful living; among other things, they extolled the virtues of early rising,

cleanliness, sunshine, and fresh air.

The first textbook to mention household management in the title was Maria Parloa’s First

Principles of Household Management and Cookery, published in 1879. Parloa advised that “a

bed that has been made up a week or more is not fit to sleep in; as moisture gathers, which

often proves fatal to persons sleeping in one” (Parloa, 1879, p. 7).

Ellen H. Richards, an American chemist and founder of the home economics movement,

is credited with forming the bridge between scientific analysis and household management

through guiding the discussions at the Lake Placid Conferences, held in New York from 1899

to 1908. During these years, the economy was growing, and the nation was prosperous; yet

many Americans lived on farms, and life was hard. The labor force participation rate for men

age 65 and over was 80 percent: “People literally worked until they died or until they couldn’t

work any more, retirement was a privilege of the well to do” (Willis & Young, 2003, p. 84).

Authors Lillian Gilbreth and Christine Frederick toured the United States and Europe on

the lecture circuit spreading the word about the new scientific methods of efficient home

management and household production (Frederick, 1918; Gilbreth, 1927). Frederick, based in

New York and married to an advertising executive, designed a model kitchen in her home that

is on display at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of American History and testified before

Congress about the important role that women play as consumers. Gilbreth saw the home as

a workplace and the homemaker as both worker and manager. She and her husband, Frank,

a factory efficiency expert, had 12 children. Their lives were portrayed in his book, Cheaper

by the Dozen, which formed the basis of two movies. When Frank died in 1924, Lillian took

up his cause and applied work-saving methods to the home. She designed the Gilbreth

management desk that was displayed at the 1933 World’s Fair. Her goal was to increase

productivity, reduce drudgery, and accumulate “happiness minutes,” which she thought of as

time spent in leisure or creative pursuits (Smithsonian, 2000). She redesigned kitchens based

36 chapter 2

on photographs of operations in the room and, in later life, applied her knowledge to bettering

living conditions for the disabled.

Nationwide, government- and industry-sponsored experimental kitchens and college

residential laboratories (more commonly known as home management houses) were set up to

record the time required and the human and mechanical energy used to perform household

tasks. Two of the earliest colleges with residence courses were Stout Institute in Wisconsin

(now the University of Wisconsin, Stout) and the University of Illinois. Florida State University

was unique in being the first college to build a house specifically for home management. The

usual way it worked was like this: During students’ senior year they moved into the home

management house or residence for a semester, where they experienced living on a budget,

record keeping, time and meal management, and other forms of efficient home management.

They shared rooms and simulated family and household conditions. Some campuses offered

multiple houses or apartments and different levels of living conditions and budgets. With

changes in college life and professional training, the need for this type of experience lessened,

and by the 1970s and 1980s most campuses transformed the houses and put them to other

uses such as child care centers or faculty offices or removed them to make way for parking

lots or classroom buildings.

When management practitioners such as Frederick and Gilbreth applied techniques that

were being used in the workplace to the home, they were emulating the work of Frederick

Taylor (1856–1915), among others. Known as the father of scientific management, Taylor

was famous for his time and motion studies. He proposed scientific management principles

designed to maximize production efficiency. By carefully studying the most efficient ways

assembly line jobs could be performed and implementing changes to increase efficiency, he

was able to achieve significant productivity improvements (Taylor, 1911). Taylor revolutionized

assembly lines. He was not afraid of work. He was so willing to pitch in that when confronted

with a blocked drain in a factory, he put on overalls, tied shoes to his elbows and knees,

and crawled through the muck to remove the obstruction (Wooldridge, 2000). He believed

in the carrot (reward) and stick (punishment) approach. Taylor promoted time clocks, syn-

chronization, and anything that would speed up work. Some workers thought he went too

far and criticized him for depersonalizing the workplace. His influence went beyond business:

His scientific management principles were applied to nonprofit organizations and government

agencies and facilities, including the Watertown Arsenal of the U.S. Army. Others, observing

his work, applied the same principles to the home by redesigning floor plans, standardizing

and updating equipment, and suggesting better work methods (e.g., saving steps and using

less time and human energy in such tasks as keeping household accounts, making beds,

washing dishes, and cooking). These improved work methods in the home, known as work

simplification, became an integral part of the study of management.

American homes were changing rapidly. Of course, regional and individual variations

existed, but in general the time period between 1900 and the present can be divided into three

eras: premodern, modern, and postmodern.

Tables 2.1, 2.2, and 2.3 summarize the main characteristics of household production and

consumption patterns in representative decades. Notice that in 1900 most houses did not

have indoor plumbing. Although Thomas Edison had invented the incandescent lightbulb in

1879, only 8 percent of U.S. homes had electricity by 1907 (Cowan, 1983). In 1909, even the

houses that had electricity did not have the number of wall outlets we are used to today, so

wires and cords for appliances had to be screwed into a central light fixture or lightbulb socket.

Management History and Theories 37

Household Production/Consumption System I: Premodern (Early 1900s) Typical families in the early 1900s made most of their own clothes, food, and household

cleaning products. They were likely to buy such basics as soap, flour, and baking powder.

• Household work: Hands-on, arduous, specific, repetitive.

• Kitchen/laundry equipment: inside sink (probably only cold water), stove, washtub or

wringer washer, possibly an icebox.

• Bathroom equipment: outdoor privy, indoor slop buckets, bathtubs or buckets for wash-

ing filled with water heated on the stove; the rich and/or city dwellers might have indoor

plumbing.

• Servants: one servant for every 15 households.*

• Shopping: Home delivery is common—doctors, peddlers, and tailors come to the home;

groceries, ice, baked goods, and dairy products are all delivered. At stores, shop owners

take products off the shelf and hand them to the customer. Catalog shopping becomes

popular; catalogs offer everything from medicines to whole houses. Beginning of

exposure to media advertising and brands.

• Electricity: Newly introduced, rare in homes except those of the rich, particularly those

who live in cities. Mostly used for lighting.

• Lighting: Kerosene (mostly lower and working class, rural), gas (upper, middle class,

urban), candles, and some electricity.

*Cowan, R. S. (1983). More Work for Mother (pp. 99, 240). New York: Basic Books.

Table 2.1

Household Production/Consumption System II: Modern (1950s) Typical families in the mid-20th century bought most of their clothing, food, and household

cleaning products from stores.

• Household work: Hands-on and machine-aided, somewhat arduous, specific, repetitive.

• Kitchen/laundry equipment: Sink (with hot and cold water), stove, refrigerator, washing

machine, perhaps a dryer and a dishwasher.

• Bathroom equipment: Sink, toilet, bathtub/shower (one or two bathrooms in the average

new home).

• Servants: one to every 42 households.*

• Shopping: Home delivery less common than in the early 1900s. Customers serve

themselves at stores. Moderate exposure to media advertising and brands. Shopping

centers begin.

• Electricity: in over 80 percent of homes.†

• Lighting: Electricity most common; kerosene still used in some rural areas.

*Cowan, R. S. (1983). More Work for Mother (pp. 99, 240). New York: Basic Books. †Historical Statistics of the United States. (1975). Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office.

Table 2.2

38 chapter 2

Household Production/Consumption System III: Postmodern (Early 21st Century)

Typical families in the early 21st century are ordering and selling more products over the

internet and receiving home deliveries. They also rely heavily on stores for food, clothing, and

household cleaning supplies and on restaurants for meals and grocery store delis for fresh

foods. Purchase of prepared frozen food is common.

• Household work: Hands-on and machine-aided, somewhat arduous, specific, repetitive.

Some products and household tools have made it easier and less hands-on.

• Kitchen/laundry equipment: Sink, stove, dishwasher, microwave oven, refrigerator,

washing machine, dryer.

• Bathroom equipment: Sink, toilet, bathtub/shower (multiple bathrooms and sinks com-

mon in average new home; also whirlpool baths and separate showers widely available).

• Servants: Rare, partially replaced by child-care centers and cleaning services.

• Shopping: Home delivery expands with toll-free catalog

shopping by phone and the use of internet shopping

using computers. Stores with customer self-service

usual. Malls, multipurpose superstores common.

Pervasive exposure to media advertising and brands

through traditional and electronic/digital methods.

• Electricity: in nearly all homes.*

• Lighting: Electricity most common.

*98 percent of all Americans have telephones, electricity, and a flush toilet.

Table 2.3

Many people were brought up in tall Victorian houses with parlor in the front and kitchen

in the back or in the basement. Upper-class homes used to be filled with bric-a-brac and art

including statues brought back from trips abroad. President Theodore Roosevelt, as well as

other wealthy people of the time, went on safaris and decorated their homes, including the

White House, with stuffed animal heads and bear and tiger rugs—souvenirs of their visits

and their shooting prowess. This is still true today in hunting lodges around the world and in

certain parts of the United States and Canada in rooms such as dens or over doorways or

fireplaces, although less common than in the Roosevelt years. Certainly, trends in household

décor change, and many people today are tuned into animal rights and species preservation.

Times change, and homes change with them.

Household Production/Consumption System I: Premodern (Early 1900s) In the early 1900s, people were collectors more than decorators. Kitchen and laundry

equipment were primitive in the premodern era, and housework was backbreaking labor.

Furthermore, it increasingly had to be done by the sole adult woman in the household because

by this time, servants were disappearing: They could find more lucrative employment in the

growing number of factories and shops. American families were also experiencing a radical

change in the way things were bought and made. According to historian Susan Strasser,

the period from 1885 to 1915 was a time of “massive transformation”: “During this period

there was a transformation in the factory and in the distribution process. All the really major

innovations came in during this time” (Goldsmith, 1993, p. 47). Introduction of the automobile

created a veritable revolution in transportation, which led to great changes in the marketplace

Management History and Theories 39

and consumer demand. There were about 8,000 cars (horseless carriages) in 1900 and less

than 10 miles of concrete road in the United States. By 1910 the automobile had changed

everything, including what was inside homes as well as the actual location of homes: Living in

the suburbs now made more sense. The gap between rural and urban life began to narrow,

and this trend would continue through the 1920s and 1930s.

One of the primary changes affecting the home was the switch from making most goods

at home to purchasing mass-produced items at the store. Things that used to take all day

to make (e.g., soap and bread) could now be bought in minutes. A time revolution, as well

as an economic, social, and technological one, was taking place. The value of light, air, and

sunshine was revisited.

Heavy draperies were replaced with pulled-back, lighter curtains. Homes were rede-

signed. A popular style introduced in the Midwest, especially around the Chicago area, and

throughout the South was the bungalow with its more horizontal lines and one or one and a

half stories:

It incorporated a number of progressive ideals of the early 1900s—the straightforward use

of materials, an informal way of living, and accessibility to outdoors. The first Bungalow

owners were interested in affordable homes that would both simplify their lives and allow

them to enjoy the outdoors as part of their daily routines. Most were middle-class families

who felt secure enough about their social standing that they didn’t need to use shelter as

an outward display of their worth. (Connolly & Wasserman, 2002, p. 8)

In 1900, the economy was strong and prices were low. It was a good time to be a con-

sumer. Sanitation and health improved. Books and collectibles were kept clean behind glass

doors. By the 1920s chrome, metal, and glass infiltrated homes—what was sleek, modern,

and curved were preferred. Pianos provided entertainment in the home, as did record players

and radios in later years. Outside the home, movie theaters sprang up. Hollywood lifestyles

portrayed on the screen and in the press brought a new level of glamor and sophistication to

rural areas. By the 1930s central air-conditioning added comfort to high-rise buildings.

From 1910 to 1940, the United States and other industrialized nations saw a great expan-

sion of high school education. Students were encouraged to graduate from high school. After

graduation they went to work in towns and in factories.

In the 1930s and 1940s, daily chores in middle-class homes included shoveling coal

into the furnace, washing and drying dishes, carrying laundry out to be hung on clothes-

lines, canning fruits and vegetables, and mending clothes. Books of the time still carried very

specific instructions on the “right way to live.” For example, The Settlement Cook Book (1948

edition) begins with the proper way to run a household, including how to air out a room by

lowering the upper sash of one window and raising the lower sash of the opposite window.

There were even sections on the proper feeding of infants and invalids, including this

piece of advice: “Use the daintiest dishes in the house. Place a clean napkin on the tray and,

if possible, a fresh flower.” Small children were to have cooked cereal at seven o’clock and

diluted orange juice at nine o’clock. When looking back, some people cringe at the idea of

this much routine, while others revel in it. “The notion of a domestic life that purrs along, with

routines and order and carefully delineated standards, is endlessly appealing to me. It is also

quite foreign, because I am not a housewife. I am an ‘at-home mother,’ and the difference

between the two is vast,” says contemporary writer Caitlin Flanagan (2003, p. 141). Flanagan

says that being an at-home mother today has little to do with the house itself and much more

to do with the fact that the home is where the children happen to be.

40 chapter 2

Household Production/Consumption System II: Modern (1950s to 1990s) The end of World War II brought an all-time high in housing demand. Color, frills, and the latest

appliances became important after the austere war years. By the 1950s, most houses had

indoor plumbing, electricity, a modern kitchen, and laundry equipment. New ranch style homes

sported large picture windows in the front. The sole television in the home drew the family from

the kitchen into the living room. In 1954, the first Swanson TV Dinner, which had turkey with

cornbread dressing and gravy, sweet potatoes, and buttered peas, cooked in 25 minutes in a

425°C oven and sold for about $1.00. As shopping centers began to spring up, home delivery

became less common, and families drove to the store to shop. The American family was being

redefined. The TV dinner allowed them to eat in a modular way rather than taking portions

from bowls and platters that were passed around the table.

In the 1960s, the casual lifestyle came into vogue in the form of fondue pots, shag rugs,

conversation pits in living rooms, and barbecue pits outside. Gold and avocado green invaded

kitchens and the rest of the house. By the end of the decade, psychedelic colors and lively

prints came into vogue. Color televisions replaced the old black and whites.

The 1970s and 1980s saw a return of interest in country style décor, quilts, and

collectibles, leading to an eclecticism or mix of styles popular through the 1990s. The decade

of the 1990s was a transition point in home design because of the introduction of computer

technology to electronics and appliances and changes in the way people spent their time. It

was also an economic boom so homes grew bigger.

Household Production/Consumption System III: Postmodern (Early 21st Century) By 2006, the average new American home was 2,434 square feet with four bedrooms and

three bathrooms. Homes were considerably larger than the 1950s’ average square footage of

983. Then what we experienced from 2008 and up was a recession which led to a retreat in

average new home size to match shrinking household budgets and a rethinking of what is truly

needed versus what is wanted. Computers, cell phones, and the Internet have changed how

families live and communicate. Household equipment has become more sophisticated, and

shopping easier, but individuals and families still devote many hours each week to household

tasks and food purchase and preparation.

After 2010, home design continued to reshape to suit the ongoing desire for newness,

spending less on utilities and being greener, and to meet the changing needs of the families

and their pocketbooks. Active, time-starved family members want to be together while doing

different activities; thus, kitchens, dining areas, and living spaces are combined into one large

room without walls. This large room which may be called a family room or great room is

multifunctional usually with the television(s) in full view. Family members are within eyeshot

or earshot of each other in such a space. It harkens back to the early pioneer one-room

houses with the exception that in modern homes family members can retreat to their own

bedrooms and bathrooms. Two or three children are not piled into one bed to save space and

to keep warm (as in the depression of the 1930s or even earlier as evidenced in Jane Austen’s

novel Pride and Prejudice) but more and more in upscale homes a child has his or her own

bed, bedroom, and bathroom. Style-wise contemporary and sleek lines are back in favor.

Management History and Theories 41

The microwave oven is standard, along with a stove, refrigerator, and dishwasher. Wealthier

homes may have multiples: two kitchen sinks, two dishwashers, two wall ovens, and two

or three laundries. Energy- and water-saving appliances are appealing as part of the green

movement, to help the environment and also to reduce utility bills.

These household and consumption changes have been accompanied by changes in

the field of management, which has expanded beyond its initial emphasis on efficiency and

economy in the home to include much more. No longer is management primarily concerned

with household tasks and the streamlining of work methods in the home, although it should be

noted that the home continues to be central to people’s lives. Even during a recession when

most people cannot afford a large new home, they can still afford a shower curtain or a small

appliance. Inexpensive home products and repairs tend to be recession-proof.

Shelter will always be at the forefront of human endeavor. When asked which one or

two of a dozen items say the most about you, Americans rank home as number one, ahead

of their jobs, hobbies, and the like. As people age, they place more value on their home. So

the importance of home is not ignored in this book and it is one of the subjects that sets

family resource management apart, but we will move on to encompass a greater life view

of management which includes a myriad of individual, family, and societal concerns ranging

from balancing work and family life to elder care. In other words, currently the discipline is

defined more as life management than as home management. Accordingly, it is referred to as

resource management or, simply, as management.

As a way to provide a prospective on how times have changed, the Cato Institute in

Washington, DC, lists the following comparisons between American life now and a century ago:

• Four times as many adults are getting their high school diplomas.

• Six times as many women now have bachelor’s degrees.

• More than 70 percent of Americans have at least one automobile, a VCR, a microwave

oven, an air conditioner, and a washer and dryer.

• Accidental deaths have dropped by 61 percent, despite all the additional cars and

airplanes, and the millions of people using them. In 2008, when gasoline prices soared,

fewer people drove and the number of traffic deaths went down considerably.

Although not every social, educational, and housing change can be documented here, there

can be no doubt that life in the United States has changed in a way that most people would

define as progress. In the last few years a resurgence of interest in the home has been

evidenced by television channels and programs devoted entirely to home remodeling and

repair, interior design, and cooking. It is also evidenced by media stories about the ups

and downs in the financial and real estate markets and by the proliferation of giant home

supply stores.

Kitchens have increased in size considerably, even though the size of families has

dropped, and so have outdoor kitchens and garages. The percentage of two-car garages

in U.S. households went up from 48 percent in 1973 to 64 percent in 2001; and 18 percent

of households had three-car garages in 2001. Organizational and storage units and specially

made garage refrigerators have made their way into the marketplace.

In a national survey of homeowners, Whirlpool found that the garage basically functions

as America’s junkroom, holding all the items the house won’t—or can’t. . . . Whirlpool

sees the garage as the next master bath—a room just waiting to be “accessorized”:

But don’t use that term around men, its target market. Whirlpool calls the new line

42 chapter 2

“Gladiator,” and nearly every item features a rugged design made of

steel. The devices range from a small, portable fridge that basically func-

tions as a beer box to an interlocking “gear wall” designed to replace

Pegboard. (Hallinan, 2002, p. B1)

It’s clear that changes in the interplay between homes and the people who

live in them are not lost on designers, retailers, and researchers. Ted Selker, an

associate professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, says, “The

kitchen of the future for me is about creating a value and having relationships

mesh with how we work in the home . . . to make cooking for four at home more

fun than having takeout or more fun than going to a fancy restaurant” (Sessa,

2000, p. R20). However, it depends on whether you feel cooking is fun. Many

of my students say they were raised on takeout food and this consumption

behavior is shown on many episodes of the television show The Middle. In

the year 2000, Sessa said that the kitchen table was the place where people

always gathered, but this was challenged by family members going to wherever

the computer was, such as in a den or bedroom. Some singles and couples do

not even bother having a kitchen table.

With the proliferation of laptops, computers are not associated with a

particular room, so once again where family members gather is being shaken

up. One way this is playing out is that many families watch television, read,

eat snacks and meals, and go online with a laptop at the same time—going

back and forth between these activities and having conversations. Another

design idea incorporates crafting such as scrapbooking or quilting in this com-

bined area. Harnessing technology and creating multipurpose rooms are not

new endeavors; what is new is the number and types of combinations being

explored.

A list of landmark books and other references is provided at the end of this chapter as an

aid to further study and as a way for you to appreciate the research and theoretical work that

forms the basis for your studies in this field.

Four Eras of Management To help describe management’s development in the 20th century, several theorists have

organized its history into chronological categories. For example, Gross, Crandall, and Knoll

(1980) conceptualized home management as having six stages of development, and Berger

(1984) used these stages as a framework for reviewing management research between 1909

and 1984. Carole Vickers introduced a simpler version that divided family/home management

history into four principal eras:

1. Era one (c. 1900 to 1930s): Health, sanitation, hygiene, and the importance of household

production as a legitimate form of economic production. Ellen Richards, discussed earlier

in the chapter, was one of the pioneers of this era and the ones to come.

2. Era two (c. 1940s to early 1950s): Household equipment, efficiency, step saving, task

simplification, and standardized work units. World War II influences household consump-

tion and production.

3. Era three (c. 1950s to 1960s): Family values, goals, standards, resources, decision

making, organization and process, optimization of families, gradual swing away from

A three story Victorian style house with basement. Note trim and

detail work. The eye is drawn upward, vertical design.

Management History and Theories 43

work performance in the home. The corporate world grows and with it an emphasis on

business management.

4. Era four (c. 1970s to 1980s): Development of a systems framework emphasizing the inter-

connections among family, home, and the greater society. Leading theorists Ruth Deacon

and Francille Firebaugh (1988) showed how systems theory could be applied to individual

and family management problems. Some would say a more sociological approach to

studying the family took hold versus a more hands-on efficiency emphasis.

To extend the eras delineated by Vickers to today, a systems framework still dominates

the study of management. In addition, theorists have become increasingly aware of the role

economics plays in the management behavior and choices of individuals and families. Later

sections of this chapter will examine the contributions of systems and economic theory to

management in more detail.

LegisLation, PoLicy, and ReseaRch The evolution of management in the 20th and 21st centuries has been affected by legislation,

policy, and research as well as by technological, economic, and societal changes. In 1914,

Congress passed the Smith–Lever Act to improve life in rural America by providing funds for

extension programs through the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA). The Smith–Hughes

Act, passed in 1917, provided funding for the training of primary- and secondary-school

teachers in what was then called “home economics.” In 1925, the Purnell Act extended the

Smith–Lever Act and provided funds for economic and sociological investigations to develop

and improve rural home life. The grants were administered by the U.S. Bureau of Home

Economics, then part of the USDA. Currently, the USDA, as well as many other government

agencies in the United States and in other countries, associations, and private foundations,

fund management research for both urban and rural populations. Employment opportunities

in resource management exist in government at the county, state, and federal levels in the

Cooperative Extension Service administered through the USDA.

The 1920s saw a great deal of discussion about the nature of management from a variety

of sources, including business, government, and education. For example, attendees of the

first worldwide Management Congress held in Prague in 1922 concluded that management

principles were universal and could be applied to a variety of business and nonbusiness situ-

ations (Drucker, 1999). Since then numerous other conferences, acts, and policies have had

an impact on individuals and families, and many of these will be discussed throughout this

book. Interest in improving human rights surged worldwide in the period from the 1970s to the

1990s. And, certainly, consumer protection legislation improved greatly over the last century

and improvement is still underway with concerns about food safety and quality in particular.

The field of resource management emphasizes raising living standards, quality of life,

and well-being through a variety of means, including improvements in health and nutrition,

welfare, child labor laws, education, and work-leave policies. A topic such as welfare reform

encompasses many factors critical to its success, such as prevention of child abuse and

neglect; financial support for children; child care; availability of transportation, education, and

employment; use of social indicators for evaluation and policy analysis; and community-based

planning. Each of these requires research to determine human needs and the best ways of

addressing them.

Research is the collection, processing, and analysis of information. Because management

falls within the realm of applied social science, the results of research studies should be useful

44 chapter 2

and made available to citizens and policy makers. Collection methods include survey, obser-

vation, mechanical measurement, focus groups, archival research, physiological measures,

diaries or records, and laboratory and field experiments.

A combination of methods is often used to cross-check results, and interviews are often

part of the process. For example, Newsweek real estate writer Daniel McGinn, author of House

Lust: America’s Obsession with Our Homes, interviewed homeowners, real estate agents,

architects, researchers, and others. He found that housing size increased as homeowners

started owning more cars, clothes, and other possessions.

In a study conducted by Merillat (a cabinet manufacturer) with 1,252 interviews in an

online survey, it was found that regarding kitchens, respondents fell into four segments:

1. Luxury leaders: affluent with a large home, highly educated, older, enjoy the latest

products, the kitchen is the “star” of the home.

2. Domestic dwellers: live in a comfortable home that is nice but not ostentatious, enjoy quiet

evenings at home and outings with the family, use the kitchen for homework, paying bills

and reading, prefer low maintenance.

3. Busy bees: similar to domestic dwellers but busier, eat out a lot, kitchen often disorga-

nized and cluttered, need more storage and organizational solutions.

4. Career builders: most likely first-time homebuyers trying to move up the ladder, kitchen not

so important, little emotional attachment, consider resale value, the island is the landing

zone for laptops, newspapers, and mail (Quintana & Grossman, 2007).

Critical Thinking

Apparently kitchens are more than what they seem. Why do you think they have become bigger at the same time that families have become smaller? Which of the four segments fits the household you grew up the best? Is it one segment or a combination?

What topics besides homes are covered in management research? Most manage-

ment research falls into one of two categories: (1) financial or economic resources and

(2)  family or household resources. Specific topics include financial planning, environ-

mental impacts, retirement planning, credit card and debt reduction, family and financial

decision making, control issues, bankruptcy and debt reduction, stress, division of

household work, time use, and balancing work and family. One of the most-studied

topics has been time use. Researchers have explored time spent on housework, home-

based paid work, and child care; who does what and when; and how factors such as

employment, income, and size of family affect time use, demands, and household pro-

duction and consumption. A study revealed that for 21-year-olds, telecommunications,

television, and the Internet are so ubiquitous in their lives that they bounce seamlessly

from one to another, sometimes consuming several media simultaneously. MTV found

evidence of this when it recently asked 18- to 24-year-olds how many hours a day

they spend surfing the Web, downloading music and emailing friends. The company’s

researchers were shocked when they added up the hours and found that the average

Management History and Theories 45

time totaled more than 24 hours a day. “Young people manage to squeeze 31 hours

into a 24-hour period,” says Betsy Franck, executive vice president of research and

planning for MTV Networks, in New York. “They’ll read a magazine while watching TV

while going online. They’re the masters of multitasking.” (Weiss, 2003, pp. 31–32)

An offshoot of time management is the subject of the division of household labor—who

does what in the home? Research studies focus on one of the following approaches:

1. Time availability

2. Psychological differences between men and women

3. Environment such as type of housing unit and external resources

4. Task preferences

5. Number of children and their ages, older dependents, individuals with disabilities

6. Employment outside the home, impact of shift work

7. Impact of education level

8. Number of years of marriage, previous marriages

Researchers also commonly investigate issues of satisfaction and well-being. They are inter-

ested in measuring not only how people are spending their time, energy, and money but how

they feel about their resource allocation and life in general.

theory overview Recall from Chapter 1 that family resource management is an applied social science. “Good

science begins with good construct definition and conceptualization” (Elliot and Niesta, 2009,

p. 56). For example, goals are individually defined and conceptualized but a class of a hundred

students in family resource management may share some similar goals. The study of manage-

ment is a combination of theory, concepts, technique, research, and practice. There is not

one management theory or framework, but several. Management is an interdisciplinary field

that borrows concepts and theories from related disciplines (see Chapter 1).

Theory is an organized system of ideas or beliefs that can be measured; it is a system of

assumptions or principles. The word “theory” comes from the Greek verb theorein (to behold

or contemplate). We form theories, for example, when we wonder why a couple has decided

to marry or divorce. We look for clues to the outcome—why is the couple compatible or

not compatible? A theory summarizes what is known about a phenomenon and permits the

formation of hypotheses, or predictions about future occurrences. For example, a mother

may hypothesize that buying back-to-school clothes for her 13-year-old daughter is a waste

of time unless they shop together, because she has observed that whatever she buys on

her own will not fit her daughter or suit her taste. The mother’s prediction of her daughter’s

response is based on past purchasing mistakes. Likewise, other theories and hypotheses

about human behavior are based on observations, past experience, and research.

Theories are useful because they reduce wastage of time and effort, and provide ways

of structuring one’s thoughts and knowledge about behaviors. A fundamental theory is that

past behavior is an indicator or strong predictor of future behavior. This explains why people

go back to the same vacation spot year after year. Many choose to ignore the latest hotels

or restaurants. An innovator, on the other hand, wants to try something new, take risks.

Thus, the well-thought-out marketing campaign for an established resort or cruise ship

46 chapter 2

considers the needs of returnees and also seeks to entice new customers with uniqueness

and novelty such as a rock climbing wall or a clear water tube that encircles the top deck

of the ship. Likewise, families and households have to roll with the tides, keeping up with

changing needs and wants. A wedding brings in new family members, as do the birth of

babies and adoptions.

Functions of Theory The primary function of theory is to organize observations and other information so that

individuals can make sense of the events that occur around them. For example, researchers

can observe the way people behave in situations requiring the allocation of resources, plan-

ning, and the implementation and evaluation of decisions. A theory of management not only

attempts to explain the observed behavior of people in general but also seeks to provide an

understanding of a single individual’s or family’s behavior. People are constantly making pre-

dictions about their own and others’ behavior. For example, perhaps we assume we will like or

dislike oysters based on a past experience of eating them. Most predictions are so automatic

that we don’t even think about them. When we look at a restaurant menu, we unconsciously

skip over the salad section if we never eat salads. However, when an unconscious prediction

turns out differently than expected (e.g., a friend who is always late shows up ahead of time),

we realize that we had made a prediction and that the prediction was wrong. In the case of the

early-arriving friend, we are pleasantly surprised.

Theory of behavior has many aspects. Predicting behavior is one aspect; controlling

behavior is another. “The vast majority of meaningful human behavior is purposeful or willed

or controlled (though not necessarily consciously so)—it is employed toward some end.

It is the events, or goals, that direct, energize, and sustain purposeful behavior over time”

(Moskowitz & Grant, 2009, p. 2). Although the word “control” sometimes has a negative con-

notation, as in brainwashing or mind control, in management it has a more prosaic meaning.

Controlling refers to the things people do to check their course of action. For example, you

may be concerned over whether you have enough money in your bank account to cover your

credit cards or whether you can get a better grade on the next test. These concerns involve

both predictions and possible alterations of behavior. As a final comment on the function of

theory, consider Kurt Lewin’s statement that “there is nothing so practical as a good theory.”

Theories provide a useful way to organize information. Without theories the prediction of future

events would be nearly impossible.

Theories Ahead Before a new theory can be promoted, the theorist must first develop definitions of key

terms, formulate statements or assumptions, and then test the theory. One of the problems

in developing and explaining theories is that they are abstract. But once a theory is put into

action and the subsequent behavior can be observed, the thought processes behind the

behavior become more understandable. Because so many studies and books have used

systems theory, most of this chapter will now focus on its components and applications. The

remainder of the chapter will examine the application of economic theory—specifically, optimi-

zation, satisficing, and risk aversion—to the study of management. Other theories specific to

resource exchange, time, stress, and fatigue will be covered in subsequent chapters.

Management History and Theories 47

Systems theory The dynamic and ongoing nature of systems theory makes it particularly applicable to

managerial thought and behavior. One of the reasons why systems theory has endured is its

versatility—it fits nearly all situations. The principle underlying systems theory is that the whole

is greater than the sum of its parts. This emphasis on the whole and the interconnectedness

of its different parts is appropriate for the eclectic, interdisciplinary field of management. Also,

as individuals and families are part of larger behavioral and environmental systems, it makes

sense to view them as parts of a whole rather than as isolated units.

Systems theory emphasizes not only interconnectedness but also interactions among

different systems. It focuses on the behavior of feedback and its complexity. The circle in the

drawing above represents the circular nature of systems.

A system is an integrated set of parts that function together for some end purpose or

result. Systems may be composed of living or nonliving things.

Because management focuses on human behavior, the emphasis in this book is on living

systems in the context of environments—in particular, the home, work, and community envi-

ronments. A system as a whole has characteristics that set it apart from other systems. For

example, a family is a system. Families have things in common with other entities, such as

streets, neighborhoods, or schools, but at the same time they have distinct traditions, ways of

living, and consumption patterns. The place or point where independent systems or diverse

groups interact is called an interface. A doctor’s office may serve as the interface between a

patient’s home and medical services.

Boundaries are the limits or borders between systems. They separate one domain

from another. Everyone has personal and family boundaries. Boundaries may be visible, as

in fences and doors, or invisible, as in rules of behavior or unmarked borderlines between

properties. For example, young children learn early in life where their yard stops and their

neighbor’s begins.

They carry this lesson about boundaries into adulthood. Thus, boundaries maintain func-

tions and influence human behavior.

Homes and workplaces are filled with visible and invisible boundaries. One of the survival

skills necessary for any new employee is to learn where the boundaries are—who talks to

whom, how flexible lunch breaks are, and which doors are kept open and which remain closed.

In a home situation, consider how quickly visiting relatives learn house rules and behavior, such

as when breakfast will be ready, who gets the bathroom first, and how loud and how long the

television can be played. The boundaries of a system determine what is allowed and what is not.

Open and Closed Families Some families are more open to the outside environment than other families; in other

words, they more freely exchange information and materials with outside influences. To use

systems terminology, families can be categorized as mostly morphogenic or morphostatic.

Morphogenic systems are adaptive to change and are relatively open. In an open system,

matter and energy are freely exchanged between the system and its environment. Its bound-

aries are permeable.

In contrast, morphostatic systems are resistant to change. They are stable and

relatively closed.

48 chapter 2

A relatively open family may have neighborhood children in and out of the house much of

the day, chat with neighbors often, spend a lot of time on the telephone, entertain often, and

leave the blinds open. A relatively closed family may not even know neighbors’ names, while

keeping the blinds shut and staying to themselves. Even without meeting the new family on

the block, neighbors may be able to surmise something about their relative openness by the

changes they make to the yard or the exterior appearance of the house. At the same time, a

quick prediction based only on appearances may turn out to be wrong. For example, a seven-

foot-high fence may be a sign that a family is closed or may simply indicate the presence of a

large dog.

Although a family’s overall style will be “open” or “closed,” variations exist within families,

and boundaries can exist between family members. For example, one member of a family

may not speak to another. Some family members may be very open and gregarious, whereas

others may be more private and take a more contemplative approach to life. Within fami-

lies, each member sets her or his own boundaries of space and privacy. Conflict can occur

when boundaries are not respected. Think how often the plots of television soap operas

revolve around a violation of privacy, such as parents reading a teenager’s diary or one family

member’s overhearing of another’s supposedly private conversation.

In addition, situations can alter the way a family interacts with others and their environ-

ment. For example, a family crisis can turn a relatively open family into a closed family, at least

temporarily. Closure may be a protective mechanism until an adjustment period has passed.

Systems theory emphasizes the adaptive nature of families.

Subsystems and System Elements A subsystem is a part of a larger system. Individuals and families are subsystems of commu-

nities. Communities are subsystems of counties, which are subsystems of states, and so on.

Each system at each level has a reason for existing. This interconnectedness of systems is the

reason why management is no longer limited to the infrastructure of the home; theorists realize

that decisions made at home ultimately affect the community, the country, and the world and

vice versa. For example, families and economic institutions have always been closely related.

Families supply work, and society supplies wages that families use to buy goods and services

and pay taxes. Thus, each subsystem affects other systems. This emphasis on how the inter-

action of parts affects the whole is the essence of systems theory.

inPuts, thRoughPuts, and outPuts Management has borrowed several system terms from computer terminology and applied

them to the individual and the family. Three of these terms—inputs, throughputs, and out-

puts—form the basic elements in systems theory as it is applied to management. The term

“inputs” refers to whatever is brought into the system (i.e., things, ideas, information). The

processing of inputs is called throughput, or transformation. “Transformations” refers

to transitions from one system to another. The term outputs refers to the end results, or

products, leftovers, and waste. Figure 2.2 presents a managerial-action model showing the

interaction of inputs, throughputs, and outputs. In the model, inputs such as resources and

demands are transformed through planning, decision making, facilitating, and other through-

puts into outputs such as met demands, altered resources, and satisfaction/dissatisfaction.

Demands are events or goals that require action for their fulfillment. For example, if a landlord

Management History and Theories 49

demands that rent be paid on time, tenants need to respond to this demand. “Facilitating”

means to make something easier. Facilitation helps move the managerial process along.

Sequencing occurs when one thing follows another, as in a series of events. For example,

scenes in a play follow a sequence. In resource management, events occur in sequence to

ensure a successful outcome. Before writing a check to the landlord, tenants determine

whether they have enough money in their checking accounts to cover the rent. This process

is facilitated if the tenants have kept their accounts balanced and their records up-to-date.

Calculating whether they have enough money in the account after they have written

checks for the rent would be placing events out of sequence.

Sharpe and Winter (1991) applied inputs, throughputs (transformations), and outputs

to the concept of managerial effectiveness. They hypothesized that effective management

leads to satisfactory outcomes, but that there are many potential ways to be a more effec-

tive manager. For example, they hypothesized, managerial effectiveness increases when the

goals (inputs) are clear, actionable, and verifiable and when the manager generates workable

alternatives (transformations). Increased efficiency in the use of time and evaluation are two

output-related hypotheses. These hypotheses illustrate how input, throughput, and output

can be applied to management.

Feedback Feedback occurs when part of the output is returned to the input in the form of information. The

term “feedback” was introduced in Chapter 1 as part of the management process diagrammed

in Figure 1.1, which also appeared earlier in this chapter in Figure 2.1. Figure 2.3 is a model that

focuses specifically on the feedback loop. This model begins with current assessment of the

performance or situation and then proceeds to the establishment of objectives and goals. Think

about it. There are many ways to achieve the same goal. As in most management models, an

evaluation component leads to further feedback. Was the right way chosen? The feedback loop

is important because it reinforces the concept that feedback affects future decisions and the

allocation of resources. The model in Figure 2.3 also demonstrates that feedback is not an end

in itself, but a process or operation.

Feedback can be positive or negative. In general conversation, the words “positive” and

“negative” connote good and bad, but in systems terminology the words are used differently.

Demands Values Matter Energy Information Resources

Start

Inputs Throughputs (transformation)

Outputs

Feedback (positive or negative)

Planning Implementing Decision making Controlling Communicating Sequencing Facilitating Use of resources

Met demands Achieved goals Satisfaction/dissatisfaction Altered resources

Environment

Figure 2.2 Managerial action using the systems approach.

50 chapter 2

Positive feedback is information put into the system that anticipates and promotes change;

thus, it indicates that a new course of action is needed. Negative feedback is information

put into the system that indicates that the system is deviating from its normal course and

that corrective measures may be necessary if the desired steady state is to be maintained.

Individuals and families use feedback to make future decisions. For example, negative feed-

back may reinforce a previous decision as being correct and emphasize that no further change

is needed.

To illustrate positive feedback, consider the situation of John, a college student, who

receives a B+ on a midterm exam in a course where the grade is based on the midterm and

the final exam. As John wants to get an A in the course, his midterm grade indicates that

he will have to study harder for the final to earn an A in the course. Therefore, the B+ grade

(although it is a disappointment) gives John positive feedback. As he enjoys the class and

thinks he is capable of getting an A, he plans to study harder to improve his grade. Kevin,

another student sitting next to John, also gets a B+ on the midterm, but he decides to put his

energies elsewhere and is prepared to settle for a B in the course. Thus, the test grade gives

Kevin negative feedback; he chooses to maintain the system by studying at his current pace

rather than by intensifying his work.

Feedback serves an important function. People use feedback to learn whether they are

doing and saying the right things. Their future decisions hinge on the type of feedback they

receive and how they act on that feedback. Are they reaching their goals? The concept of

feedback will be covered more extensively in the chapter on communication.

entRoPy and equiLibRium According to systems theory, each system has a tendency to run down and possibly misfunc-

tion as its energy flow ebbs and becomes less structured. This tendency toward disorder or

randomness is called entropy. It is more likely to occur in a closed system than in an open

system because a closed system receives few inputs from outside and thus has no source for

renewed energy (Sieburg, 1985). For example, an executive who works 60-hour weeks and

eventually wears down and needs a vacation is experiencing entropy. The vacation revitalizes

the executive, and she returns with renewed energy and vigor. In a system, entropy can refer

to a lack of energy as well as a lack of information. Entropy unchecked leads to disorganiza-

tion and disruption; order is destroyed.

A system also seeks equilibrium which means feedback causes it to readjust itself with a

tendency toward wanting to put things back the way they were. Children may not want family

traditions changed, and if the parents are divorcing, they usually want them back together

Assess current situation

Establish objectives/goals

Develop plans Implement plans

Monitor resultsProvide feedback*

*Feedback is the return of information about the result of managerial action.

Environment

Figure 2.3 Model of the feedback loop in management.

Management History and Theories 51

again. Students may want the same favorite professor over and over again for different classes.

They are comfortable with that professor, know what to expect and how they will perform in

terms of grades. Changes in the external environment will move individuals and families toward

equilibrium-seeking behaviors especially if they were content with things as they were.

muRPhy’s Law and systems theoRy Plenty of attention is paid to various rules and laws that influence our lives. Murphy’s Law is

named after an Air Force captain who noticed during rocket-sled deceleration tests that a

crucial gauge had been wired wrong and summarized: “If there’s more than one way to do a

job and one of those will end in disaster, then somebody will do it that way” (Edwards, 2002,

p. 72). Even a simple toy, such as roller skates, left at the top of the stairs can spell disaster.

As our homes become more complex technologically and as this technology becomes more

interlocking, the chances for something going wrong increase.

Murphy’s Law, most simply stated, is, “if something can go wrong, it will.” It implies that “in

complex systems even the tiniest flaw can cause a cascade of failures” (Edwards, 2002, p. 72).

homeostasis Even though things can easily go wrong in a system, there is also a general tendency for the

system to try to remain balanced. This tendency to maintain balance, called “homeostasis,”

works as a control device. When something gets out of control, tension is created, and the

system becomes unbalanced, triggering the homeostasis mechanism. For example, people

who have a Monday-through-Friday workweek use the weekend to renew their sense of

balance and get their home and family life back in order. They run errands, answer mail, wash

clothes, mow their lawns, and spend time with their families and friends. By Sunday night, they

hope they will have achieved a feeling of homeostasis—a sense that things are back under

control and in order for the week ahead.

equiFinaLity and muLtiFinaLity The concepts of equifinality and multifinality are also important in systems theory. Equifinality

refers to the phenomenon in which different circumstances and opportunities may lead to

similar outcomes. The goals are the same but as said before there are lots of ways to get

there. Multifinality refers to the phenomenon in which the same initial circumstances or con-

ditions may lead to different conclusions or outcomes. For example, consider the situation of

two friends, Brett and Nick, who are high school seniors deciding which college to attend.

Although they have been accepted by the same colleges and have the same backgrounds

and career goals, Brett chooses to stay at home and attend a community college, and Nick

chooses to go away to a four-year college. These different outcomes, given the same initial

conditions, are an example of multifinality. Now consider the situation of Megan and Tia, two

students who have never met. Even though they have totally different backgrounds and ambi-

tions, they end up choosing the same college—an example of equifinality, similar outcomes

given different initial conditions.

Equifinality and multifinality are useful concepts because they illustrate the complex

nature of management. Different outcomes given the same initial surface factors may indicate

that other factors are at work—not apparent to the outside observer. For example, individual

tastes, preferences, and attitudes play a large part in decisions and outcomes. Nick might be

52 chapter 2

ready for a four-year college away from home, but Brett may not. Expense might be another

consideration in their decisions. Megan and Tia may have more in common than is readily

apparent, or both may be attracted to the same feature of a particular college.

The Personal System The goal of personal systems management is to recognize and to make productive the specific

strengths and abilities of each individual. Respect for the uniqueness of the qualities of each

individual is a critical part of management. Each person is a system composed of many sub-

systems, including (1) biological/physiological, (2) behavioral, (3) psychological, and (4) social

subsystems. Each subsystem in turn has many components. For example, values and ethics

are part of the psychological subsystem; they provide integrity and direction to decisions,

guiding individuals through the many moral dilemmas they encounter each day. After a day of

shopping, for instance, Kayla examines her receipts and discovers that the salesperson at the

music store neglected to charge her for one of the compact discs she purchased. Will Kayla

go back and pay for the extra disc? Her decision will be guided by the values and ethics of her

psychological subsystem.

Each individual’s personal system exists within a greater system of relationships, friend-

ships, and family. Inputs to the personal system include other people, the environment, heredity,

and past experiences, all of which help shape the individual’s personal management style.

Owing to the dynamic nature of systems, the individual is always changing and always

interpreting feedback. An example of feedback is the story of what happened to Lucky, the

dog. George Blooston who writes for AARP magazine wrote:

One of my jobs at this magazine is encouraging AARP members to be careful with their

money. Really, folks, put away whatever you can. Spend only on necessities. But what

is a necessity? Last fall Lucky bolted across the street toward a friend and was hit by a

speeding SUV. In 12 days we spent $20,000 to save him. Yes, there went a semester

at college, or a new car, or years off the mortgage. There went the emergency fund. But

I have no regrets. We could find the money. In good conscience we couldn’t not spend

it (2008, p. 49).

“Lucky” was indeed lucky to have such a devoted family, and the story shows that

management takes into account human emotions; it is not all steps-to-follow or rationality

(meaning, based on reason). Besides management researchers, industry and government

are interested in how people’s attitudes change. The Gallup organization regularly monitors

people’s attitudes on a variety of subjects, including conditions in the United States and in

their personal lives. In one survey, respondents reported that they were more satisfied with

their personal lives than with the way things were going overall in the United States.

Family Systems Theory and Management The goal of family systems management is to recognize and to make productive the specific

strengths and abilities of each family. As discussed earlier, systems have a tendency toward

equilibrium. “In family dynamics, this tendency toward equilibrium puts pressure on a changing

family member to revert to his or her original behavior within the family system. For change to

occur, the family system as a whole must change. Indeed, that is the goal of family therapy

based on systems theory” (Lamanna & Riedmann, 2009, p. 34).

Management History and Theories 53

In family systems, boundaries change over time as families change. The permeability

of boundaries alters as family members age and move on to other life stages. Boundary

ambiguity is common in blended families in which members are unsure where the lines are;

how daily life should be arranged; and who should be invited to what family/holiday events.

As the Canberra case study illustrates, interactions within families are qualitatively and

quantitatively different from interactions among other groups. Family systems theory has come

to be one of the leading theories in clinical and programmatic work with families. It is useful,

for example, in helping a family who has undergone a traumatic event. Anyone studying to be

a marriage and family therapist would learn family systems theory. In practice, the focus may

be on a particular subsystem such as the marital (or couple), parental, or sibling subsystem.

Family systems theory assumes that families share goals and work together to achieve

them. A constant is to try and be good parents spending time with children and ensuring they

do well in life. This involves not just time but quality time. An example of a family goal would be

that each of the children goes to college. To reach this goal all family members may work extra

jobs or put in overtime or make financial investments to accumulate enough money; in addi-

tion, the children may study extra hard in school to get good grades and/or excel in athletics

or music or other activities leading to better scholarships and financial aid.

In short, “Family systems theory allows one to understand the organizational complexity

of families, as well as the interactive patterns that guide family interactions. One of the central

premises of family systems theory is that family systems organize themselves to carry out the

daily challenges and tasks of life, as well as adjusting to the developmental needs of its mem-

bers” (Fleming, 2003, p. 643).

Another important aspect of family systems theory is that families are dynamic in nature

and have patterns of rules and strategies that affect the interactions that take place. Rules

would include such things as mealtimes and bedtimes. According to an Impulse Research poll,

67 percent of American families have assigned or “usual” seats at the table. What happens

when someone upsets this rule and sits in someone else’s chair?

Families are resilient; they respond to change by readjusting patterns of interaction and

resource use. They have the ability to recover from misfortune such as losing a house to

foreclosure or suffering through a family trauma. Family systems theory also emphasizes the

importance of family history, a psychological perspective introduced by Murray Bowen in the

1970s and set forth more recently by Monica McGoldrick in You Can Go Home Again.

Case study the Canberra Family In the Canberra family, divorced Linda married divorced Andrew, whose ex-wife Emma, also remarried, lives down the street. Linda and Andrew have five children between the ages of 15 and 25 from their first marriages. Emma comes to their house uninvited, even walks in the door (the door is usually unlocked so that the

children can come and go) and opens the refrigerator and takes out a drink. Sometimes Linda has wandered into the kitchen for her morning coffee and been surprised to find Emma sitting there. Has Emma crossed boundaries? What should Linda and Andrew say or do? Explain your answer.

54 chapter 2

McGoldrick emphasizes that people and their problems do not exist in a vacuum but are

part of a broad family system. She says that

The “family” comprises the entire emotional system of at least three and increasingly

four generations, who move through life together, even though they often live in different

places. As a family we share a common past and an anticipated future. The patterns

of family life cycle are changing dramatically, so that there is less continuity than ever

before between the demands on current families and the patterns of past generations.

Thus it is easy to lose all sense of connection with what has come before in your family,

and this can be a serious loss. (McGoldrick, 1995, p. 30)

Further, McGoldrick says,

While each family is unique in its particular history, all families are alike in their underlying

patterns. Famous families may, because they are in the spotlight, have certain responses

to their notoriety, but all families have basic ways they deal with love, pain, and conflict;

make sense of life and death; cross time, class, and cultural barriers. All families must

find ways of dealing with loss and of integrating new members. (1995, p. 30)

Application of Systems Theory to Households In the previous two sections, we have focused on the management of personal and family

lives. Systems theory and terminology can also apply to homes. For example, the concepts

of inputs, throughputs, outputs, and feedback can be applied to both simple and complex

household operations.

An example of a simple household operation is doing the laundry. Water, detergent, and

clothes are inputs for the washing machine. The throughput is the cleansing, rinsing, and spinning

action, and the outputs are dirty wastewater and clean clothes. If the clothes are not clean, this

signals (provides feedback) that something is wrong with the system, and a change is needed.

Home styles change with the times. This is an example of horizontal design. Note the three car garage

and the driveway pattern making this feature stand out.

Management History and Theories 55

More complex household operations include preparing meals, establishing schedules,

and caring for children. For example, meal preparation involves deciding what to eat, shop-

ping (the average grocery store offers more than 30,000 different products), preparing food,

serving, eating, and cleaning up. Setting schedules requires communication and the coor-

dination of activities, people, and time. Child care involves innumerable decisions, tasks,

and responsibilities in addition to emotional factors. Family economists have tried to put a

dollar value on household work, which has been used in determining life insurance and other

financial implications and in resolving court cases involving divorce, or the injury or death of a

stay-at-home spouse or parent. Estimates run anywhere from $50,000 and up to replacing

a main caregiver. Clearly, household work and in-home childcare and eldercare have value.

These figures are often constructed from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics averages for a

variety of occupations, such as maid and chauffeur. To calculate the value, wages and the

number of hours the service typically takes are determined; other factors, such as the age of

the children, are also taken into account. Critics of this approach say that, realistically, if a wife

and mother, for example, is the victim of a car accident, her family will not replace her with a

team comprising a bookkeeper, a cook, and so on. Furthermore, emotional loss is not added

into these types of calculations.

Much more goes into household systems than the work input of an at-home parent.

All members contribute to household production and consumption. Inputs may be rented,

leased, provided by the community, or owned. Raw materials, market goods and services,

durables, labor, knowledge, and management skills are inputs to the household system. An

example of household production would be preparation of a meal. This activity contributes to

household well-being and the desired end result (output, goal) of improved human resources.

Household production/consumption does more than satisfy immediate needs—it provides for

an increased human capability, a provision for the future.

Human Ecology and Ecosystems Conditions in the greater environment have an important influence on how households and

families function. The study of how living things relate to their natural environment is called

ecology. Adding the word “human” produces the term human ecology, which simply

means humans interacting with their environment. A more comprehensive definition of human

ecology says that it is the study of how humans—as social, physical, and biological beings—

interact with each other and with their physical, sociocultural, aesthetic, and biological

environments as well as with the material and human resources of these environments

(Bubolz & Sontag, 1988).

Human ecology views humans and their near environments as integrated wholes,

influencing each other (Bubolz & Sontag, 1988). The environment is the all-encompassing

external conditions influencing the life of an organism or population. In this book, the emphasis

in considering environment is on the quality-of-life conditions for individuals and families.

Environment is essentially everything that surrounds humans; but because this concept is

so broad, theorists have divided environment into microenvironment and macroenviron-

ment. Microenvironment (also called microhabitat or near environment) is the environment

that closely surrounds individuals and families. Apartments, sorority and fraternity houses,

classrooms, libraries, and dormitory rooms are part of a college student’s microenvironment.

Macroenvironment (also called macrohabitat or far environment) surrounds and encom-

passes the microenvironment. Sky, trees, and oceans are part of the macroenvironment.

56 chapter 2

FamiLy ecosystem Family ecosystem is the subsystem of human ecology that emphasizes the interactions

between families and environments. According to Paolucci, Hall, and Axinn (1977), family

ecosystem has three basic elements:

1. Organisms: These are the family members.

2. Environments: Both the natural and human-built environments are included.

3. Family organization: This functions to transform energy in the form of information into

family decisions and actions.

The ecosystem approach is useful because it emphasizes the interaction between families and

the conditions that surround them. A change in a single component of the family ecosystem

has an impact on the other parts. For example, if one family member has an alcohol or drug

abuse problem, it will affect everyone else in the family. This interaction could be illustrated as

Individual Family Member Family

Many management situations involve individuals or families interacting with factors in their

environment. This exchange can be illustrated most simply as

Individual/Family Environment

Notice that in these illustrations, the arrows point both ways; the environment impacts

the individual or family and vice versa. The nature of systems is the emphasis on linkages

and complexity of situations. A related theory is social exchange theory, which focuses on

individual resources and the trading or bartering of these resources, often related to power in

families. Exchanging gifts at holiday time or for birthdays is an example of social exchange.

Another example would be a father limiting his child’s access to the Internet

gLobaL ecosystems Global ecosystems encompass all the family ecosystems and are regulated by interactive

physical, social, political, economic, chemical, and biological processes. To begin to under-

stand the global ecosystem, one must understand the dynamics of family ecosystems. For

instance, each family contributes to the greater society and is a microcosm of the larger

social system in which it exists. Each patch in a quilt adds a special nuance of color, pattern,

strength, utility, and texture to the finished product. Collectively, the sum of all the parts is

infinitely more interesting than the individual pieces. Each extended family and each nation

benefits from the combined strength of its various people and cultures.

Millions of family ecosystems combine to form national ecosystems that in turn make up

the global ecosystem. Human ecology emphasizes the global interdependence of individuals,

families, and communities, and the resources of natural, constructed, and behavioral environ-

ments, for the purpose of wise decision making and use of resources essentially for human

development and to improve the quality of life and the environment (Bubolz & Sontag, 1988).

In homes, family ecosystems interact with the systems that supply food, heat, healthcare,

information, water, gas, electricity, clothing, and transportation. These same systems oper-

ate in the global ecosystem on a much larger scale. The welfare of nations depends on these

life-support systems. For example, maintaining an adequate food supply is a concern at the

household level, the national level, and the global level.

International environmental issues continue to dominate the global policy agenda. Long-

range solutions to environmental problems require planning and cooperation among nations.

Management History and Theories 57

As planning is a fundamental part of management, this field will play an increasingly vital role in

encouraging the conservation of resources and the promotion of informed and sound health

and environmental attitudes and practices at the individual, family, and household levels.

Economic theory Although systems theory has been the dominant influence on management over the last few

decades, the application of economic theory to management has attracted renewed attention.

Economic thinking is based on eight guideposts (Gwartney, Stroup, Sobel, & Macpherson,

2008):

1. The use of scarce resources is costly; trade-offs must always be made.

2. Individuals choose purposefully, trying to get the most from their limited resources.

3. Incentives matter.

4. Individuals focus on the difference in the costs and benefits between alternatives.

5. Information can be scarce and is costly to acquire.

6. Actions may generate second effects; in other words, decisions have both immediate

effects and spin-off, or later, effects.

7. Preferences vary between individuals. A ticket to the ballet may be worth $100 to one

person and absolutely nothing to another. Value is subjective.

8. Theory is useful in making predictions. The focus in economics is on the behavior of a

large number of individuals.

According to Professor Sherman Hanna of Ohio State University, “the most obvious applica-

tion of economic theory to family resource management is in terms of the maximization of

satisfaction or utility subject to resource constraints. The potential application of the economic

framework is very wide, extending to all consumer purchases of products and services, and

also including labor force, fertility, and even marriage decisions” (1989, 1997). Thus, the

second point in the list of guideposts is often cited in family resource management.

Economic theory assumes that individuals seek to maximize satisfaction from the decisions

they make. It also assumes that individuals are rational (use reason in making decisions) and

will act in their own self-interest. Economic theory focuses on the interaction between buyers

and sellers. Economists are basically concerned with the nature of the exchange—for example,

what a thing costs and what is gained in return. If you are really thirsty a drink will mean more

to you than a friend who is not thirsty. You will be more appreciative of who gives you a drink.

Optimization and Satisficing Economic theory includes many subtheories. One of these is optimization, which means

obtaining the best result, such as maximizing profit for a business or maximizing satisfaction

for a household (Hanna, 1989, 1997). Optimization refers to the effective use of resources to

gain the maximum satisfaction. Holly Hunts and Ramona Marotz-Baden of Montana State

University write that

Optimizing means that all assessment tools are considered in the search for the best

choice. An optimizing search is thorough, and the choice that meets the assessment

tool standards of high quality while considering cost is the choice made. An example

might be choosing a wedding dress. A young woman may search tirelessly for months

58 chapter 2

for the perfect dress—looking at patterns, looking at magazines, attending bridal shows,

and searching the Internet. Optimizing is possible when time is not limited and when

true quality can be measured. (2003, p. 5)

Although in theory individuals and families will seek to optimize their resources, in reality they

often do not behave in optimizing ways. For example, they may not buy the low-cost generic

product in a grocery store even though it has the same quality as a more expensive brand

name product. Or they may not buy the lowest-cost airplane ticket because they don’t want

to fly at an inconvenient time or plan far enough ahead to get the lowest price. Comparison

shopping can save money, but some people may feel that it is not worth the aggravation, time,

energy, and patience required. An optimization approach to consumption-related problem

solving may include:

1. An examination of utility or objective

2. A consideration of the desired consumption levels of different goods and services

3. An analysis of constraints or limitations

Much of what is consumed today has evolved, sometimes rapidly, as a result of cultural

and technological changes that occurred in the late 19th century and the twentieth. In

addition, the massive migration from rural to urban areas as well as the massive immigration

into the country have had enormous impact on the overall economy as well as on economic

theory and application. Similar conclusions can be drawn worldwide (e.g., the trend of migrat-

ing from rural to urban is global), although each nation has its own timetable.

Intensive information seeking is an important aspect of optimization theory. As economic

theory emphasizes the measurable and the rational, information seeking is heralded as a logical

course of action. Theorists reason that the more people know the more informed (better) their

decisions will be. This makes intuitive sense, but not everyone does what is reasonable and

logical all the time. Besides, even the best-informed decisions can go wrong. For example,

Randall and Elaine spent months researching which car to buy. They read articles about new

cars, checked the recommendations of Consumer Reports magazine, and then went out and

bought the worst car of their married life. Apparently, the marketplace is less than perfect (e.g.,

a particular car could be poorly manufactured even though the model is highly recommended).

Furthermore, people must consider the possible outcomes in deciding how much plan-

ning and implementing effort is optimal. Expending considerable effort to obtain information

about a choice that will have little long-term effect on the family may not be a wise use of time

and other resources. Decisions may fail because of lack of access to information, inability to

process information, or the lack of time to gather or process information. Not everyone has

equal access to the Internet, for example, although schools and communities are working to

make the distribution of this technology more equitable.

Attempts have been made to integrate economic and social systems theories. For

example, mate selection is an intriguing example of a decision that is not based entirely on

reason. Gary S. Becker, and winner of the Nobel Prize in economics, posits that the economic

forces that influence people to get married and have children are as powerful as the forces that

govern decisions to buy a new car or change jobs. Others disagree. They argue that selecting

a mate, having children, and other highly personal choices are more emotional than rational.

Less controversial is the use of optimization theory by household and business managers.

Decisions that are largely objective, such as which refrigerator or laser printer to purchase, may

be well suited to a short information search and a rational decision. Thus, optimization may be

most useful in simple, straightforward situations involving a short information search and little

Management History and Theories 59

emotion. Whether it is applicable in decision situations such as mate selection, as suggested by

Becker, is open to debate. But as the basic point of optimization is the maximization of satisfac-

tion through obtaining the best result, the theory should be applicable to a variety of situations.

Satisficing refers to picking the first good alternative that presents itself so that an individual

stops searching once it appears that an initial choice will suffice. This strategy makes sense when

time and choices are limited. Someone with a flat tire who is late to work may not want to take

the time to comparison shop for tires. She will probably buy a tire as quickly as possible so that

she can proceed on her way. Hunts and Marotz-Baden describe satisficing in the following way:

For example, if a husband is searching for a car and the minimum assessment standards

include that it started when the key was turned and that it cost less than $10,000, then the

first car that met those minimum standards would be chosen. In goods and services where

it is difficult to determine true quality until the good or service is consumed, consumers

often satisfice. Childcare is an example. The first childcare center that is a reasonable

distance from work and home, is within the family budget, and looks inviting might be the

one chosen, simply because it met minimum assessment tool standards. (2003, p. 5)

Applying economic theory to personal consumption is complicated because “values other

than efficiency are important for many people, including satisfaction derived from the pro-

cess rather than the end product, and creation of unique products not available from the

market” (Hanna, 1989, 1997). Thus, shopping in and of itself is an enjoyable activity for many

individuals, and this should be considered in discussions of rational economic behavior. The

fastest choice may not be the best choice, if shopping itself creates satisfaction. Furthermore,

according to Hanna, “in the business world, firms that do not adopt more efficient ways of

doing things will not survive in the long run, but households can just muddle along using

inefficient techniques” (1989, 1997).

This statement makes one wonder how efficient households have to be to exist and func-

tion. Are they really “small factories” as Gary Becker says? How much of economic theory, with

its emphasis on rationality and logic, can be applied to households and families? Questions

such as these fuel management research.

Physician searching for vital information in order to recommend a diagnosis.

60 chapter 2

Risk Aversion The possibility of experiencing harm, suffering, danger, or loss is known as risk. Although we

tend to associate risk with physical danger, it can also involve such things as losing money,

energy, time, or reputation. In the last section, car buyers Randall and Elaine experienced

consumer risk, but risk can also take other forms including health and safety risk, educational

risk, relationship risk, occupational risk, and financial risk. Foxall, Goldsmith, and Brown (1998)

have identified several types of perceived risk that affect decision making:

• Functional or performance risk: The possibility that a choice may not turn out as desired

or have the expected benefits.

• Financial risk: The possibility that substantial amounts of money may be lost.

• Physical risk: The possibility that harm may come from a choice.

• Psychological risk: The possibility that a choice may damage a person’s image of self or

self-esteem.

• Social risk: The possibility that a choice may not be approved by others or may cause

social embarrassment or rejection.

• Time risk: The possibility that the ability to satisfy wants will decline over time. In economics,

it is assumed that a consumer would nearly always prefer to receive a good or service now

rather than later.

To summarize, not all risks are bad, and risk carries with it many characteristics.

A person may be risk-averse, risk-loving, or risk-neutral. Changing jobs or spouses

involves risk. Traveling or moving involves risk. Indeed, people like a certain amount of risk;

otherwise, games, gambling, quiz shows, and competitions would not exist. Risk provides a

little excitement and a release from tedium. One person may dream of winning the lottery and

quitting his boring job. Another may take up skydiving to spice up her life. As these examples

suggest, risk is not an absolute. The perception of risk varies from person to person. One indi-

vidual may think riding down the Grand Canyon on the back of a mule is an exciting adventure,

whereas another may view it as foolhardy.

Trying to avoid the dire outcomes associated with risk is a rational course of behavior. In

economic theory, the avoidance of risk is called risk aversion. Risk-averse individuals and

families seek to minimize problems and maximize satisfaction by avoiding risk. For example, a

risk-averse individual who dislikes heights and enclosed spaces would avoid riding elevators

to the top of tall buildings. Just as different people perceive risk differently, the amount of risk

aversion varies from person to person, family to family, and situation to situation.

Although some people feel comfortable betting on horse races or playing slot machines,

others would never dream of spending money on gambling. The amount of risk a person is

likely to take also varies by the stage in the life cycle. A person who is 18 years old is likely to

take more risks than someone who is 84. People’s resources also affect the amount of risk

they are likely to assume. What constitutes a risk depends on the individual. The greater the

resources, the more confident an individual will feel about taking a risk. If the decision fails, the

individual will not feel the loss as keenly as someone with fewer remaining resources.

Yet even people with substantial resources may be wary of risk or feel uncertain in new

situations. The decision maker estimates how much risk the situation involves and tries to turn

an uncertain outcome to his or her advantage. Understanding the principles of perceived risk

and being sensitive to the presence of risk can help the decision maker use risk-reduction

strategies (e.g., gathering more information or following safe procedures) more effectively

Management History and Theories 61

summarysummary The study of management as taught and practiced today has its roots in the 19th century. As it has adjusted to technological, social, scientific, and economic changes in the 20th and 21st centuries, the field has necessarily become far more complex than it was originally. One particularly significant change in the 20th century was the transformation of the home from being primarily a pro- ducer to primarily a consumer of goods and services. Not only has the amount of household production declined, but the types of products it does produce and consume have also changed significantly. Who stays at home has changed as well. In the first half of the 20th century most adult women stayed at home, but in the current century less than 13 percent of U.S. households include a stay-at-home spouse.

The integrative nature of management relies heavily on sys- tems theory. In general systems theory, each part contributes to the behavior of the whole, but the whole is greater than the sum of its parts. Feedback can be positive or negative; it is modeled as a loop (Figure 2.3). Family systems theory emphasizes the ways families organize themselves to carry out daily tasks and face challenges. Because the parts of a system are interrelated, systems are especially vulnerable to Murphy’s Law (if some- thing can go wrong, it will go wrong), and the tiniest flaw can cause damage. But, for the most part, systems try to balance themselves.

Polls show that Americans tend to be more satisfied with their personal affairs than with overall conditions in the United States, which is part of the greater environment. Families and environments are interdependent within the global ecosystem. Environments, near and far, provide the setting for human interac- tions, although individuals and families vary in the degree to which they are open or closed to the environment.

Economic theories play a role in management. According to optimization theory, the individual increases her or his chance for satisfaction and minimizes problems in a rational way by searching for information. Satisficing refers to situations where individuals choose the first good option that presents itself. Risk aversion holds that the goal is to maximize satisfaction by avoiding risks, although some people are risk lovers or neutral about risk.

Underlying family systems theory, social exchange theory, and economic theory is the belief that behavior is not random and occurs for some reason or reasons. In resource management, most behavior is rational, although individual preferences and situ- ations play a great part in behavior.

Theories provide useful ways to organize information, allowing for predicting future behavior. They do not explain everything, but provide valuable starting points and frameworks. The next chapter goes on to explore how values affect decision making and how goals drive managerial behavior.

termskey terms boundaries 47 boundary ambiguity 53 controlling 46 demands 48 ecology 55 entropy 50 environment 55 equifinality 51 equilibrium 50 family ecosystem 56 homeostasis 51 human ecology 55

hypotheses 45 inputs 48 interface 47 macroenvironment 55 microenvironment 55 morphogenic systems 47 morphostatic systems 47 multifinality 51 negative feedback 50 optimization 57 outputs 48 positive feedback 50

risk 60 risk aversion 60 satisficing 59 sequencing 49 social exchange theory 56 subsystem 48 system 47 systems theory 47 theory 45 throughputs 48 transformation 48 work simplification 36

(Foxall, Goldsmith, & Brown, 1998). Chapter 5 discusses the relationship of risk and uncer-

tainty to decision making in more detail.

A tenet of economics is that humans try to get maximum benefit for the least amount

of effort, including the use of resources that will give them an acceptable level of the benefit

desired (Hunt & Marotz-Baden, 2003). Risk aversion is part of the equation. It provides insight

into the study of management. The fundamental principle of the maximization of satisfaction

through the avoidance of risk provides plausible explanations for many types of decisions.

62 chapter 2

referencesreferences Berger, P. S. (1984). Home management research: State of the

art 1909–1984. Family and Consumer Sciences Research Journal, 12(3), 252–264.

Blooston, G. (2008, August). Because you know money can buy some happiness. Retrieved from www.AARPMagazine.org. p. 49.

Bubolz, M., & Sontag, S. (1988). Integration in home economics and human ecology. Journal of Consumer Studies and Home Economics, 12, 1–14.

Campbell, L., & Parcel, T. (2010). Children’s home environments in Great Britain and the United States. Journal of Family Issues, 31(5), 559–584.

Connolly, M., & Wasserman, L. (2002). Updating classic American bungalows. Newtown, CT: Taunton Press.

Cowan, R. (1983). More work for mother. New York: Basic Books.

Crossen, C. (2002, December 11). Buying home spigots, water was never taken for granted. The Wall Street Journal.

Deacon, R. E., & Firebaugh, F. M. (1988). Family resource management: Principles and applications (2nd ed.). Boston, MA: Allyn & Bacon.

Drucker, P. (1999). Management challenges for the 21st century. New York: Harper Business.

Edwards, O. (2002, October 7). Mores. Forbes.

Elliott and Niesta, 2009, p. 56 in Chapter 2 in Moskowiz, F. and H. Grant. The Psychology of Goals. New York: Guilford.

Flanagan, C. (2003, September). Housewife confidential. Atlantic Monthly, 141–142.

Fleming, W. (2003). Family systems theory. In J. J. Ponzetti, Jr. (Ed.), International Encyclopedia of Marriage and Family (2nd ed., Vol. 2). New York: Macmillan.

Fletcher, J. (2002, August 1). Out with the new, in with the old. The Wall Street Journal, p. W9.

Foxall, G., Goldsmith, R., & Brown, S. (1998). Consumer psychol- ogy for marketing. London: Routledge.

Frederick, C. (1918). The new housekeeping. New York: Doubleday.

Gilbreth, L. (1927). The homemaker and her job. New York: Appleton.

Goldsmith, E. (1993). Home economics: The discovered discipline. Journal of Home Economics, 85(4), 45–48.

Gross, I. H., Crandall, E. W., & Knoll, M. M. (1980). Management for modern families (4th ed.). Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall.

Gwartney, J., Stroup, R., Sobel, R., & Macpherson, D. (2008). Economics: Private & public choice (11th ed.). Cincinnati, OH: South-Western.

Hallinan, J. (2002, August 12). Help for hopeless garages. The Wall Street Journal, p. B1.

Hanna, S. (1989, 1997 renewed copyright). Optimization for family resource management. Proceedings, Southeastern Regional Family Economics/Home Management Association.

Haase, R. (1992). Classic cracker: Florida’s wood frame vernacular architecture. Sarasota, FL: Pineapple Press.

Hunts, H., & Marotz-Baden, R. (2003). Family systems theory, a new look at an old friend. Consumer Interests Annual, 49, 1–13.

Lamanna, M., & Riedmann, A. (2009). Marriages and families (10th ed.). Belmont, CA: Thomson/Wadsworth.

Lichtenstein, A., & Ludwig, D. (2010). Bring back home eco- nomics education. Journal of American Medical Association, 303(18), 1857.

McGinn, D. (2007). House lust: America’s obsession with our homes. New York: Currency.

McGoldrick, M. (1995). You can go home again. New York: Norton.

Moskowitz, G., & Grant, H. (2009). The Psychology of Goals. New York: Guilford.

Paolucci, B., Hall, O., & Axinn, N. (1977). Family decision making: An ecosystem approach. New York: Wiley.

questions 1. Compare and contrast typical homes and household tasks in

1900, in 1950, and today according to the information given in this chapter.

2. “There is nothing so practical as a good theory,” says Kurt Lewin. Explain how theory is useful. Also discuss the deep and rich theoretical heritage of family resource management. Name two of the most used theories.

3. According to the chapter content, what is the difference between positive and negative feedback?

4. How is a family a system? How do families cope with change? Give an example.

5. Economist Gary Becker says a household can be regarded as a “small factory.” What does he mean by that? What is produced in households?

review questions

Management History and Theories 63

readingfor further reading* Andrews, B. R. (1935). Economics of the household. New York:

Macmillan.

Becker, G. S. (1981). A treatise on the family. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.

Beecher, C. (1841). Treatise on domestic economy. Boston: Marsh, Capen, Lyon, & Webb.

Bonde, R. L. (1944). Management in daily living. New York: Macmillan.

Bratton, E. C. (1971). Home management is. Boston: Ginn.

Cushman, E. M. (1945). Management in homes. New York: Macmillan.

Fitzsimmons, C., & Williams, F. (1973). The family economy, nature and management of resources. Ann Arbor, MI: Edwards Brothers.

Gilbreth, L., Thomas, O. M., & Clymer, E. (1955). Management in the home. New York: Dodd, Mead.

Goodyear, M. R., & Klohr, M. C. (1965). Managing for effective living (2nd ed.). New York: Wiley.

Kyrk, H. (1933). Economic problems of the family. New York: Harper & Row.

Kyrk, H. (1953). The family in the American economy. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

Lamanna, M., & Riedmann, A. (2009). Marriages and families (10th ed.). Belmont, CA: Thomson Wadsworth.

Liston, M. (1993). History of family economics research: 1862– 1962. Ames, IA: University Publications, Iowa State University.

Magrabi, F. M., Chung, Y. S., Cha, S. S., & Yang, S. (1991). The economics of household consumption. New York: Praeger.

May, E. E., Waggoner, N. R., & Boethke, E. M. (1974). Independent living for the handicapped and the elderly. Boston: Houghton Mifflin.

Oppenheim, I. (1976). Management of the modern home (2nd ed.). New York: Macmillan.

Reid, M. G. (1934). Economics of household production. New York: Wiley.

Rice, A. S., & Tucker, S. M. (1986). Family life management (6th ed.). New York: Macmillan.

Richards, E. H. (1900). The cost of living as modified by sanitary science. New York: Wiley.

Stage, S., & Vincent, V. (1997). Rethinking home economics. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University.

Starr, M. C. (1968). Management for better living. Lexington, MA: Heath.

Steidl, R. E., & Bratton, E. C. (1968). Work in the home. New York: Wiley.

Swanson, B. B. (1981). Introduction to home management. New York: Macmillan.

Talbot, M., & Breckinridge, S. (1919). The modern household. Boston: Whitcomb & Barrows.

Walker, K. E., & Woods, M. E. (1976). Time use: A measure of household production of family goods and services. Washington, DC: American Home Economics Association.

Parloa, M. (1879). First principles of household management and cookery. Boston: Houghton, Osgood.

Quintana, M., & Grossman, R. (2007, May). Merillat’s third phase of research. Adrian, Michigan. Retrieved from www.merillat.com.

Sessa, D. (2000, November 13). Have dinner. The Wall Street Journal, p. R20.

Sharpe, D. L., & Winter, M. (1991). Toward working hypotheses of effective management: Conditions, thought processes and behaviors. Lifestyles: Family and Economic Issues, 12(4), 303–323.

Sieburg, E. (1985). Family communication. New York: Gardner Press.

Smithsonian. (2000). National museum of American history, on time exhibit. Washington, DC.

Taylor, F. W. (1911). Principles of scientific management. New York: Harper & Row.

Weiss, M. (2003, September). To be about to be. American Demographics, pp. 29–36.

Weston, L. P. (2003, June 14). What’s a homemaker worth?

Willis, G., & Young, L. (2003, April). Retire happy. Smart Money, p. 84.

Wooldridge, A. (2000, April 28–29). Where business profs walk tall. The Wall Street Journal Europe.

Woolgar, C. (1993). Household accounts from medieval England. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

*When a book has appeared in several editions, the newest is cited. This list of seminal works (textbooks, popular books, and reference books) is intended to supplement those already cited in the reference list; it is not meant to be comprehensive. In addition, management articles can be found in the Interna- tional Journal of Consumer Studies, Journal of Family and Consumer Sciences (formerly the Journal of Home Economics), Family and Consumer Sciences Research Journal (formerly the Home Economics Research Journal), Journal of Marriage and Family, Journal of Consumer Affairs, Journal of Family and Economic Issues, Journal of Family Issues, Journal of Consumer Education, Kappa Omicron Nu Forum, and in the journals of allied fields. Other sources of management theory, research, and applications include theses and dissertations, Agricultural Experiment Station Bulletins, the Family Economics Review and other government publications, and conference proceedings.

65

You become successful the moment you start moving toward a worthwhile goal.

—Samuel JohnSon 3

Attitudes, GoAls, VAlues,

Main Topics

Values and Attitudes Types of Values Values, lifestyles, and Consumption Societal and Cultural Values Families, Values, Standards, and households Value Chains attitudes

Goals and Motivation Goals Versus habits

Goal attributes Types of Goals Goals and Performance, Creativity, and learning Setting Goals Disengaging from Goals College Students’ Values, Goals, and life outcomes motivation

DiD you know that . . .?

. . . About 23 percent of new-year resolutions are broken the first week, and 45 percent by the end of January.

. . . On average, nearly one-third of college freshmen do not return for their sophomore year.

And MotiVAtion

66 chapter 3

Do you agree with Ms. Erika Jenkins that so much of success is self-defined even in work situations? What is success? Is it about fame, family, accumulating wealth, climbing up the ladder at work, friends, and happiness? How would you describe a perfect life? Don’t limit yourself, paint in broad, bold strokes.

Once you have the description or the vision, what should you do next? Decide what you

really care about and move forward. David Lloyd George says, “Don’t be afraid to take a big

step if one is indicated; you can’t cross a chasm in two small jumps.” Let’s begin with an

examination of your values, attitudes, and goals that underlie choices such as whom to live

with, where to live, what to consume, and which career path to follow.

People who report being happy when they are 20 years old report being equally happy

when they are 70. Conversely, 20-year-olds who report being unhappy at 20 will still be

unhappy at age 70 (McIntosh, Martin, & Jones, 1997). Fulfilling goals brings happiness through

a sense of accomplishment. Happiness falls into three categories:

There’s the pleasant life with lots of richly positive emotions in the past, present, and

future. . . . A second type of happy life is one in which you are totally absorbed and

immersed in what you do. It is feeling positive about knowing you are using your high-

est strengths and virtues in love, work and play. The third type of meaningful, happy

life is using your highest strengths in service to others, for something larger. (Condor,

2002, p. 4D)

This chapter explores these and related concepts. Why does happiness matter? How often

have you heard someone say, “I just want you to be happy” or express that sentiment

Case study success is not so easy Erika Jenkins, age 22, kept losing. She would apply again and again for awards that she was nominated for, but she couldn’t seem to win. At the beginning of her junior year she resolved never to apply again and to focus on her classes, graduating, and  getting a job. Her advisor and the Director of Student Achieve- ment, Walt McCormick, at the university wouldn’t let up because everything in her record and past experiences indicated she could win. Walt called Erika in September and said, “you have to apply for this new award.” She said no and he called her again. Walt said, “Applying is a process, you have to apply over and over again, that is how it works.” And, he added he would coach her and read her essay. He also tried to encourage her through the ups and downs by quoting the famous opening lines to Charles Dickens’ A Tale of Two Cities:

It was the best of times, It was the worst of times, It was the age of wisdom,

It was the age of foolishness, It was the epoch of belief, It was the epoch of incredulity, It was the season of light, It was the season of darkness, It was the spring of hope, It was the winter of despair, We had everything before us, We had nothing before us . . .

Walt said, “Dickens wrote compelling stories, he had tremendous powers of persuasion. He knew what people value, what they care about, and how to tap into emotions. You have to try again.” Erika did and she won a year abroad teaching children in a wonderful country. She sparkled as she told her success story at a student awards banquet. Her message was to never give up and to listen to people who believe in you.

Values, Attitudes, Goals, and Motivation 67

regarding someone else? For example, on the occasion of the second marriage of Nikki, her

closest friend Lisa said to acquaintances, “I just want her to be happy this time.”

As noted in Chapter 1, management is the process of using resources to achieve goals.

“Goals are of central importance to the study of motivation. Goals represent the hub of

self-regulation” (Elliot & Niesta, 2009, p. 56). The goals people

seek and the way they perceive and use resources are affected

by their values and attitudes. Setting goals is a necessary

first step because, after all, you can’t get what you want until

you have a clear idea what it is that you want. This chapter

focuses on step 1 (identifying problem, need, want, or goal) and

step 2 (clarifying values) in the management process model (see

Figure 3.1).

The chapter begins with a discussion of values and attitudes

and then proceeds to goals. The values and goals of college

students in particular are examined. As the successful achieve-

ment of goals is closely linked to motivation, it plays an important

part in this chapter. Consider the motivation and achievement

of Charles Lindbergh, the first aviator to fly nonstop across the

Atlantic Ocean from the United States to Europe. Discussing his

flight in an article in the New York Times on May 13, 1927, he said:

We (that’s my ship and I) took off rather suddenly. We had a

report somewhere around four o’clock in the afternoon before

the weather would be fine, so we thought we would try it.

In the same article, F. Scott Fitzgerald, the renowned novelist,

described the flight of the Spirit of Saint Louis more eloquently:

In the spring of ’27 something bright and alien flashed across

the sky.

A young Minnesotan [Lindbergh] who seemed to have had

nothing to do with his generation did a heroic thing, and for a

moment people set down their glasses in country clubs and

speakeasies and thought of their old best dreams.

Chapters 1 and 3

Step 1

Chapter 3

Step 2

Chapter 4

Step 3

Chapters 5 and 6

Step 4

Chapter 6

Step 5

Decide, plan, and implement

Accomplish goals and evaluate

Identify resources

Identify problem, need, want, or goal

Clarify values

Environment

Feedback

Chapters 2 and 7

Chapters 2 and 12

Figure 3.1 The management process model.

Charles Lindbergh with his plane, the Spirit of St. Louis, ready to start on his

attempt to cross the Atlantic.

Source: Library of Congress.

68 chapter 3

There’s no denying that the 20th century brought an incredible amount of innovation

and progress to the world and that the 21st century continues this tradition with incredible

upgrades in mobile phones, transportation, and information collection. Business keeps

changing rapidly to keep up with the demand for better, faster, and more efficient devices. The

industrial revolution of the 19th century was about saving muscle power, having machines do

what man used to do. The current revolution, called either the digital or the information revolu-

tion, is more about organizing data and enhancing technology for rapid information retrieval

and exchange.

With any revolution or innovation, many unwanted or misguided steps are taken along the

way. Encouraging the reader to think about the issues surrounding goals and personal and

societal values, to set priorities, to not be discouraged, to seize opportunities, and to progress

are the behavioral goals of this chapter.

Values and attitudes Values are principles that guide behavior. For example, a person who values honesty will

try to act in honest ways. Values are deep-seated psychological constructs that direct indi-

vidual preferences and strategies for goal achievement. They form the foundation for behavior,

including goal-seeking behavior. An example of a value is wisdom, which is the accumulated

philosophic or scientific learning and also the ability to discern inner qualities and relationships.

A person with wisdom listens and has insight, knowledge, and good sense.

Critical Thinking

Socrates said, “Wisdom begins in wonder.” Another saying by Naguib Mahfouz is, “You can tell whether a man is clever by his answers. You can tell whether a man is wise by his questions.” Do you ask questions in your classes? Or, can you recall what you would consider to be a good question asked by another?

Critical Thinking

Has the spirit of invention and adventure epitomized by Lindbergh’s solo flight across the Atlantic evaporated? Can you think of current-day inventors and adventurers? What sort of activities do they do? What goals have they set?

Values, Attitudes, Goals, and Motivation 69

If wisdom is a value you hold, then how does one go about gaining wisdom beyond the

usual context of college classes and assignments? Here are a few steps to follow:

• Wisdom gathering isn’t confined to books but can be experienced through travel and

listening to speakers, by shadowing a professional in his or her daily work life or in

a number of other ways.

• Seek the connections, the patterns, and connect the dots between different realms of life.

Figure out how one subject intersects another.

• Wisdom implies deep thinking, going beyond the surface. Why is someone saying what

he or she is saying? What is the background to a comment or action? Often there is

a lesson to be learned not only by what you experience but by observing what others

experience.

Wisdom is part of a person’s internally integrated value system called value orientation,

which is expressed in part in the way he or she makes judgments. A person’s judgments are

based on the value meanings derived from his or her feelings (the affective domain) and

thinking (the cognitive domain) about events, situations, groups of people, and things. Both

the affective and the cognitive domains are based on previous experience. Thus, valuing is an

ongoing, never-ending process that forms an integral part of an individual’s personality and

behavioral systems. Different generations may hold slightly different values.

Behavior is what people actually do. The word “behavior” implies action. Often a gap

exists between values (the ideal) and behavior (the actual). For example, a man may say that

he is on a strict weight-reducing diet, yet stuff his grocery cart with candy bars. Another per-

son may say that she thinks a speed limit of 55 mph is a good idea, yet habitually drive much

faster. Knowing of the gap between values and behavior, researchers are careful to ask survey

questions not only about values and attitudes but also about actual behavior.

Critical Thinking

McDonald’s, the global fast-food restaurant, added apples to their Happy Meal and reduced the amount of French fries in response to societal demand for healthier food for children. This is an example of valuing health. What do you think about this move on their part?

Consider shopping online while at work and the possible conflict of values with employ-

ers. Research shows that online shopping surges in the middle of the workday (10 a.m. to

2 p.m. which includes the lunch hour) and falls off in the evening and on weekends. Some

workers say this beats going to the mall at lunchtime and in the long run saves their com-

pany time. Rick Dalmazzi, president of Certicom, an encryption company based in Hayward,

California, doesn’t get upset about his employees shopping online with company computers

“within reason” because they all work more than 40 hours a week: “We have a philosophy

around here that people should be comfortable at work and if they’re comfortable at work,

they’ll work harder.” Mr. Dalmazzi says, “I’m totally fine with these areas where business life

and personal life mix” (de Lisser, 2002, p. A8).

70 chapter 3

Less employee-friendly companies use software that filters out retail Web sites or social

networking sites like YouTube. For the most part, the decision is up to the employee about

what is an appropriate amount of Internet shopping during office hours.

Environment plays a role in behavior. For example, maybe it is more difficult to maintain

an average weight today because of the plenitude and easy availability of food. Twenty years

ago the typical restaurant plate was 10 inches in diameter; now it is 12 inches. The fastest-

growing food chains market themselves as upscale or nutritious as well as convenient. In

2003, Subway Restaurants opened a new store in the United States every 3 hours on average

and Starbucks Corporation a new store every 11 hours (Leung, 2003, October 1). In February

2008 several hundred Starbucks employees were let go (perhaps due to overexpansion) and

on February 25, 2008, Starbucks closed from 5:30 to 8:30 p.m. all their U.S. stores to retrain

employees and discuss new strategies as the company moves forward. Dunkin’ Donuts and

McDonald’s along with others are challenging Starbucks by offering deluxe coffee at lower

prices. So, what does Starbucks do in this situation? The same as an individual or family

would: reassess and regroup, and go back to core values. Recently, Starbucks experimented

with not naming all their stores Starbucks; instead they were choosing street addresses or

neighborhoods to name the stores so that they seemed less corporate. In terms of core values,

they also tried to rejuvenate their original coffeehouse feeling with grinding coffee beans for

each new pot.

Attitudes are outlooks or opinions that may express values, serve as a means of

evaluation, or demonstrate feeling in regard to some idea, person, object, event, situation, or

relationship. They are states of mind or feelings, likes and dislikes about some matter, such

as liking or disliking Subway sandwiches or Starbucks coffee. Additional examples of objects

of attitudes are:

• People

• Images

• Smells or scents

• Food or cuisine

• Environments

• Pictures or art

• Colors

• Countries or regions

• Music

• Sounds

• Animals

• Words

• Colleges or universities

• Sports teams

Memory plays a significant part in determining attitudes. Everyone has her or his own

unique set of attitudes, but the number of attitudes varies from person to person. One person

may have attitudes on everything and everybody, whereas another may have few attitudes.

Talk shows would be dull if hosts or interviewers, guests, and the audience had no attitudes or

opinions. Attitudes can range from the significant to the petty.

Sometimes values and attitudes are confused. They do share the characteristic that both

are abstract. In addition, both can be either explicit, meaning that they are held at the con-

scious level and are readily verbalized, or implicit, meaning that they are held subconsciously

and can only be identified by behavior. But values and attitudes also differ in several respects.

Whereas values are fairly constant (as deep-seated psychological constructs), attitudes

are more transitory and subject to change. Values represent broad tendencies and highly

prized beliefs (e.g., helpfulness, courage, and ambition), whereas attitudes are narrower pre-

dispositions (e.g., having a particular attitude about a clothing style, rap music, or modern

art). Advertising plays on both values and attitudes by appealing to people’s feelings about

cleanliness, youthfulness, power, and prestige.

Values, Attitudes, Goals, and Motivation 71

Goals are end results, the purpose toward which much behavior is directed. Goals are

linked to deadlines, accomplishments, completion, or achievement. They are most likely to be

attained if they are specific and stated in measurable terms. For example, rather than merely

hoping to finish a race, an experienced runner is likely to set a goal of cutting X number of

seconds off his or her best recorded time.

Goals give shape, meaning, and direction to people’s lives. A life without goals would be

aimless. In the quote in the beginning of the chapter, Samuel Johnson (1709–1784), a noted

author and critic who lived in England, said, “You become successful the moment you start

moving toward a worthwhile goal.” What goals are you moving toward?

A survey of 1,000 people conducted by Market Facts TeleNation found the top priorities

to be

1. Physical and spiritual well-being

2. Financial stability

3. Relationships

4. Personal or professional development

5. Work and career happiness

6. Service to others

Every day people make complex decisions that reflect their attitudes, values, and goals. If

students value good grades, they decide to spend time studying. Attitudes often occupy a

middle ground between values and goals. Students who hate studying (an attitude) are going

to have difficulty reconciling their value of wisdom and their goal of attaining good grades.

Types of Values Because the world is filled with an almost infinite array of different stimuli, one of the most

basic human functions is to classify concepts, objects, and events into clusters or groups. In

so doing, people simplify their world and lay the groundwork for interpretation and action. For

example, values can be classified in four different ways:

1. Absolute and relative

2. Intrinsic and extrinsic

3. Traditional, personal, and professional

4. Instrumental and terminal

Each of these will be discussed in the following sections.

Critical Thinking

A restaurant says no children under ten are allowed or that a certain area of the restaurant is child-free. Some first-class sections of airplanes are also not allowing young children. Catering to child-free environments may be good for business but is it good for parents and children? What do you think?

72 chapter 3

Absolute And RelAtive vAlues Absolute values are extreme and definitive; such values can be described in black and white

terms, as in the phrase “honesty is the best policy.” People who hold honesty as an absolute

value would say that honesty is right in all situations. Relative values are interpreted based

on the context. They can be visualized as shades of gray that depend on the situation for

definition. A person who holds honesty as a relative value will usually be honest, but in certain

situations will put friendship, politeness, or consideration first. For example, if a friend gets a

terrible haircut and asks how it looks, Person X, who has absolute values, will respond that the

haircut is awful. Person Y, who has relative values, will simply say that her friend’s hair might

be a little short. In this situation, Person Y is placing the values of friendship and sensitivity over

the value of total honesty.

People with more relative values tend to seek additional information about an

event or situation. They want more details or knowledge before expressing an opinion or

taking action.

intRinsic And extRinsic vAlues Values can also be classified as intrinsic values, which are ends in themselves (internally

driven), or extrinsic values, which derive their worth or meaning from someone or something

else. A couple finding their own way around a foreign city might find that experience intrinsi-

cally rewarding; they are demonstrating the values of independence and self-reliance. On the

other hand, winning an Academy Award has extrinsic value because in this case a group of

people have rewarded an individual for professional excellence.

The concepts of intrinsic and extrinsic can be applied to leadership. “Internal leader-

ship skills reflect intrinsic values such as honesty, integrity, respecting others, professional

ethics, and developing vision. . . . External leadership is demonstrated with actions such as

taking risks, sharing a vision, fostering collaboration, giving power away, being a role model,

communicating well, and celebrating success” (Buck, 2003, pp. 8, 9).

tRAditionAl, PeRsonAl, And PRofessionAl vAlues Traditional values are those commonly held by the predominant society in which one lives.

A traditional value or societal standard widely held in the United States and Canada is that

children should begin going to school around the age of five or six. Another value of these two

nations is that education is important and a key to future success.

Weddings are value-laden traditional events. The wedding veil has evolved over the

centuries. It symbolizes youth, innocence, modesty, and mystery. In the United States the

color is white. In Japan many brides still wear the traditional tsuno-kakushi—a white hood that

symbolizes hiding the horns of jealousy. A Finnish bride may wear a gold crown, which she

places on the head of a bridesmaid during the reception dance to signal that the bridesmaid

may be the next to marry. The American tradition is for brides to toss the bouquet to a group

of unmarried women. The tradition of wearing something old stands for continuity and the

wearing of something new for the future. A borrowed object refers to happiness, and blue

stands for fidelity, purity, good fortune, and love. In the past, in the United States another tradi-

tion was for the bride to wear a penny in her shoe (or in England a sixpence) symbolizing good

fortune or luck. The significance of the train on the wedding dress originated in the Middle

Ages, when train length indicated rank in court: The longer the train, the higher the prestige. If

Values, Attitudes, Goals, and Motivation 73

you’ve seen images of Princess Diana’s wedding gown, you’ll remember the extreme length

of the train.

Values are focal points for discussion and policy making. For example, government cam-

paigns encourage families to eat together more often. These campaigns exist in part because

of evidence showing that when families eat together, there is less likelihood of criminal or

juvenile problems, as well as there are higher degrees of interaction, higher grades, and better

nutrition. The traditional family meal is under threat as more people eat alone.

According to a report compiled by FFP Complete, a market research department of

Taylor Nelson Sofres, nearly one in two meals consumed in Britain are eaten by solitary diners

and convenience food is becoming more popular. This British report also indicated that many

people appear to be eating separately at different times even though they live together. In the

United States, Sara and Jack, a married couple in their early 50s with grown-up children, told

the author of this book that they eat their dinners on trays in front of the television every night.

He is exhausted from his day at work as a golf pro dealing with the public, and she from her

job in real estate, likewise dealing with the public. This is the second marriage for both of them,

and Sara says they fell into this pattern quickly and both are happy with it. Their situation raises

the interesting question: Should government be involved in trying to change people’s eating

patterns at home, in restaurants, or at school?

Each person has to separate out societal values or messages from what she or he truly

believes. When someone finds himself or herself thinking “I should be a better friend” or

“I should be thinner” or “I should have a house that reflects my stature in the community,” he

or she should stop and ask, “Says who?” These thoughts often reflect extrinsic messages

that you have internalized, but are they really you? Personal values are those that individuals

hold for themselves, such as courage (standing up for one’s beliefs), forgiveness (the ability

to pardon others), and the right to pursue happiness. Perhaps you value solitude, health,

and  frugality more than others in your community do. People pride themselves on their

personal values.

Critical Thinking

Circle the word in these pairs that you value more: Independence or teamwork? Thriftiness or generosity? Responsibility or freedom? In a statement say why you chose the words that you did. If you selected independence what does that mean to you?

Personal values affect consumption patterns. The under-25 group is spending less on

clothes, cars, and entertainment, and more on home furnishings and homes, according to the

Bureau of Labor Statistics:

Justin Townsend, a computer consultant in Allen, Texas, lives in a house on a cul de

sac with a big backyard and a swimming pool. When friends visit and give the place

the once-over, they often ask where his parents are. “There are no parents,” says

Mr. Townsend, all of 22 years old. “It’s my house.” Tired of renting, he got a 100% loan

74 chapter 3

last year and bought the $152,500 suburban house. He wanted a living room large

enough for his pool table. “I couldn’t really do that with a condo,” he says. (Leung, 2003,

July 16, p. B1)

Justin exemplifies a national trend toward home ownership at a younger age. The number

of home owners who are under 25 doubled to 1.5 million in 2007, up from 792,000 in

1993, according to U.S. census data. Successful, young Generation-Xers are not wait-

ing until they are 30 and married to buy a house. According to David Tufts, executive

vice president at Coldwell Banker, “These people are much more focused on success

and lifestyle” (Leung, 2003, July 16, p. B1). The economy hardened since this quote and

the movement to buy houses at an ever-younger age has been slowed by changes in the

real estate market and in unemployment rates. The relative freedom that renting repre-

sents has become more attractive to a number of age groups. Other examples of personal

values include

• Giving the gift of time

• Putting someone else’s feelings first

• Forgiving a wrong

• Expressing gratitude

• Mentoring another student or a fellow employee

• Serving the community

Professional values are related to jobs and

careers; examples include being ambitious,

capable, or logical. The same value can fall into

all three categories. For example, a society, an

individual, and a profession may all hold polite-

ness as a value. Conversely, societal, personal,

and professional values may be in conflict.

Employees who place a high value on

honesty and integrity may become whistle-

blowers, exposing the wrongdoing in a company or government agency. Their values are in

conflict with the values of their employer or at least with those of particular other employees.

One of the goals of a job interview is to determine whether there is an appropriate fit

between the prospective employee’s values and those of the organization. To help determine

this, many organizations give psychological tests to applicants.

instRumentAl And teRminAl vAlues Milton Rokeach, one of the most respected authorities on values, divided values into two

types: terminal values and instrumental values (see Table 3.1). Terminal values are preferences

for end states of existence, such as equality, freedom, or a comfortable life. Instrumental

values are preferences for general modes of conduct, such as being helpful, loving, or intel-

lectual. An individual taking the Rokeach Value Survey is asked to rank the values in each list

from 1 (most important) to 18 (least important). Of particular significance are the top three

values—these tend to be consistent over time.

Rokeach defined values as global beliefs that guide actions and judgments across a

variety of situations. He concluded that values are individual attributes that affect attitudes,

motivation, needs, and perceptions (Rokeach, 1973).

Suggested Activity List the parts of your life that are most important to you, ways you look after yourself, and personal characteris- tics you value in yourself and in others. Do your relationships nurture these types of values? Does your current lifestyle match your values? Is there a disconnect? Where? Perhaps cleanliness and orderliness are important to you, but your apartment, house, or dorm room is a mess—is that a temporary or permanent state?

Values, Attitudes, Goals, and Motivation 75

Values, Lifestyles, and Consumption Henry David Thoreau said, “My life is like a stroll upon the beach, as near the ocean’s edge

as I can go.” Values, lifestyles, and goals are shaped by experiences and are influenced

by many sources, including parents, siblings, friends, teachers, religions, organizations, and

the media.

Shopping behaviors provide an example of values in action. A person who comparison

shops has different values (and perhaps resources) than a person who buys the first thing

she or he sees. Remember in the previous chapter on economics theory we talked about

optimization (trying to get the most for your money by comparison shopping) versus satisfic-

ing (satisfying a need by buying the first thing that fits). Choosing what to buy and where to

shop are examples of consumption decisions based on values and lifestyle. Consider the

differences between the consumption styles of college students Chelsea and Anthea. Chelsea

usually shops at The Gap, but if she does not have much money to spend, she goes to

Old Navy or another less expensive store. She

goes shopping for clothes every week. Anthea

prefers department stores and tries to find what

she needs as quickly as possible so that she

can leave. She sees shopping as a chore, so

she goes only a few times a year and has turned

to shopping over the Internet.

Suggested Activity Review Table 3.1 and circle your top three terminal values and your top three instrumental values. Discuss in class why these are important to you.

Terminal and Instrumental Values Terminal Values (end states of existence)

instrumental Values (modes of conduct)

a comfortable life (a prosperous life) ambitious (hardworking, aspiring)

an exciting life (a stimulating, active life) Broadminded (open-minded)

a sense of accomplishment (lasting

contribution)

Capable (competent, effective)

a world at peace (free of war and conflict) Cheerful (lighthearted, joyful)

a world of beauty (nature and the arts) Clean (neat, tidy)

equality (brotherhood, equal opportunity) Courageous (standing up for your beliefs)

Family security (taking care of loved ones) Forgiving (willing to pardon others)

Freedom (independence, free choice) helpful (working for others’ welfare)

happiness (contentedness) honest (sincere, truthful)

Inner harmony (freedom form inner conflict) Imaginative (daring, creative)

mature love (sexual and spiritual intimacy) Independent (self-reliant, self-sufficient)

national security (protection from attack) Intellectual (intelligent, reflective)

Pleasure (an enjoyable, leisurely life) logical (consistent, rational)

Salvation (saved, eternal life) loving (affectionate, tender)

Self-respect (self-esteem) obedient (dutiful, respectful)

Social recognition (respect, admiration) Polite (courteous, well-mannered)

True friendship (close companionship) Responsible (dependable, reliable)

Wisdom (a mature understanding of life) Self-controlled (restrained,

self-disciplined)

Source: M. Rokeach (1968, Winter). The role of values in public opinion research. Public Opinion Quarterly, 32, 554, by permission of Oxford University Press.

Table 3.1

76 chapter 3

Societal and Cultural Values Although values are enduring and measurable, they are not static. An individual’s and

society’s values can change through an evolutionary process. They may be influenced by all

of the following:

• Family or societal upset

• Technological, economic, and cultural changes

• Dramatic events such as war, famine, or disease

• Environmental threats

The Great Depression, which began in October 1929, and lasted through the 1930s,

influenced an entire generation to be cautious spenders. Thrift and security remained very

important values to these people well after the Depression was over. The recent recession has

brought renewed attention to economic problems and behaviors.

In regard to environmental safety (a value), people are now more aware than ever before of

the dangers of environmental threats, such as unclaimed floating barges laden with garbage,

oil spills, and polluted air. Corresponding behaviors range from personal accountability (e.g.,

recycling or joining cleanup crews) to national accountability (e.g., the promotion of environ-

mental legislation and more vigorous government enforcement of environmental regulations).

Values are the cornerstones of a society’s culture. They stand for what is worthwhile,

preferred, and consistent. Cultural values are generally held conceptualizations of what is

right or wrong in a culture or what is preferred. Customs, manners, and gestures are indi-

cators of cultural values. For example, bowing in deference to one’s superiors or elders is

customary in South Korea but would be unusual in the United States. Bowing is the outward

behavior that reflects the underlying value of deference or respect. The deeper the bow, the

more the respect shown. In the United States, respect for the elderly would more likely be

displayed by use of formal names (“Mr. Smith,” not “Joe”) and by giving up seats on trains and

buses as well as by offering other forms of aid.

Socialization, value transmission, begins in the family.

Values, Attitudes, Goals, and Motivation 77

People in Western cultures, such as Canada, the United States, Australia, and most coun-

tries in Western Europe, customarily eat three meals a day, whereas eating five meals a day

is customary in East and Southeast Asian cultures. Even the meaning of gestures (a behavior)

varies by culture. For example, the hand sign for “okay” in the United States is considered an

obscene gesture in some Latin American countries.

Understanding cultural differences can be helpful in a variety of contexts, including man-

agement and planning of workplaces, transportation systems, and homes. For instance,

supervisors who keep a close watch on their workers may be viewed as caring in some

cultures, but overbearing and belittling in others. Cultures also vary in the types of mass transit

they prefer and the amount of crowding people will tolerate in subways and trains. Typical

cultural values and standards of comfort, function, and beauty influence floor plans of homes

and interior designs.

For example, consider the differences between values in the United States, in Europe, and

in Japan. These areas of the world are called “the rich economies of the Triad,” which have

enjoyed rapid growth in the past and are mature economies with aging populations (Kono &

Lynn, 2007). Historically, the Japanese tend to be more concerned with consensus and are

group-oriented. Consequently, Japanese businesses offer their employees more security and

longer-term employment than most American businesses. Apparently this is shifting, and in

Japan there is a value system emerging which gives more importance to self-fulfillment and

self-assertion (Kono & Lynn, 2007). As contacts between the countries increase through mass

media, travel, and business exchange, the value gap is narrowing. This trend provokes criti-

cism from some observers, including Willis Harman, author of Global Mind Change:

The industrialized world, having lost any consensus on ultimate meanings and values,

steers itself mainly by economic and financial signals serving as pseudovalues. Part of

the developing world is scrambling to catch up with the West; other parts are seeking

some attractive alternative to scrapping their own cultural roots and adopting the alien

culture of the West. (1998, p. 126)

One does not have to cross national borders to find cultural differences in values, attitudes,

and behavior. They exist everywhere within countries. Regional food preferences are a good

example. The food in northern Italy is quite different from that in southern Italy. In the United

States, grits are a favorite food in the South, but are rarely eaten elsewhere. People from

different regions of the United States perceive and use time differently.

Families, Values, Standards, and Households All families have values and value orientations, and the way they maintain their homes is an

expression of those values. As Chapter 1 explained, standards are the quantitative and/or

qualitative criteria used to measure values and goals, and to reconcile resources with demands.

Different family members may have different standards for time and household work. What is

“on time” to one family member may not be “on time” to another. And a teenager’s standard

of a clean bedroom may not be the same as his parents’. Standards also vary greatly between

households. Dennis, a 13-year-old, told his parents about the variations he had observed in

the cleaning standards of the households of three of his friends:

We don’t like going to Daryl’s house because it is sterile. It is so clean it is spooky, like

nobody lives there and we are afraid to touch anything. They even clean the driveway.

The only things in Daryl’s room are a bed, a dresser, and a desk. Steve’s house is a

78 chapter 3

mess because they have that awful dog tearing up everything. Brent’s house is about

like ours, somewhere in the middle. So we usually end up at our house, sometimes

at Brent’s.

The physical and emotional quality of home and family life have been a subject of debate

across time and across cultures. Two national surveys about family values and patterns of

behavior indicated that people in the United States think the family is falling apart everywhere

but in their own home. This paradox is called the “I’m OK, but you’re not” syndrome. According

to one survey, “four out of five Americans claim they wouldn’t give up Thanksgiving dinner

with their family for $1,000.” Nevertheless, two

out of three Americans say that family values

have grown weaker. The researchers summed

up this paradox as follows: “Some of this is

real change. . . . But some is the same pattern

you find when you ask people about schools or

crime or members of Congress. Everyone else’s

is terrible, but theirs is OK.”

Couples may or may not have compatible values:

Daniel Caine, president of Split-Up.com, a financial-planning firm for divorcing couples,

says that divorce is rooted in five areas: insecurity, money, communication, clash of

values, and insufficient separation from family. He recommends asking a few questions:

Are you comfortable with my religious observance? My family? My urge for wealth?

“Opposites attract, but that doesn’t mean they stay together,” he warns. (Zaslow,

2003, p. D1)

A study compared attitudes about engagement rings over a 15-year period. It was

found that the 200 new brides who said YES and 54 percent who said NO to the question,

“Would you ever consider trading in your engagement ring for a bigger, better diamond?” had

different marital outcomes, when polled later. Of the 46 percent who said YES, 81 percent

were divorced. Of the more sentimental type who said NO, 78 percent were still married.

The psychiatrist who monitored the study, Francisco Montalvo, said the results suggest that

people who are “hardwired” to upgrade rings may also be driven to upgrade houses, cars,

and even spouses (Zaslow, 2003).

vAlue foRmAtion And sociAlizAtion Values are shared by most members of a society and are passed on to younger members by

senior members. Families, especially parents, play a fundamental role in forming children’s

values. The ability to cope with and adjust to life problems and demands is based on the

psychological foundations of early family experience. Parents perceive that within their soci-

ety certain competencies and values are important for their child’s growth and development.

For example, parents influence their children’s dress and grooming standards, manners and

speech, and educational motivation. Thus, the culture’s child-rearing patterns reflect the

parents’ and the greater society’s values and the environmental context in which the parents

live. As the society changes, so do the values parents impart to their children. If the immediate

society has high expectations so do the parents. This is apparent in high-end school districts

and neighborhoods.

Suggested Activity Make a list of your family’s values and give an example of each. The example could be an action, a memory, an activity, or a saying that demonstrates the value.

Values, Attitudes, Goals, and Motivation 79

The process by which children learn the rules and values of a society is called

socialization. Although the family is the primary socializer of children, parents are not the

only influence. Values are affected by a host of variables, conditions, and sources, such as the

media, friends, and extended family. Furthermore, to imply that socialization is only a child-

hood experience would be misleading. Although socialization starts in infancy, it is a lifelong

process influenced by many sources.

A subsystem of socialization is called “consumer socialization”; through this process,

people acquire the skills, attitudes, and information necessary to function in the marketplace.

Children initially learn much of their consumption behavior from accompanying their parents

on shopping trips. By adolescence, children are likely to shop with friends. In fact going shop-

ping with friends has become such a popular teen activity that some malls in the United States

have limited teen shopping hours. This practice raises an interesting question of societal

values: Should stores be able to restrict who shops in them?

tRAditionAlism And nontRAditionAlism Dominant social and cultural trends are often counterbalanced by other trends. For example,

the value of traditionalism (going back to basics) appears to recur in cycles. It is estimated

that 29 percent of Americans can be called “heartlanders,” or traditionalists. They hold

traditional views, specifically believing in the value of small-town and country life (Ray, 1997).

Traditionalists are a smaller group within the U.S. population than modernists (47 percent),

who place a high value on personal success, consumerism, materialism, and technological

rationality. The other main group consists of the cultural creatures (24 percent), who put a

strong emphasis on having new and unique experiences and are attuned to global issues and

social causes.

Newspapers, books, and television and radio shows also take value stances. For exam-

ple, many magazines and newspapers will not publish cigarette advertisements. The renewed

interest in traditionalism is not the exclusive domain of any magazine. Clothing and home

furnishing retailers have noticed a renewed interest in traditional patterns, styles, and fabrics.

The new traditionalists put the well-being of families and children ahead of ostentatious con-

sumption. A car advertisement directed to the new traditionalists would emphasize the car’s

safety (e.g., airbags, low accident rate) over its speed.

A swing toward nontraditional behavior is evidenced in large numbers of Asians delay-

ing or rejecting marriage. Marriage ages have risen all over the world but the mean age of

marriage in Japan, Hong Kong, South Korea, and Taiwan has risen sharply in the last few

decades to 29–30 for women and 31–33 for men. There are a number of factors involved such

as women being more financially independent and having more education. In East Asia fertility

rates have fallen from 5.3 children per woman in the late 1960s to 1.6 now. Family life is being

redefined and governments are re-examining divorce laws, pensions, maternal and paternal

leave, and subsidies for child care.

Value Chains In the business world, value chains are the glue that holds any business together. “Value

chains” refers to a series of events or activities that take place in a specific time and space.

According to Peter Senge et al.’s book The Necessary Revolution: How Individuals and

Organizations Are Working Together to Create a Sustainable Future (2008), employees

80 chapter 3

comprehensively work together to create a place that is ecologically, economically, and

socially relevant. In business, the ultimate goal is maximizing profit or value creation while

minimizing costs.

Businesses seek solutions to underlying problems. Their values form a connectedness

throughout the organization. For example, the value of ecoconsciousness (concern for the

environment, the search for safe and renewable resources) can be espoused by companies

or by individuals and families.

Thus, the concept of value chains can fit families who build a shared commitment over

time, agree on choices, and position, strategize, or plan for the future, such as parents saving

for the college education of their children. Families are all about sustainability, value creation

and retention, and innovation. Shared activities, traditions, or events hold them together, and

provide a sense of identity.

Attitudes As noted earlier in this chapter, attitudes are favorable or unfavorable feelings or ideas about

some matter. They are expressions of likes and dislikes. People have attitudes about other

people, objects, and issues. Examples of attitudes are prejudice about racial or cultural issues,

notions about the characteristics of rich people versus poor people, and ideas about war,

space exploration, or politics. Letters to the editor in newspapers are filled with attitudes and

opinions, and so are blogs.

Attitudes are learned and have a basis in memories. Just as with values, children learn

their attitudes primarily from their families, but with time those attitudes are also shaped by

other environmental influences. As they develop into adults, men and women shape their

attitudes about parenting and managing a home. Child rearing and household manage-

ment practices (ways of planning and doing work in the home, standards of cleanliness, and

Shared meal time reinforces family values.

Source: Getty Images—Stockbyte.

Values, Attitudes, Goals, and Motivation 81

assigning tasks) are learned first in childhood. Adults choose to accept, reject, or modify the

household management practices they learned in their youth.

Once learned, attitudes influence behavior. Two experts on the effects of attitudes on

behavior, Icek Ajzen and Martin Fishbein (1980), developed a theory of reasoned action,

which assumes that human beings are usually quite rational and make systematic use of the

information available to them. This theory is heavily used today in consumer and household

behavior research. Ajzen and Fishbein posit that individuals consider the implications of their

actions before they decide to engage in a given behavior. In their theory, a person’s intention

to perform (or not to perform) a behavior is the immediate determinant of the action. The indi-

vidual’s positive or negative evaluation of performing a behavior is her or his attitude toward

the behavior. The second factor in the intention to act is called the subjective norm. This refers

to the person’s perception of the social pressures put on him or her to perform or not perform

the behavior in question. Ease or difficulty of behavior is also a factor.

Thus, intention to behave a certain way will be affected by whether the person evaluates

the behavior as positive, by what other people think, and by whether the action is perceived as

easy or difficult. Beliefs shape attitudes and subjective norms, which in turn lead to intention

and then actual behavior.

Because attitudes are not directly observable, they must be determined by research or

by observation of behavior; however, care should be taken in inferring attitudes and values

based solely on behavior. For example, the distance between two people talking to each other

may be indicative of their attitudes (likes and dislikes) toward each other, but it may also reflect

cultural standards of behavior (see Chapter 7). As another example, work behavior is often

easy to observe: Is the person a loner? Or a team player? Is a person always late? Or early?

Reliable? Or unreliable? Is the person’s work neat? Or sloppy? Attitudes about time, indepen-

dence, control, obedience to authority, and conformity to rules all affect work behavior.

Goals and Motivation Some attitudes and values are held more strongly than others. Likewise, some goals are

pursued more strongly than others. If goals are to be achieved, they must be specific and

realistic. Goals are different from attitudes and values because they are deliberately chosen

often after weighing the pros and the cons, all the options that are possible.

Figure 3.2 shows the relationship between values and goals. Once a goal has been iden-

tified, values provide the impetus—the start—toward its attainment. A person fulfills a desire

or a need by engaging in goal-seeking behavior—leading, one hopes, to goal achievement.

The seeking of goals requires energy, commitment, and motivation. As the figure shows, not

all goals are reached; some have to be reformulated or dropped. Not all goals or opportuni-

ties are worthy of effort. Goals should be desired end states. Accordingly, flexibility is one

of the most important characteristics of goal setting. Knowing when to let go of unrealis-

tic or unattainable goals is an important step in the management process. Goals should be

Identify goal desired

Values Goal formation and commitment

Goal-seeking behaviors

Goal attainment, rejection, or reformulation

Figure 3.2 Interactive values–Goals model.

82 chapter 3

constantly re-evaluated and updated. If goals are not fully committed to (and are not exciting

and compelling), they have little chance of being attained. Here are some pointers to remem-

ber when you set goals:

• What benefits will attaining this goal bring to my life?

• What will I be able to do once this goal is achieved?

• How will this goal benefit others?

• How will I feel when I achieve this goal?

Goals Versus Habits Goals are things people are trying to accomplish. Not all behaviors are goal directed or goal

activated; some are simply basic survival behaviors or habits. Goals can be intrinsic (coming

from inside) or they can be extrinsic (coming from outside).

Case study A colleague suggested that 45-year-old Monica apply for a government board and sent her the information about it. Monica researched it and thought “Why not?” and put in her application

to a pool of about 100. She and 10 others were selected to serve two-year terms. Was this goal achievement intrinsic or extrinsic or both?

Habits are repetitive, often unconscious, patterns of behavior like brushing one’s teeth.

This action is related to the goals of better dental health and having an attractive appearance.

Confucius said that “the nature of men is always the same; it is their habits that separate

them.” In other words, habits are unique to the individual. They can be either good or bad.

Whining and overeating are bad habits. Treating others with respect and being courteous are

good habits. Goals encompass more than just the fulfillment of immediate wants and needs.

For example, graduating from law school is a goal, but eating a hamburger is not—it is the

fulfillment of a need, hunger.

Goal Attributes Not all goals are created equal; each has certain characteristics or attributes.

For example, goals vary in

• Intensity: Commitment, how much the goal is desired

• Complexity: Interrelationships, how many other goals are related to this goal

• Priority: How important the goal is and how attainable is it

• Resource Use: How much the goal is going to cost (energy, money) and how many

resources will be put into this goal versus other pursuits

• Timing: How long it will take to attain the goal

These goal attributes are demonstrated by the behaviors of Roger and Stephanie. Roger, a

22-year-old, worked for eight years during high school and college and saved every penny to

Values, Attitudes, Goals, and Motivation 83

buy a BMW. Stephanie, also a 22-year-old, made finding the best job her top priority during her

senior year in college and put that goal before everything else. Roger and Stephanie directed

their attention, developed strategies, mobilized effort, and persisted until they reached their

goals. Both were highly goal driven. When goals are highly prized, people are more inclined to

hang on and not let go.

Goals provide a sense of purpose and direct behavior toward a positive end result (e.g.,

a BMW, a job). Although goals are generally regarded as positive, problems can surface

when goal conflict occurs in families or other groups. Conflict develops when goals compete

with or subvert each other. If a family’s goal is to eat a leisurely Sunday dinner together,

conflict may arise if the teenage children would rather skip dinner and spend the afternoon

with their friends.

Types of Goals For purposes of discussion, it is useful to categorize goals. Among the ways goals can be

categorized are the following:

• By time: short-term, intermediate, or long-term

• By role: personal, professional, societal, or familial

• By type: primary or secondary

Each category will be discussed in the following sections.

Striving for goals has often been compared to climbing a mountain.

Source: Dorling Kindersley Media Library.

84 chapter 3

GoAls And time In terms of time required for attaining, goals can be separated into short-term, intermediate,

and long-term goals.

• Short-term goals usually take less than three months to accomplish.

• Intermediate goals can usually be achieved in three months to one year.

• Long-range goals usually take more than one year to achieve.

A fall-semester college junior may have a short-term goal of finishing current coursework, an

intermediate goal of finishing the year, and a long-term goal of graduating. College students

are assumed to be long-term planners. For example, job recruiters typically ask college inter-

viewees, “What do you plan to be doing five years from now?” With this question, the recruiter

finds out whether the student has thought ahead, is a realistic planner, and is ambitious.

For some, goal setting is a luxury reserved for the wealthy and the better educated.

Certainly, setting long-term goals implies a secure future or at least one partially under control.

Low-income families do not always have the resource base to think beyond fulfilling daily

needs and short-term goals. In terms of Maslow’s hierarchy of needs, they are concerned with

the physiological and safety levels of the hierarchy. For them, planning six months in advance

would be a luxury. At the other extreme are celebrities who may have managers or agents,

who plan their schedules five years or more in advance.

Goals and Performance, Creativity, and Learning Another way to categorize or group goals is by performance, creativity, or learning.

Performance goals emphasize outcomes or actions, things that can be seen such as at a

sporting event with scores or measurements. Examples would be how fast a runner goes or

Critical Thinking

List the goals you are striving for arranged by time and by priority (put the main one first in each category):

Short-term (less than three months): 1. 2. 3.

Intermediate (three months to a year): 1. 2. 3.

Long-range (more than a year): 1. 2. 3.

Values, Attitudes, Goals, and Motivation 85

how many basketballs go through the hoop. In sports, we even see the word “goal” used as

in goal post or goal line or in hockey a goalie. There are other kinds of performance such as

in dance, in music, or in public speaking or debate. Creativity goals are unique in that they

are characterized by someone wanting to do new things or to be original, not just to master

skills. A person would be striving to be ingenious or innovative, a founder or an originator of

a movement, style, or school of thought or action. Learning goals emphasize the gaining of

competence such as learning to be a better reader, understanding more vocabulary, or know-

ing more about an author or a subject (such as management) or an idea. Both performing

and learning goals are about building knowledge, ability, and experience and the two types of

goals often intertwine. Creativity goals are about pushing the levels even further, beyond those

previously imagined.

Think of the role of teachers and coaches in helping children and adults toward achieving

performance and learning goals and encouraging creativity. This leads to our next discussion.

GoAls And Roles Another way to categorize goals is by role. In this typology, goals can be personal, profes-

sional, societal, or familial. Personal goals include such things as learning how to swing dance,

ski, skydive, or ride a horse. Achieving personal goals provides a “positive affect such as

pride and satisfaction (and maybe make us scream with delight). The goal is the essence of

all we think of what it means to be human. It is to have purpose that directs how we think and

act . . .” (Moskowitz & Grant, 2009, p. 1). Professional goals are related to one’s job or career;

they might include improving skills like using computers, writing a contract, or conducting an

interview. You achieve career success when you reach the goals you have set for yourself.

Because the goals are individually defined, they vary among individuals. For some, success is

defined by titles, awards, frequent promotions, or salary increases; for others, these are less

important, and success is defined by completion of difficult projects, for example. One way to

envision success is to pay attention to the winners in a field—who they are and what they do—

with special focus on those with continued success rather than a singular moment of glory.

Societal goals are commonly held by the greater society; they include such goals as

having a full-time job by a certain age, marrying, having children, and retiring. Familial goals are

related to being a son, daughter, parent, or other family member. At any one time, a person

might be achieving personal and professional goals while considering or reacting to societal

or familial goals.

An individual can have one or two goals, or dozens. People who are professionally

oriented may have many career goals and may ignore personal goals. Other people may have

no professional or career goals (their job is simply something they do to earn money, so they

go home at five o’clock and forget about it) and are interested only in personal or family goals.

Management comes into play because goals must be prioritized and strategies developed.

What is most important? How do people go about getting what they want?

GoAls by tyPe: PRimARy And secondARy GoAls Goals can also be categorized as primary and secondary. For example, if a person’s primary

goal is to attain a college degree, then his or her secondary goals would include being accepted

into a college, passing courses, and completing graduation requirements. Secondary goals

are smaller; they motivate and collectively add up to the primary goals.

86 chapter 3

Setting Goals The beneficial effect of goal setting on task performance is one of the most validated concepts

in psychology. Simply stated, people accomplish more when they set goals. Studies of survi-

vors of concentration camps found that those who had a purpose for living and well-defined

goals were better able to withstand deprivation, including starvation and torture, than those

without goals. Many of the survivors said that their main goal was to see their family again.

To be helpful, goals should have certain characteristics. First, goals must be reasonable,

attainable, and within the resources of the goal setter. For example, a person who wants

to buy a house must have the resources to make a down payment and meet the monthly

payments. Saying that goals should be realistic and attainable does not mean that they should

be easy to accomplish. Indeed, goals should present some challenge for the goal setter.

Goals should also be clearly formed. When asked about his formula for success, J. Paul

Getty, one of the richest men in the world, said, “Rise early. Work late. Strike oil.” The impor-

tance of having clear, specific goals cannot be overemphasized. The goal of buying a new car

is too vague because it cannot be visualized. The goal of buying a certain type of car in one

year is effective, however, because it allows the mind to form a specific picture of the car and

focuses attention on actions and a time frame for achieving the goal. When the person sees

advertisements for that particular car or passes one in a parking lot, her decision to try to buy

that car will be reinforced. Of course, during the year she may decide on another model, but

at least initially, visualizing a specific car can be helpful. Goals provide an avenue for freedom,

a sense of control, and, as noted before, a sense of direction and purpose.

oPtimism, GoAls, And Well-beinG In Authentic Happiness Martin Seligman, a past president of the American Psychological

Association and professor of psychology at the University of Pennsylvania, says that happiness

and optimism are essential for a good and successful life. He is a leader in the positive psychol-

ogy movement, which looks at what is right with people rather than at what is wrong. Optimism

is a tendency or a disposition to expect the best outcome or to think hopefully about a situation.

The belief that things will get better is called the optimism bias. Children express it when they

say, “When I grow up I will . . .” and you express it when you say, “When I graduate I will. . . .”

Critical Thinking

“We like to think of ourselves as rational creatures. We watch our backs, weight the odds, pack an umbrella. But both neuroscience and social science suggest that we are more optimistic than realistic. On average, we expect things to turn out better than they wind up being. People hugely underestimate their chances of getting divorced, losing their job or being diagnosed with cancer; expect their children to be extraordinarily gifted; envi- sion themselves achieving more than their peers; and overestimate their likely life span (sometimes by 20 years or more)” (Sharot, 2011, p. 38). Why does optimism bias hold forth in every race, region, and socioeconomic group even though there are illnesses, hurricanes, floods, tornadoes, and high unemployment?

Values, Attitudes, Goals, and Motivation 87

Researchers are accumulating evidence that our brains aren’t just conjuring up the past

but rather are constantly being shaped by imagining the future. Some call this mental time

travel. We see ourselves in this new setting, happy and fulfilled. Maybe this explains the popu-

larity of wedding movies and television shows.

Optimists work longer hours and tend to make more money and save more money which

makes sense; they are saving for the future. When Americans are asked if they will live to

100, about 10 percent say yes but in reality less than 2 percent will live that long. A study by

scientists at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota, revealed that optimists had 19 percent

greater longevity, in terms of their expected life span, than did pessimists (Danner, Snowdon, &

Friesen, 2001).

So what are we to make of this as management experts? Perhaps a more measured view

comes from Martin Seligman who promotes flexible optimism—optimism with its eyes open

rather than the total rose-colored glasses variety. He says that people are not stuck with their

pasts, but can learn from them. We should be knowledgeable and hopeful, for example, try

to stay healthy but get health insurance, too. The kinds of phrases associated with optimism

include a person saying or thinking

• “I’m usually lucky.”

• “I’m talented.”

• “My dog is better than any other at the obedience class.”

• “My rival is no good.”

• “I’m smart.”

• “I’m good at lots of things.”

• “I give everything my best shot.”

• “I have a lot to look forward to.”

• “I drive better than other people.”

• “I look better than my friends.”

In pursuit of understanding the linkages between health and illness, other researchers

have explored the relationship between optimism and general well-being. An optimist is more

likely to think that goals are reachable. A Harris poll revealed that Americans are happier and

more optimistic about their future than are most Europeans. Within Europe, the percent-

age of people who were very satisfied with their lives varied from 64 percent in Denmark to

26 percent in Finland. Those in between included people in the Netherlands, Luxembourg,

Sweden, the United Kingdom, Ireland, and Austria. More Irish and Swedish respondents,

than the Americans, to the telephone poll said their lives had improved more in the last five

years. The most optimistic European country was Spain. Respondents from Germany and

the Mediterranean countries indicated that they were less happy and optimistic than Northern

Europeans (Taylor, 2003) although a more recent poll found that Malta, an island nation in

the Mediterranean Sea, is the happiest of the European nations. These poll results are merely

indicators and not all evidence comes from surveys. In anecdotal evidence, curators at a New

York retrospective exhibition of works by Matisse and Picasso noted that the colorful, cheerful

works of Matisse drew far more visitors than did Picasso’s (Goodale, 2003).

imPoRtAnce of chAllenGe If we had no sense of challenge we would never try to change our appearance; notice the new

fashions, weather, or the news; or try to get better at anything. A drive to achieve leads to goal

88 chapter 3

pursuit. The novelist F. Scott Fitzgerald said, “Vitality shows in not only the ability to persist

but the ability to start over.” Starting over is a challenge. Goals need to be reset. How does

a person choose the goals to pursue? The study of management assumes that if someone

devotes the required resources, plans well, and makes the sacrifices necessary, almost any-

thing is achievable. Consequently, people should aim high and set goals that force them to do

their best. By creating a challenge, goals affect performance by directing attention, mobilizing

effort, increasing persistence, and motivating strategy development.

Anthony, who is single and 25, listed his goals for the next five years as follows:

• Career/work: Own a fitness center

• Home: Have a nice apartment

• Personal: Date someone seriously, have lots of friends

• Leisure: Work out every day

Do Anthony’s goals seem realistic for someone who works full-time in a gym and has a college

degree in nutrition and fitness? How much does it cost to open a fitness center? To rent an

apartment? What secondary goals does he need to accomplish to reach his primary goal of

owning a fitness center? Anthony’s goal of owning a fitness center has created a very real

challenge for him and forced him to develop strategies to achieve it. Anthony’s strategies

include learning all he can from the gym where he now works before opening his own fitness

center and fulfilling his secondary goals of paying off his college loans and credit cards and

saving money.

PlAns foR AttAininG GoAls Once goals are set, a plan for achieving them must be developed. Planning includes all

managerial activities that determine results and the appropriate means to achieve those

results. It involves the following five steps:

1. Set specific goals and prioritize them; weigh options.

2. State the goals clearly and positively. For example, “I will be a nonsmoker by January 1”—

not “I will stop smoking.” “I will lose five pounds”—not “I will lose weight.”

3. Forecast possible future events and the resources that will be needed. This entails deter-

mining both the level of material resources that will be needed and the amount of effort

that will be required.

4. Implement the plan by following through with goal-directed activity. In other words, don’t

just plan, do something. A lot of people get stuck on the planning phase.

5. Be aware of discrepancies between what is and what is desired by detecting what doesn’t

fit forward progress; make adjustments; be flexible which means redefining goals when

necessary.

Note that the planning process begins with prioritizing goals. Prioritizing involves ranking

goals by the degree of commitment to them. Commitment is the sense of obligation one feels

toward the goal. If a goal is not enticing or inspiring, something is wrong, and the goal will not

serve its function of motivating the person to put in greater effort. Prioritizing forces people to

decide what they really want and how they are going to get it. Step five involves critical think-

ing, self-reflection, and being ready and able to read outside clues.

We reset goals all the time. A common one is a New Year’s Eve resolution. About

23 percent of New Year resolutions are broken in the first week, 45 percent by the end of

Values, Attitudes, Goals, and Motivation 89

January (Norcross & Prochaska, 1998). People fail to keep their resolutions because their

willpower is not enough, they haven’t chosen realistic resolutions, and they fail to devise a

plan to work on them every day. Even the smallest step makes a difference in the long run.

Doing ten morning pushups is better than not doing pushups at all.

obstAcles to GoAl Achievement Many forces such as family or health crises pull us away from goals. All the goal setting in the

world cannot stop unplanned events from altering the course of resource use. Obstacles to

achieving goals include, but are not limited to, the following: time, parents, family, rules, peers,

social customs, demands, imagination, money, health, and natural disasters.

Obstacles alone do not determine the fate

of human goal-seeking behavior. Instead, the

way people perceive and react to obstacles will

determine whether they will reach their goals.

One way to overcome obstacles is to divide

larger goals into smaller ones, which allows

a person to make progress a little at a time.

It also helps to find a trusted, nonjudgmental

friend who is willing to discuss about one’s

goals and periodically check on how projects

are going.

Monitoring one’s progress by marking deadlines on a calendar is useful as well. Everyone

should also be aware of when roadblocks are likely to occur. Is it at the start of projects? In

the middle? At the end?

Resilience is defined as the ability to overcome obstacles and to achieve positive out-

comes even after experiencing extreme difficulties. Individual traits associated with resilience

include intelligence, competence, a good-natured temperament, internal locus of control, and

self-esteem. Researchers also note that relationships can help protect a person from stress

and promote positive growth. In other words, resilience—although an inner ability (involving

courage and fortitude)—is helped and accentuated by strong, encouraging relationships.

Parents play an important role in helping children learn how to be resilient.

Suggested Activity Keep a journal. Each week write down your goals (short-term, intermediate, and/or long-term). For one month do not look back at the previous entries; then read all of them at once. Do you see a pattern? Were any of the goals accomplished? Or was significant progress made on any of them? If yes, keep on or else, perhaps goals need to be re-evaluated.

Critical Thinking

Joel Haber, author of Bullyproof Your Child for Life, says that a resilient child knows how to handle letdowns. To boost resilience, he says, first show you understand the child’s feelings and then ask what he or she has done to rebound. Brainstorm together how to deal with bullying situations and setbacks. Do you remember any bullying situa- tions or disappointments that you or your friends experienced? What steps were taken to bounce back? How long did it take?

90 chapter 3

Renee Spencer (2000) found a number of studies indicating that one supportive

adult can provide good outcomes for children coping with poverty, problems at school,

malnutrition, separation from a parent, marital discord at home, divorcing parents,

and mental illness of parents. David Elkind, a Tufts University professor emeritus and

author  of  The  Hurried Child, says that teens experience what he calls “an imaginary

audience,” a feeling that others are watching and evaluating them. There are so many

changes going on in teens’ lives that they tend to over-magnify other peoples’ judging

of them. They are often sensitive and self-absorbed during these years. He believes that

parents can help during those trying times when their children are making transitions to

the next stage. The reason why this is especially important is that the teens are laying the

groundwork for how they will deal with future life transitions when they are on uncertain

social  ground.

Finally, goals need to be re-evaluated. Resistance to goals may mean that it is time to

change them or to take a break. Pursuing goals requires energy.

needs foR Achievement: the n Ach fActoR People can make themselves miserable trying to set impossible goals such as earning a million

dollars in a year or insisting that everyone be happy every minute of a family vacation. Healthy

goals are a little out of reach, but they are not impossible dreams. Compromise and flexibility

rule the day.

In a classic study, David McClelland, a Harvard psychologist, stressed that individuals

vary in their need for achievement, which he called “n Ach” (McClelland, 1961). He found that

each individual has a different level of motivation for overcoming obstacles, desiring success,

and expending effort to seek out difficult tasks and do them well as quickly as possible. He

emphasized that the achievement motive can be expressed as a desire to perform in terms of

a standard of excellence or to be successful in competitive situations. You can choose to act

in ways that help you achieve goals.

A person possessing high n Ach takes moderate risks, not high risks as one might

assume. This phenomenon can be demonstrated by the ring-toss game. Low achiev-

ers will stand very near the peg and drop the rings over it or stand far away and wildly

throw  the ring. High achievers will carefully calculate the exact distance from the peg

that  will challenge their abilities, yet will give them a chance for success. Thus, low

achievers take a low or high risk, and high achievers take a moderate risk. Research

indicates that this pattern holds true in most walks of life and for children as well as

for adults.

Disengaging from Goals So much of goal study is about setting and reaching goals and although in step five we talked

about re-adjusting goals we need to go more in depth about letting go. It turns out that this

is a hard thing to do, to let go of, for example, the dream of being married to a certain person

or being a star athlete. In the financial world, people have an easier time buying stocks than

selling them especially at a loss. They have a hard time facing they made the wrong decision

even though circumstances beyond their control have changed. Goal disengagement over

Values, Attitudes, Goals, and Motivation 91

time means some goals have to be let go or sharply redefined. Different types of disengage-

ment include:

1. Behavioral (switching to new activities)

2. Affective (a change in feelings)

3. Motivational (changing motives, the seeds of actions)

Consider the case study of Bob and Sally and determine if they were disengaged for behav-

ioral, affective, and/or motivational reasons.

Case study Brad and sally Brad and Sally, both professionals with careers, were married for twenty-three years and then got divorced because of irreconcil- able differences. They just did not get along in their later years the way they did when newly married and starting careers and their family. Their college-age son and daughter hoped they would get back together. After living apart for five years Bob and Sally started

dating and decided to remarry. They bought a townhouse. Within a year they were separated again. Sally said, “We never should have gotten remarried, we do fine living apart but our differences come out when we live together.” A few years passed and Sally married James and moved to another town. Brad stayed single and said he liked it that way.

Critical Thinking

A college club which was allied with a subject was losing membership and did not have a faculty advisor. The rule at the university was that student clubs had to have a faculty advisor assigned to them or the club would be dissolved. The department chairman sent out an email asking for a faculty member to be an advisor and also to re-invigorate the club. No one responded, so he sent out one final memo and said unless someone volun- teers to be an advisor we will let the club go. A nearly retired professor responded and said, “I’ll do it.” And, true to his word he did and the club grew. What does this story say about goal disengagement? What does this say about persistence? What does it say about goal setting and thinking of others?

lifestyles, GoAls, And feedbAck Each person has a basic notion of what he or she wants in the way of food, shelter, and com-

panionship; these basic needs evolve into a more complicated set of needs, which combine

to form a lifestyle. Likewise, goals often start simple and evolve into more complicated notions.

A recent college graduate might want a job, any job, to get started and then, as time goes by,

develop a more specific definition of what a good job is.

Goals don’t have to be selfish. They can be altruistic like starting a new club or helping

friends move or volunteering. Goals provide meaning and direction. They involve persistence

and initiative.

92 chapter 3

Forming short-term goals is a way to conserve the time and energy needed to reach

long-term goals. Short-term goals have the advantage that they can be completed fairly

rapidly, giving a sense of accomplishment. An author, for example, might write newspaper

and magazine articles during the same time period she is writing a novel so that she always

has something in process, in the mail, or in print.

Individuals and families need feedback to determine whether their goals are viable or

need to be changed. Goals are generally thought of as positives in life, but they can be self-

defeating if they are too difficult. Goals can also have a negative effect if they cause people to

be so single-minded that they do not see other possible goals or courses of action that might

be better. Both depression over failure to be an overnight success and single-minded focus on

today without a thought of the future can be self-defeating. Listening to feedback helps keep

goals realistic and on track.

College Students’ Values, Goals, and Life Outcomes Psychologists conducted a fascinating study of college yearbook photos. They compared

the actual life outcomes of women students whose photos showed a genuine smile, called

the “Duchenne smile” (named after its discoverer Guillaume Duchenne), with those of women

whose photos showed an inauthentic smile, called the Pan American smile. In the Duchenne

smile the corners of the mouth turn up, and the skin around the corners of the eyes crinkles

(like crow’s feet). The muscles that control these functions are connected, and it is difficult to

voluntarily control them. The Pan Am smile is a fake smile named after flight attendants posing

in advertisements for a now-defunct airline.

Dacher Kelter and LeeAnne Harker (2001) of the University of California, Berkeley, found

that the women with a Duchenne smile were more likely to be married, to stay married, and to

experience more personal well-being over a 30-year period. Others questioned whether the

results had more to do with good looks than with the smile itself, so the investigators went

back and rated how pretty each of the women seemed. They found that looks had nothing

to do with good marriages or life satisfaction. It turns out that a genuinely smiling woman was

simply more likely to be well-wed and happy (Seligman, 2002).

College students’ values, goals, and life outcomes have been the subject of many

studies. Researchers have found that, overall, college men and women have similar goal and

value orientations. For many students, the college years serve as a transition stage between

living at home with parents and living on their own—a physical and emotional bridge between

childhood and adulthood. Studies have shown that a close family relationship leads to more

successful adjustments to college life for students.

Because college is a transitory stage, goal instability is not unusual during the

college years. For example, students may change their majors and career choices many

times. Thus, goal instability is common for college students and can even be helpful,

but it can also be uncomfortable for the individual experiencing it. Nearly one-third of

college  freshmen do not return for their sophomore year and the numbers on this are

much higher for community colleges than for four-year colleges. The main reasons they

do not return are job opportunities, financial circumstances, poor grades, and personal

situations.

Values, Attitudes, Goals, and Motivation 93

Case study doug Doug’s parents went to college so he thought he would, too. He was an excellent band member in high school so he thought he would major in music. By the second semester he knew college was not for him so he joined the armed forces, where he played in a number of bands mostly in the Washington, DC, area but he also got to travel. After a few years he got married and was reassigned elsewhere. Not too long after that the marriage went

sour and he decided to leave the military and regroup. By age 26 he had experienced a lot of changes and was now ready for school. He wasn’t sure whether it should be a four-year college or community college or some other form of training such as becoming a firefighter. But, he was happy and enthused and felt he was rejoining life where he left off in the same college town that he started in.

The happiest college students surround themselves with family and friends.

Source: Corbis RF.

Although college students have the same array of values as the general population, the

media and social scientists over the years have attempted to categorize the general typology

of college students by decade or by generation. For example, students of the 1950s have

been described as conservative and conforming, as holders of traditional values who had

only slight concern for societal problems. After graduation, a typical student from these years

went on to become the join organizations and businesses grew incredibly. Many obeyed the

laws and fulfilled obligations, as they strove to get ahead. In this decade, significant advances

occurred in civil rights.

The late 1960s and the early 1970s are considered years of unrest and change, charac-

terized by the advent of the peace movement, the women’s liberation movement, and other

societal causes. College students challenged traditional ways of doing things, questioned

material gain, and extolled the virtues of individual rights and freedom. Values changed on

94 chapter 3

campuses, exemplified by the widespread introduction of coeducational dormitories and the

end of dress codes and curfews.

In the 1980s, the college culture moved back to material goals; students flooded business

schools and became more egocentric and less committed to broad sociopolitical change. The

students of the 1980s grew up during the downsizing of certain businesses; they saw or

experienced social and personal insecurities. As a result, they became more savvy and more

skeptical (Stoneman, 1998). A shift that occurred in the 1980s is that since 1982 more women

than men have received bachelor’s degrees and this trend continues today.

Students of the 1990s enjoyed the benefits of a strong economy and a thriving labor

market. They had more money than their predecessors. Colleges realized that standard

dormitory style living was becoming less attractive to students.

In the 21st century, many colleges in the United States and other countries built or reno-

vated dormitories to allow for more single rooms with bathrooms en suite, which means each

room has its own bathroom, or shared suites with fewer students per suite; others allowed

privatized on-campus apartments. The ups and downs of the economy affected the amount

of choice in the job market, although, as always, some majors led to more job opportuni-

ties than others. In 2003, The Association of American Medical Colleges reported that more

women than men applied to and were accepted at medical schools for the first time ever.

Critical Thinking

How will current students compare with those of previous generations? One trend is the growing concern over crime in the greater society and on college campuses. Another trend is the increasing acceptance of fragmentation and extreme individuality. As a coun- terpoint, some studies report a return to social engagement and involvement by college students. What do you think? Are college students becoming more socially engaged? Do they have lots of friends? Do they do a lot of volunteer or service work? Or, is it going the other way? One wonders because there are indications of increased disengagement expe- rienced in many areas of life: political apathy; retreat from church attendance; eroding union membership; and the decline of bridge clubs, dinner parties, Rotary clubs, volun- teering, and blood donation (Putnam, 2000). College students are often at the forefront of new thought and action. They can change the direction of the greater society.

Through intensive orientation programs, parents’ weekends, and other such activities,

campuses are trying to build a sense of community and purpose that meets students’

needs. It appears that the happiest people (college students or anyone else) “surround

themselves with family and friends, don’t care about keeping up with the Joneses

next door, lose themselves in daily activities, and most important, forgive easily” (Elias,

2002, p. A1).

The next section on motivation has enormous implications for college students. How

do they stay in college and keep studying so that they reach their goal of a college degree?

Motivation is a combination of individual qualities and parental and society’s reaction

or support.

Values, Attitudes, Goals, and Motivation 95

Motivation “The biggest human temptation is . . . to settle for too little,” says Thomas Merton, an

American monk and spiritual writer. Thomas Edison and his staff tried 3,000 ways to perfect

a lightbulb before they found one that worked. A motivated person has to take risks and

overcome obstacles to achieve goals. The word “motivation” comes from the Latin word

movere (to move). In management, motivation refers to movement toward goals or other

desired outcomes and also to vigor, drive, persistence, creativity, direction, and sustained

energy. One of the goals of nurturing children is to build each child’s strengths and virtues

as well as helping them find a niche where their positive traits can develop to the fullest. For

example, in the 2008 Olympics, the parents of one of the gold medal winners in gymnastics

mortgaged their house three times to pay for her coaching. They were definitely motivated,

as was their daughter.

Motivated individuals work hard. Motivation is shown through tasks, in mastery, in prac-

tice, and in public performances, such as piano recitals, debates, or sports events. Motivated

individuals develop exceptional qualities usually through an investment of time, staying in the

field as long as it takes to build expertise. They keep going despite setbacks. How they do this

is one of the puzzles in the study of human excellence.

Expertise is “the characteristics, skills, and knowledge that distinguish experts from

novices and less experienced people. In some domains there are objective criteria for find-

ing experts, who are consistently able to exhibit superior performance for representative

tasks in a domain. For example, chess masters will almost always win chess games against

recreational chess player in chess tournaments, medical specialists are far more likely to

diagnose a disease correctly than advanced medical students, and professional musicians

can perform pieces of music in a manner that is unattainable for less skilled musicians”

(Ericsson, Charness, Feltovich, & Hoffman, 2006, p. 3).

Critical Thinking

Can you remember a time when you were very motivated? When you succeeded in a pub- lic performance or in a competition? What steps led you to that performance or outcome? How many months or years of training or studying did it take?

Another way to approach motivation is to say one’s eagerness to pursue goals matters.

Motivation is not just a personal or family construct; it is the driving force behind companies

and organizations. Car salespeople try to sell a certain number of cars per month to reach

a quota. Real estate salespeople try to sell enough houses in a year to be on the “million

dollar seller list.” Girl Scouts try to sell enough boxes of cookies to go to camp. Goal setting’s

potential for improving productivity is so well established that it is rarely questioned as a

management technique.

Motivation is a process rather than an end state. The process begins with an unsatisfied

need that creates tension. This tension drives a person to undertake a search for resources or

96 chapter 3

information. Hence, the person does not feel satisfied until her or his need is fulfilled or the goal

attained. Internal and external factors contribute to the motivation to achieve goals.

Intrinsic motivation involves the underlying causes and the internal need for compe-

tence and self-determination. It can increase or decrease. If someone enjoys performing a

task such as distance running it is likely they will pursue it more—it is intrinsically satisfying. It

refers to the pleasure or value a person derives from the content of work or activity. If a student

works hard in school, the satisfaction he or she derives from learning and mastering a subject

provides the intrinsic motivation to keep learning. Extrinsic motivation involves forces exter-

nal to the individual—environmental factors such as titles, raises, preferred offices, promotions,

and other forms of rewards including forming meaningful relationships. For a student, extrinsic

motivators include “A” grades, the honor roll, the Dean’s List, the President’s List, the honor

society, scholarships, and other forms of recognition for academic performance. A waiter is

a member of a cycling club so that on weekends he goes on hundred-mile bike rides with a

group of men and women ages 20–58 and his extrinsic motivation is having them with him

versus cycling alone. They usually stop and have a drink mid-route and talk about the route

and next events. If anyone falls or if equipment fails, they help each other. Famous weight loss

organizations and television programs place great emphasis on extrinsic motivation.

A study by Regina Conti asked 110 adults about their summer projects: which ones they

wanted to do (primarily intrinsically motivated) and which ones they had to get done (primarily

extrinsically motivated). The results showed that projects that participants had to do as com-

pared with those they wanted to do were started and finished more often and had more time

devoted to them each week (Conti, 2000). Is this finding surprising to you? It actually adds

to the procrastination literature by suggesting that extrinsic motivation is essential to getting

things done. Summer projects such as those for self-improvement or enjoyment are most

likely to be put off.

Both intrinsic and extrinsic motivation are important for goal achievement. Children need

to experience both types. They should feel good about learning (intrinsic), and they should also

feel that their efforts are recognized by others (extrinsic). In the home, the family members who

do housework should feel good about living in a clean house and about having their cleaning

efforts noticed and appreciated by other family members.

One of the unsolved mysteries of life is why some people have more intrinsic motivation

than others. These people work hard regardless of the number and quality of external

rewards. Are the answers in genetics? In early childhood experiences? In work experi-

ences? In temperament? Psychologists and others are searching for the answers to these

questions. Often the intrinsically motivated individual values mastery, or values the learning

process over achievement of outcomes. The tennis champion Monica Seles described her

intrinsic motivation:

I really never enjoyed playing matches, even as a youngster. I just love to practice and

drill and that stuff. I just hate the whole thought that one [player] is better than the other.

It drives me nuts. (Vecsey, 1999, p. D1)

Far more is known about the working of extrinsic motivation than about intrinsic motiva-

tion. For example, extrinsic rewards are most effective if

• They are specific.

• They are given immediately after a good work performance.

• They are valued by the receiver.

• They are equitable.

Values, Attitudes, Goals, and Motivation 97

What one person perceives as a reward may not be perceived as desirable by another. For

example, a trip at the company’s expense to a convention might be valued by one employee,

but considered a burden by another. As another example, a child who does not like candy will

not view a candy bar as a reward. Rewards should be appropriate to the individual and at the

same time be perceived as equitable by the family or organization.

summarysummary This is a key chapter in the book because values, attitudes, motivation, and goals are four of the most important concepts in the management process. Values are principles that guide behav- ior. They stand for what is worthwhile, preferred, and consistent. Values are tested in times of stress or trouble. A value chain is the glue that holds families together, in time and in space. Value chain analysis is borrowed from business and refers to organizations that have a shared vision and value set.

Families play a fundamental role in the formation and trans- mission of values. Parents, as the primary socializers of children, greatly influence their children’s values. Goals are end results, the things people are working toward.

Motivation and optimism are important elements in achieving goals. Researchers study motivation in many fields from sports to chess and are interested in what drives individuals to perform at high levels. Is it intrinsic (inward) versus extrinsic (outside rewards, praise, recognition) motivation or a combination of both?

Attitudes are states of mind or feelings, likes and dislikes, about some matter. They often occupy a middle ground between values and goals.

A value or goal change recently evidenced is the growing number of people in their 20s, married or not, buying houses, a sign of settling down and establishing roots. This trend may be a symbol of optimism, an area studied by many psychologists including Martin Seligman. A Harris poll revealed that Americans are generally happier with their lives and more optimistic about their futures than are Europeans, although results vary depending on the individual nation within Europe.

When two people date or become close friends, they try to find out about each other’s values, attitudes, and goals, especially the one’s they have in common. Do they enjoy the same activities? Do they have similar or compatible views about leisure, work, religion, and politics? Do they have similar reactions to situations and people?

Selecting one’s life goals is a complex task, which is easier for people who have been raised in a supportive environment. Whether an individual family is supportive depends to a great extent on how much energy and enthusiasm family members invest in each other, especially in each other’s goals. The family that encourages children’s development by attending school plays and sporting events, music recitals, award ceremonies, and science and history fairs is a family that recognizes and rewards hard work, perfor- mance, and achievement. To be achievable, goals should be clear, realistic, and challenging, but not overwhelming. Long-term goals take grit (determination).

Most importantly, goals should be flexible. The motivation pro- cess starts with an unsatisfied need or unmet demand that creates tension and results in a satisfied need and reduced tension. Goals give direction to life, and values serve as a guide. Many different ways to group or categorize goals were given and the concepts of performance, creativity, and learning goals were introduced. Goals have to be activated, behaviors ensue, steps are taken, evaluations made. A person can disengage from goals and change course, set new goals or targets. Some success will lead to more success. Goals cannot be set without consideration of resource availability. Resources are the subject of the next chapter.

termskey terms absolute values 72 affective domain 69 attitudes 70 behavior 69 cognitive domain 69 creativity goals 85 cultural values 76 expertise 95

extrinsic motivation 96 extrinsic values 72 goal disengagement 90 habits 82 intrinsic motivation 96 intrinsic values 72 learning goals 85 motivation 95

optimism 86 optimism bias 86 performance goals 84 relative values 72 resilience 89 socialization 79 value chains 79 value orientation 69

98 chapter 3

referencesreferences Ajzen, I., & Fishbein, M. (1980). Understanding attitudes and pre-

dicting social behavior. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice Hall.

Buck, S. (2003). Building capacity through leadership develop- ment programs. Journal of Family and Consumer Sciences, 95(3), 8–11.

Condor, B. (2002, September 3). Find your strengths, then your happiness. Tallahassee Democrat, p. 4D.

Consumer demand. (2003). Retrieved September 3, 2003, from http://www.sric-bi.com/consulting/ConsumerDmd.shtml.

Conti, R. (2000). Competing demands and complimentary motives: Procrastination on intrinsically and extrinsically motivated summer projects. Journal of Social Behavior and Personality, 15(5), 47–59.

Cravatta, M. (1997, November). Hanging on to students. American Demographics, 19 (11), 41.

Csikszentmihalyi, M. (1997). Finding flow. New York: Basic Books.

Danner, D., Snowdon, D., & Friesen, W. (2001). Positive emotions in early life and longevity: Findings from the nun study. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 80, 804–813.

de Lisser, E. (2002, September 24). One-click commerce: What people do now to goof off at work. The Wall Street Journal, pp. A1, A8.

Elias, M. (2002, December 9). What makes people happy. USA Today, p. A1.

Elkind, D. (1988). The hurried child. Reading, MA: Addison-Wesley.

Elliot, A., & Niesta, D. (2009). Goals in the context of the hierarchical model of approach-avoidance motivation. In G. Moskowitz & H. Grant (Eds.), The Psychology of Goals (Chapter 2, p. 56). New York: The Guilford Press.

Ericsson, K. A., Charness, N., Feltovich, P., & Hoffman, R. (2006). The Cambridge handbook of expertise and expert perfor- mance. New York: Cambridge University Press.

Goodale, G. (2003, July 3). Sunny side up. Christian Science Monitor. Retrieved from www.csmonitor.com.

Haber, J. (2007). Bullyproof your child for life. New York: Penguin.

Harman, W. (1998). Global mind change (2nd ed.). San Francisco: Berrett-Koehler.

Kelter, D., & Harker, L. (2001). Expressions of positive emotion in women’s college yearbook pictures and their relationship to personality and life outcomes across adulthood. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 80, 112–124.

Kono, T., & Lynn, L. (2007). Strategic new product development for the global economy. New York: Palgrave Macmillan.

Leung, S. (2003, July 16). New kids on the block. The Wall Street Journal, p. B1.

Leung, S. (2003, October 1). A glutted market leaves food chains hungry for sites. The Wall Street Journal, p. A1.

McClelland, D. (1961). The achieving society. New York: Van Nostrand Reinhold.

McIntosh, W., Martin, L., & Jones, J. (1997). Goal beliefs, life events, and the malleability of people’s judgments of their happiness. Journal of Social Behavior and Personality, 12(2), 567–575.

Moskowitz, G., & Grant, H. (2009). The psychology of goals. New York: The Guilford Press.

Norcross, J., & Prochaska, J. (1998). Changing for good. New York: Avon.

Putnam, R. (2000). Bowling alone. New York: Simon & Schuster.

Ray, P. (1997). The emerging culture. American Demographics, 19, 29–34, 56.

questions 1. Poet Robert Frost wrote, “Home is the place where, when

you have to go there, they have to take you in.” Does that family value still hold true? Why would a grown person decide it is time to move back home?

2. According to the book The Necessary Revolution: How Individuals and Organizations Are Working Together to Create a Sustainable Future, businesses form value chains, a shared commitment to goals built around time and space. Likewise, families form multigenerational value chains. Describe a shared value or tradition in your family that has endured over time.

3. Women have outnumbered men on college campuses since 1979 and on graduate campuses since 1984. This has resulted in more women than men receiving bachelor’s degrees every year since 1982. Why do you suppose this has happened?

4. What does Henry David Thoreau mean when he says, “My life is like a stroll upon the beach, as near the ocean’s edge as I can go.” How does this statement relate to the ideas in the chapter?

5. Why does Martin Seligman say that optimism is essential for achieving goals?

review questions

Values, Attitudes, Goals, and Motivation 99

Rokeach, M. J. (1973). The nature of human values. New York: Free Press.

Senge, P., Smith, B., Kruschwitz, N., Laur, J., & Schley, S. (2008). The necessary revolution: How individuals and orga- nizations are working together to create a sustainable future. New York: Doubleday.

Seligman, M. (2002). Authentic happiness. New York: Free Press.

Sharot, T. (2011, June 6). The optimism bias. New York: TIME.

Spencer, R. (2000). A comparison of national psychologies. Project Report, No. 5. Wellesley, MA: Stone Center Working Paper Series.

Stoneman, B. (1998, December 4). Beyond rocking the ages: An interview with J. Walter Smith. American Demographics, 1–7.

Taylor, H. (2003, May 21). Americans are far more optimistic and have much higher life satisfactions than Europeans. Retrieved March 22, 2004, from http://www.harrisinteractive.com.

Vecsey, G. (1999, September 3). Seles feels windy blast from past. New York Times, p. D1.

Zaslow, J. (2003, February 6). Ready to pop the question? Hold off until you’ve done the interrogation. The Wall Street Journal, p. D1.

101

May you have a strong foundation when the winds of change shift.

—BoB Dylan 4

ResouRces

Main Topics

Resources Defined Types of Resources Economics and Resources Resource attributes and a Model Resource-advantage Theory other Resource allocation Factors: Utility and

accessibility

Decision Making and Resources Knowledge, Education, and Health:

Vital Resources Cultural Perceptions of Resources

Resources, Families, and Households Consumption: China Using More Resources Strategy and the Conservation of Resources Theory

DiD you know that . . .?

. . . An average of one out of three meals consumed by Americans is prepared in a commercial setting, lunch being the most typical meal to be commercially prepared.

. . . There are 16 million college students in the United States.

102 chapter 4

Resources, what they are, who has them, who doesn’t, and how to use them wisely in good and bad situations including traumatic events are the subjects of this chapter. The ways to examine resources are endless. Consider the following case study.

Human resources are challenged every day.

case study Taking Time out Ryan and Bailey looked at their married life one day and said some- thing has to change. Their desk jobs were boring and they hardly saw their young children. So, after much arranging they took a year off, a sabbatical, and lived on a Caribbean island. The children ran barefoot on the beach while the parents read and wrote under the shade of a palm tree. When school started the children made new friends. Ryan and Bailey found the time to communicate and think

about what they wanted for the rest of their lives. They grew closer to their children and to each other. They came back to the United States after that year a very different family than when they left. They had a renewed sense of home and of what mattered. Ryan says, “It was a leap of faith to take a year out like that, would our jobs still be there on return, renting our house to another family, but it all worked out and we look back on that year as the start of a new life.”

Resource recognition, creation, and exchange are included in this chapter. Exchanging

resources facilitates the pursuit of human satisfaction or happiness. Learning new skills and

getting an education are examples of resource creation. Individuals, families, and communities

are constantly moving in new directions, seeking new ways to trade and network, and live. For

example, Detroit once had 1.85 million inhabitants and now it has less than 730,000. Other

U.S. cities dropping considerably in population include St. Louis and Cleveland. Abroad, other

cities losing size are Leipzig in Germany and Liverpool in England. Often the cause is a shift

in location of jobs connected to technology, industry, and manufacturing. Cities can make

a comeback if they re-invent themselves through new industries, education, and enterprise.

Resources 103

From the individual’s standpoint, effectively using what you have (resources) to get what

you want is a lifelong challenge.

Resources are mobile, complex, and interconnected. Examples of resources are

expertise, integrity, time, people, technology, tools, attitude, space, money, materials, objects,

food, intelligence, and energy. Let’s take integrity as an example. Peterson and Seligman

(2004, p. 25) define integrity in various behavioral terms as

• A regular pattern of behavior that is consistent with espoused values (you practice what

you preach).

• Public acknowledgment of moral convictions, even if those convictions are not popular.

• Treatment of others with care, as demonstrated by helping those in need; sensitivity to

the needs of others.

So integrity is more than a value; it is a resource, a cluster of behavioral characteristics.

Integrity is a fundamental way of behaving in which a person is genuine and sincere, and has

a strong moral compass. If you have a family name that is well thought of in a community, that

name is a resource.

Resources may be exchanged internally within the family or externally between the family

and the greater environment, such as a retail, political, or real estate environment. The house-

hold is an organized behavior system. One model of resource exchange in a household would

suggest that households would select internal exchange when they have the expertise, time,

and resource capacity to indulge in an internal exchange; but when these are lacking, a

search for an outside or external exchange will ensue. An example would be home owners

deciding to paint a bedroom themselves rather than hire a painter. Another example would

be 25-year-old newlyweds deciding to have a reception at their parents’ house rather than

reserving a reception hall at a hotel, church, or club.

External exchange is usually necessary for auto repair or other tasks requiring expertise

beyond the typical individual’s capacity. Wise competitors and service providers use advertis-

ing to show what they can provide and how they can make life easier.

The worth of internal exchanges tends to be undervalued in our society, and one of the

goals of this book is to extol the virtues of building one’s human capacity. Companies that

combine do-it-yourself products or customization along with free instruction are providing

for both internal and external exchange; these types of products/activities will be increasingly

popular in the future because they provide satisfying experiences—and an end product with

a personal touch. According to Zuboff and Maxmin,

The new individuals seek meaning, not just material security and comfort. They enjoy

their things but place an even higher value on the quality of the lives they lead, in

which those possessions play a part. They insist on self-expression, participation, and

influence because they share the certain knowledge that the singularity of their own lives

cannot be deduced from the general case. No longer born to a biography, their identi-

ties must be invented as they go—cobbled together from personal initiative and private

judgment. (2002, p. 93)

Another fundamental principle is that resource use changes over time. We no longer go

down to the stream and wash clothes. We use washers and dryers, detergent and softeners,

electricity, and piped-in water to get clothes clean. Or we may choose to drop clothes at a

laundry or dry cleaner and exchange money for human time and energy. Many management

activities have been transformed from simple but labor-intensive actions to complex processes

104 chapter 4

requiring investment of time, human and mechanical energy, and money. As another example,

the resource use of college students over the past few decades has changed considerably.

Middle-aged parents remember themselves as cash-strapped, existing for weeks on peanut-

butter sandwiches, and living in run-down dormitories and apartments; but today’s college

students have more cash, credit, and possessions.

The college market is growing. In 2011, there were 16 million undergraduate students

in U.S. institutions of higher education. College graduates have higher-than-average lifetime

earnings (compared to the general population), and they spend more money on virtually every-

thing. Money is just one of the resources used by college students; time, energy, and space

are others.

This chapter explores the subject of resources from a variety of theoretical and applied

viewpoints. Resource theory analyzes, predicts, and explains the nature of resources as

well as their perception, exchange, and use. During the economic slowdowns that occurred

off and on in the United States during the first and second decades of the 21st century,

stretching resources, such as having enough money for food and gasoline, was a practical

concern. Identifying resources (and then deciding how to allocate them) is an integral part of

the management process as Figure 4.1 shows.

Resources Defined Resources are what is available to be used. They are assets—anything with a real or perceived

value used to attain or satisfy some need. They can be replenished or conserved. We’ve listed

resources before in this book, but it is helpful to fit them into these categories:

• material

• family

• work

• social

• education

• technological

• health

Chapters 1 and 3

Step 1

Chapter 3

Step 2

Chapter 4

Step 3

Chapters 5 and 6

Step 4

Chapter 6

Step 5

Decide, plan, and implement

Accomplish goals and evaluate

Identify resources

Identify problem, need, want, or goal

Clarify values

Environment

Feedback

Chapters 2 and 7

Chapters 2 and 12

Figure 4.1 The management process model.

Resources 105

A resource is any entity, tangible or intangible, that contributes to the ability of an individual

or family to produce valued outputs. Some of the valued outputs may have value only for the

individual or the family; other outputs may have market value.

Not all resource use is directed toward long-term goals; some resources are used to pro-

vide for more immediate wants and needs. For example, a librarian spending twelve dollars on

lunch is satisfying hunger, an immediate need. The cost of buying lunch is weighed against the

time and expense involved in making and bringing a lunch to the library.

In management, time, energy, and money usually receive the most attention, and these

resources will be referred to throughout this chapter and the book as a whole. Replenishing

energy is an issue all college students face.

Resources take many forms. A sense of humor or a pleasant personality is a resource.

Knowledge is a resource. A high school diploma is a resource. Everyone has a unique set

of resources and uses those resources differently. Our homes are resources as well. Author

David McCullough says:

We’re shaped by the buildings we live in and work in. The rooms in which things hap-

pen shape what happens in those rooms—the size of the room, the way the light falls

through the windows, the prospect outside the windows. All of that bears on how peo-

ple feel and how they act. (Kovach, 2003, p. 226)

Resourcefulness is the ability to recognize and use resources effectively. A resource-

ful person skillfully uses resources to cope with daily challenges. When resourceful people

encounter a problem, they solve it or find a way around it, rather than be defeated by it.

Resourcefulness is learned in families, schools, work situations, and social organizations. For

example, children observe how their parents cope and substitute alternative sources of energy

and light when the electrical power fails at home. In an office, if the copy machine breaks

down, the employees substitute temporary alternative resources (e.g., use the machine in

another office or go to a copy center). To balance work and family, a lot of adjustments have

to be made as the following story shows.

case study Issac Should college student Issac, deep into studying for an exam, take a break? “Just what he does during that break will deter- mine how helpful that pause will be, a growing body of research shows. A stroll in the park could do wonders, for instance, while downing coffee could leave him just as stressed and depleted as before the break. And, sometimes, forcing oneself to simply power through mental fatigue can be more effective

than pausing. Like a muscle, our brains appear to get fatigued after working for sustained periods of time, particularly if we have to concentrate intensely or deal with a repetitive task, says Michael Posner, an emeritus professor at the University of Oregon who studies attention. Taking in the sights and sounds of nature appears to be especially beneficial for our minds, researchers say.”

Source: Wang, S. (2011, August 30). Coffee break? Walk in the park? Why unwinding is hard to do. The Wall Street Journal, p. D1.

106 chapter 4

Along with families, schools and community youth organizations, such as Boy Scouts,

Girl Scouts, 4-H, and the YMCA and YWCA, encourage the development of resourcefulness

in children. An individual or a family can act in such a way as to replenish (add to) resources.

An individual may also be a resource creator; learning new skills and furthering one’s educa-

tion are examples of resource creation according to resource-advantage theory, which will be

discussed later in this chapter.

One of the most basic concepts in management is that material resources are limited,

so decisions have to be made about their allocation. By helping individuals learn to be more

resourceful, resource management can contribute significantly to their quality of life. It is not

enough to win millions of dollars, as lottery winners who have lost all their money will attest;

more important to one’s lifestyle in the long run is what one does with the money to retain it

and make it grow.

Types of Resources Resources can be classified in several ways. One way is to categorize them as intangible or

tangible. Intangible resources cannot be touched; examples include integrity, confidence,

and literacy. Tangible resources are real, touchable, or capable of being appraised; some

examples are jewelry, land, and house. Obviously, tangible resources are easier to observe

and measure than intangible ones.

Resources can also be classified as human or material. Human resources are the skills,

talents, and abilities that people possess. Such resources increase through use. For example,

the more a person rides a bicycle, the better bicycle rider he or she becomes. Other examples

of human resources are emotion and caring. Friendships are interesting human resources that

change over time, some lasting more than others. Consider the story of nine sorority friends,

who graduated from the University of Illinois and were determined to remain friends forever.

Two years after they graduated, they met again. “They were idealistic young working women,

talking excitedly about love, men and each other. They reminisced about sorority days, and

vowed to remain central to each other’s lives because, as one of them insisted, ‘You can

have the career, the family—and keep your old girlfriends, too’ ” (Zaslow, 2003, June 24,

p. D1). What happened to them? As they turned 40, eight were still friends. All were in their

case study Double shift Katie Dyer Buss, of Batavia, Illinois, will be working a double shift Thursday on her seasonal job, answering consumers’ cooking questions on Butterball’s “Turkey Talk Line.” Because she and her husband, Andrew, will miss their family’s Thanksgiving Day feast at an uncle’s house, they will have their own smaller holiday dinner at home after her second shift ends. Then next weekend they will

gather for two separate “mini Thanksgivings” with different branch- es of the family. “Among all of us, we will eat a Thanksgiving dinner three times,” she says. She hopes to work for Butterball, Garner, North Carolina, on Christmas Eve and Christmas Day, too, to raise cash for her and her husband’s new home and other needs. About two-fifths of Americans work nontraditional hours . . . ”

Source: Shellengarger, S. (2010, November 24). Remaking traditions to fit the new job. The Wall Street Journal, p. D2.

Resources 107

first marriage. Altogether, the friends had 19

children (including three sets of twins). Five

worked part-time, and six lived in the suburbs

of Chicago; in fact, two lived across the street

from each other.

Karen Roberto, director of the Center for

Gerontology at Virginia Polytechnic Institute and

State University, says, “If women are friends at

40, there’s a strong likelihood they’ll be life-long friends” (Zaslow, 2003, June 24, p. D1).

The most likely time for women’s friendships to fall off is between the ages of 25 and 40

because women are busy marrying, raising children, and establishing careers during those

years. The way the former sorority sisters kept up was by scheduling play dates with their

children, going on family vacations together, sending email, calling, and celebrating one

another’s birthdays. What about males and friendship patterns?

Men tend to build friendships until about age 30, but there’s often a steady fall-off after

that. . . . Male friendships are more likely to be hurt by geographical moves, lifestyle

changes, or differences in career trajectories. And many men turn to wives, girlfriends,

sisters or platonic female friends to share emotional issues, assuming male friends will

be of little help. (Zaslow, 2003, June 24, p. D1)

Men and women often re-establish friendships or make new friendships near

the retirement years because as one gets older having other people around

makes him or her feel more connected. Older people may travel or do volun-

teer work or join clubs such as garden clubs, investment clubs, golf groups,

or bowling leagues. There is more time for others, for leisure, and for learning

when child raising and career responsibilities diminish.

Considering that time is short, how does one disentangle oneself from

friendships that are no longer desirable? Studies show that only 15 percent

of people say they can end a friendship, and women have a harder time with

ailing relationships than do men. Moving helps, as do changing jobs and

other  tactics:

Ms. Blieszner, a Virginia Tech professor, employed what researchers call “the

fade out.” She limited contact with her glum friend. “I drifted away, and it

worked,” she says. . . . If possible, winding down a friendship by feigning a

busy calendar is preferable to a dramatic confrontation, says sociologist Jan

Yager. (It lessens the likelihood of a vendetta.) If the person doesn’t get the

message, step up the frankness of your hints. (Zaslow, 2003, March 6, p. D1)

The sum total of human resources, all the capabilities and traits that

people use to achieve goals and other resources, is called human capital.

Investing in human capital is a lifelong personal goal for many people and a

professional goal for those employed in the helping professions (e.g., counsel-

ing, education, and social work). Government also invests in human capital

through such programs as free school lunches and Head Start. As another

example, employers and employees create value, based not only on some unit

of labor in the current moment but also on their entire store of knowledge and

experience—their human capital.

Suggested Activity Describe a goal you would like to accomplish in the next two weeks. Name the human and material resources you will need to achieve this goal. Say how you are going to use these resources to achieve your goal.

Sharing material resources, improving everyday lives.

108 chapter 4

It’s said that a tourist once spotted Pablo Picasso sketching in a Paris cafe and asked if

he would sketch her, offering to pay him fair value. In a matter of minutes, Picasso was

finished. When she asked what she owed him, Picasso told her 5,000 francs.

“But it only took you a few minutes,” the tourist said.

“No,” said Picasso, “it took me all my life.” (Kay, 1999)

Our knowledge-based economy is full of Picassos. What goes into a personal or

professional decision is not just the time immediately absorbed. The years of experience and

education a person has accrued is applied to the situation at hand.

One of the goals of education is to increase human capital. By going to college, students

invest in their human capital development. When parents pay tuition fees and alumni provide

scholarships, they are also investing in students’ human capital.

Although everyone has human capital and the potential for growth and development, only

a small percentage of this is used. Of course, no one knows exactly what this percentage is.

Scientists have a long way to go before they will completely understand the boundaries and

potentials of human capital.

Material resources include natural phenomena, such as fertile soil, petroleum, and

rivers, and human-made items, such as buildings, money, and computers. Material resources

decrease through use; for example, buildings

deteriorate, money is spent, and computers

break down or become outdated. Lifestyles are

based on a combination of human and material

resources.

Resource stock is the sum of readily

available resources an individual possesses.

Each individual has a resource stock that

she or he draws on, to make and implement

decisions.

Economics and Resources Effective resource use can lead to enhanced chances for success. Economics is related to the

creation of new products and the encouragement of entrepreneurship, investment, innova-

tion, and invention. “An increase in the economy’s resource base would expand one’s ability

to produce goods and services. If we had more and better resources, we could produce a

greater amount of all goods. Many resources are human-made. If we were willing to give up

some current consumption, we could invest more of today’s resources into production of

long-lasting physical structures, machines, education, and the development of human skills”

(Gwartney, Stroup, Sobel, & Macpherson, 2003, p. 40).

Resources have the power to satisfy wants and enhance lives. Individuals use resources

differently at different times in their life span. For example, parents have a difficult time under-

standing why their children “waste money” on candy and poor-quality toys, because the

parents would make different choices. In childhood, much resource use is directed to

the satisfaction of immediate personal wants and needs; thus, candy is a good purchase in

the mind of a five-year-old.

This book is primarily about management, not economics. Nevertheless, most deci-

sions are affected by economic realities. For example, many people would like to go on a trip

Suggested Activity TV psychologist and author Dr. Phillip C. McGraw (Dr. Phil) recommends doing a 10–7–5 exercise in which you write down the 10 defining moments of your life (these are experiences that helped mold you into who you are today), the 7 critical choices you have made, and the 5 pivotal people who have influenced you. Try it.

See if any patterns emerge about your resource stock.

Resources 109

abroad, but how many can afford to go on the spur of the moment? Everyone is a consumer,

if not of trips, then of food, of shelter, and of gasoline.

Patterns in food consumption are an intriguing case in point. Over the last decade, the

levels of eating out and bringing prepared foods into the home rose. Now, one in three U.S.

meals is commercially prepared (meaning prepared outside the home), some of this is take-

out or takeaway and others involve sit-down restaurants. About 6 out of 10 people between

18 and 24 years of age are restaurant patrons on a typical day, compared to 3 out of 10 adults

over 65. The number of eating and drinking establishments owned by African Americans and

by women increased at double-digit rates over the past decade, with sales also rising dramati-

cally. Saturday is the most popular day to eat out and Monday is the least popular which is

why some restaurants are closed on Mondays. August is the most popular month to eat out.

Critical Thinking

Would you say one out of three of your meals per day are commercially prepared? Or, would you say more or less? What is the typical pattern of college students?

As Chapter 1 explained, economics refers to the production, development, and manage-

ment of material wealth. It is also concerned with distribution and consumption. Any economic

system must address four questions:

1. What are the goods and services going to be produced?

2. How are the goods and services produced?

3. Where are goods and services produced?

4. Who will get these goods and services?

What is produced can range from ice cream to health care. The “how” includes types of facto-

ries, equipment, materials, labor, and regulations. Where things are produced is getting more

complicated. Maytag dishwashers, for example, have Chinese motors and Mexican wiring, but

are put together in U.S. factories (Aeppel, 2003). This three-tiered, or triad, approach is increas-

ingly used in manufacturing to keep costs down. It used to be that bulky appliances for the U.S.

market were all made indigenously because they were so expensive to transport. But, as the

labor and production costs became sharply lower in other countries, the expenses involved in

importing parts were offset. In addition, totally produced and assembled appliances are being

sold worldwide from China, South Korea, and New Zealand. The “who” can be young or old

consumers, highly educated or less educated, poor or rich, housebound or frequent travelers,

employed or unemployed, parents or singles with or without children or grandparents.

In economics, a central concept is scarcity, which means a shortage or an insufficient

amount of supply. Scarcity lies at the heart of production and consumption. In the 1980s,

toy stores experienced a run on Cabbage Patch dolls for Christmas. Evening news pro-

grams showed parents fighting over dolls and told of the disappointment of children who did

not receive one. In this instance, the demand far outweighed the supply, creating a short-

age. A year later, stores had an oversupply of the same dolls, which were no longer in great

110 chapter 4

demand. In the 1990s, a similar run on another set of toys, Beanie Babies, happened with

the same problems of overdemand and undersupply. In more recent years the main “toy”

fights have been over electronic games and gadgets. Scarce goods are economic goods.

Food, clothing, and shelter are examples of economic goods. So are parks, trees, and clean

air. Scarcity can be experienced in good times and bad. Individuals and families can have

abundance in one aspect of their lives and be lacking in another. Leisure is an economic good

because most people feel they do not have enough leisure time.

Juliet Schor, author of The Overworked American, writes,

When surveyed, Americans report that they have only sixteen and a half hours of leisure

a week, after the obligations of job and household are taken care of. Working hours are

already longer than they were forty years ago. If present trends continue, by the end

of the century Americans will be spending as much time at their jobs as they did back

in the nineteen twenties. . . . U.S. manufacturing employees currently work 320 more

hours—the equivalent of over two months—than their counterparts in West Germany or

France. (1991, pp. 1–2)

Although this quote from Schor’s book reflects the scenario years ago, it still holds true

that Americans spend more time in employed work than do most Europeans, who have longer

vacations and holidays. Experiments with employed time continue nationwide and worldwide.

Recently the state of Utah experimented with a four-day workweek (Monday–Thursday from

7 a.m. to 6 p.m.) for state workers. This schedule was initiated for cost-saving purposes and

was popular with the employees but not with the public, who wanted services on Fridays. In

the fall of 2011 the state went back to a conventional five-day workweek.

Economic thinking recognizes that obtaining any scarce good involves a cost, which

leads individuals and families to economizing behavior and goal setting. People use their skills,

energy, and ingenuity to produce economic goods. They struggle constantly to reduce scar-

city and better provide for their needs. No society has enough economic goods or resources

to satisfy everyone’s wants and desires, nor does any individual have enough income or wealth

to satisfy her or his every want or desire. Scarcity exists as long as people cannot purchase

everything at zero price. Theoretically even the richest person as well as the poorest in the

world experience scarcity. Each person defines for himself or herself what constitutes scarcity.

case study White Noise Sound is a resource. Nikki finds she cannot go to sleep without her sound track of water flowing and wind blowing in the trees and she wonders if it would be helpful to use to relax her during the day as well. The soothing sounds of white noise once mostly for bedtime are finding a place in daytime activities. “When played through headphones, the sounds help people tune out chatty co-workers, pounding jackhammers and the dentist’s drill. Janet Berkman, a 51 year-old retired project manager, in Toronto prefers the sounds

of storms, wind, rain and running water when she is on the subway or trying to read in busy surroundings. Ms. Berkman started listen- ing to the sounds late last year after she realized it helped her focus and concentrate. ‘Life is getting noisier,’ she says, and listening to these sounds ‘kind of empties out my brain.’ To make the soothing sounds, developers take computer-generated sounds or sounds recorded in nature and make an audio file that usually is ‘looped,’ or repeated.”

Source: Mir, A. (2011, August 31). To tune out distracting noises. The Wall Street Journal, p. D1.

Resources 111

ChoiCe and opportunity Costs Scarcity forces people to make choices and decisions about the allocation of resources.

Should a person buy a new car, or keep the old one and invest in a prepaid tuition plan?

Each decision involves a cost; for example, saving for a car means, that money cannot

be spent for something else. Economics assumes that people will make choices that will

improve their lives. Management offers a guide for making the best choices about how

to use and allocate resources such as time and money. The end goal of these choices is

maximizing satisfaction.

Opportunity refers to a hoped-for favorable outcome, a chance for progress, winning,

fulfillment, advancement, or action leading to a desired goal. Economics assumes one will

try to maximize satisfaction by pursuing opportunities. Every choice made means that some-

thing else was given up. The highest-valued alternative that must be sacrificed to satisfy a

want or attain something is called opportunity cost. When someone quits a paid job to stay

home with children, he or she is experiencing opportunity costs. Another example is Matt

Damon, star of the Bourne Identity and other movies, dropping out of Harvard to pursue his

acting career. One way to conceptualize opportunity costs is to think of them as trade-offs.

Life is full of trade-offs; choosing one activity over another involves a trade-off. For example,

choosing to buy one product over another may involve a trade-off between quality and cost.

To get a desired good or outcome, it is necessary to trade off some other desired good or

outcome—for example, time with friends versus time with family. Trade-offs, thus, require

sacrifice—something must be given up to gain something else.

household aCtivities: trade-offs and time The basic activities of any household include many examples of resource trade-offs.

In each household, the manager (or managers) must decide how the family resources of

time, labor, and money will be allocated. Among other things, the manager must decide which

aspects of household production should be carried out by the unpaid work of household

members or obtained through market goods and services. A restaurant meal could replace

a home-cooked dinner, for example, or a gardener could be hired to care for the lawn and

a housekeeper to care for the house. Often a household’s trade-offs are between time and

money. Obtaining goods or services from outside is usually costlier than producing them

within the household.

Buying frozen pre-prepared meals at the store costs more than cooking at home, and

sending clothes to the laundry costs more than washing them at home. But as time becomes

an increasingly scarce commodity, more families are choosing time-saving options and relying

on time-saving equipment such as microwave ovens and dishwashers.

In a nationwide survey, women, 18 years or older, were polled about how they felt about

cooking at home. Almost 44 percent said they “enjoy it very much,” and another 35 percent

said they “liked it somewhat”—that amounts to four out of five women who like to cook for

themselves or their families. How often do they cook at home? A third said every day, and

almost half said four to six days a week (Weber, 2000).

In 2000, an average of one out of five meals consumed by Americans—4.2 meals per

week—was prepared in a commercial setting. Since then the average has gone up, although

with the recession in 2008 and 2009 there was a slight pullback to more at-home eating

and several restaurants closed or offered less expensive meals to attract customers, such as

McDonald’s offering hamburgers for 49 cents on Wednesdays and Sundays. This is probably

112 chapter 4

a good strategy as lunch is the meal most likely to be consumed from commercial outlets. You

might ask why they picked those two days, possibly their slowest days.

Kitchens in suburban homes occupied by families are growing in size, whereas in cities,

kitchens—especially those in apartments occupied by singles—are growing smaller as a

reflection of the need for less cooking:

Like many food-obsessed New Yorkers, Tom Piscitello has grand plans for his

kitchen. No, he’s not installing zillions of dollars of commercial equipment. He’s put-

ting in a guest bedroom. “The room is just the perfect size for a double bed,” says

Mr. Piscitello, a 42-year-old bachelor who hasn’t cooked on his stove in six years.

A kitchen, he says, is a waste of space and money: “It’s just cheaper to eat out.”

(Bernstein, 2001, p. D1)

Doing laundry is another example of the trade-offs between time and human energy:

The suburban home shared by Beth Sunderman, her husband, three sons, two dogs

and two school-science-fair rats runs on a tight schedule. The boys are home from

school at 3, in the car by 5 for baseball practice, and back home at 8:30 for showers,

snacks, schoolwork and bedtime. In the background, “there is always a hum,” says

Ms. Sunderman. “You get sick of listening to it.” It’s her washer and dryer. Ms. Sunderman

has figured out how to do nearly every household chore more efficiently—by micro-

waving dinner, for example, or having the boys unload the dishwasher. But she can’t

escape the 15 hours of laundry she does each week. (Nelson, 2002, p. A1)

Procter & Gamble provides the following information:

• 35 billion loads of laundry are done in the United States each year.

• 1,100 loads of laundry are started every second in the United States.

• In the United States each person generates one-fourth ton of dirty clothes per year.

• The average American woman spends 7–9 hours a week on laundry.

Despite talk of household work equality, laundry is still primarily a female chore. Newer

washers use fewer gallons of water, but as washers can last 25 years, the overall change in

water use will occur gradually. Tougher energy-use standards were instigated to meet U.S.

federal rules. Regarding technique, L. D. Metcalfe, director of strategic global alliances at

Whirlpool Corporation, says, “Their mother taught them. It’s handed down like folklore from

generation to generation” (Nelson, 2002, p. A1).

laws of supply and demand Scarcity affects the price or worth of a resource. According to the law of demand, as the price

of a good or service rises, the quantity demanded of that good or service falls. Conversely,

as the price falls, the quantity demanded will rise. The supply and demand curve is shown in

Figure 4.2.

The law of supply is the law of demand in reverse. According to the law of supply, as the

supply of a good or service goes up, the price goes down. Conversely, as the supply goes

down, the price goes up. Aren’t more people likely to apply for a job that pays $50 an hour

than for one that pays $5.15 an hour? Isn’t a one-of-a-kind Louis XV desk more valuable than

a mass-produced desk from a discount store? Thus, the price paid for goods and services is

influenced by supply and demand. In economic theory, the right price is reached when supply

and demand are equal.

Resources 113

When prices change radically, they are probably reacting to real or perceived changes

in supply or demand. For example, if the weather is too wet and the peanut crop is

destroyed, the price of peanut butter will skyrocket. Grocery shoppers will watch for sales

on peanut butter and stock up or substitute another sandwich ingredient for the high-priced

peanut butter.

eConomiC well-Being Economic well-being is the degree to which individuals and families have economic ade-

quacy and security. It refers to the desire for or extent of protection against economic risks,

such as loss of employment, illness, bankruptcy, bank failures, poverty, and destitution in old

age (McGregor & Goldsmith, 1998).

It is a function of many variables in combination, including monetary income, financial

assets, human capital, durable goods and services, time, ability to manage, control over finan-

cial affairs and resources, values, job security, retirement plans, ability to adjust to changes,

and lifestyle decisions. Economic well-being is often used as a measure of quality of life. Each

person and each family defines what constitutes economic well-being for them.

alloCation and reCognition of resourCes Management is the process of using resources to attain goals through planning and taking the

steps necessary to meet goals. A crucial part of the management process is the allocation of

resources to appropriate goals. As explained in the previous chapter, goals can be prioritized

and divided into short-term, intermediate, and long-term goals. In theory, resources should be

300

Price

280

260

240

220

200

180

160

140

0 5 10 15 20

QuantityEquilibrium quantity

Equilibrium price ($200)

Demand

Supply

Figure 4.2 Supply and demand curve. When buyers and sellers interact in the market, the equilibrium price is at the point of intersection of the supply and demand curves.

114 chapter 4

allocated to meet the most important goals first; but in practice, resources are often diverted

to more immediate needs or demands.

Everyone has different types and amounts of resources and different life demands. As

explained in the previous chapter, many people who live from day to day do not have the

luxury of allocating resources toward long-term goals. Their resources have to go to basic

survival needs.

Resource recognition is the realization of the skills, talents, and materials in one’s

possession. Lack of resource recognition is often a problem with teenagers. As they develop

their adult identity, they become more aware and more confident about their resources and

how to allocate them. One of the goals of education is to help students become aware of their

strengths and how to capitalize on them.

regulation of resourCes Who should control resources? Many conflicts, from family feuds to full-scale wars, have

occurred over this question. How should resources be divided? Which resources should be

publicly held? Which ones should be privately held?

Private resources are owned and/or controlled by an individual, a family, or a group.

Public resources are owned and used by all the people in a locality or country; a national

park and a county-owned swimming pool are examples.

In 1776, Adam Smith published An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth

of Nations, which advanced a theory justifying capitalism. He argued that with economic

freedom individuals will follow their own self-interest to fulfill the needs of themselves and

their families, thereby benefiting society as a whole. Smith used the term laissez-faire to

suggest that government should leave business alone. According to him, the “invisible

hand” of competition would guide the marketplace. To a certain extent, society still adheres

to much of Smith’s laissez-faire theory, but societal and economic developments in the

20th century led many people to believe that government needs to serve as a regulator of

the economy, at least to a certain degree. How much governmental regulation is desirable

in such areas as health care and welfare reform is a topic of public debate that continues

in the 21st century.

eConomiC resourCes and employee Benefits Economic resources refer to wealth in any form, including credit, money, benefits, and stocks

and bonds. Household equipment, cars, savings, property, and investments are forms of

wealth, whereas commissions, wages, interest, dividends, bonuses, pensions, and royalties

are forms of money income.

Wealth is a measure of what has been accumulated, whereas income is money earned

or given to the recipient (e.g., child support, alimony, and government transfer payments such

as welfare payments). Employee benefits are goods and services that are part of an indi-

vidual’s or family’s resource base. When determining personal and family assets, the value

of benefits should be estimated along with income and wealth. Typical employee benefits are

health insurance, life insurance, paid vacations and sick leave, and retirement programs. Many

employers offer cafeteria plans, which allow employees to choose the benefits they want.

For example, employees may add a dental plan or a child care assistance plan to their basic

benefit package.

Resources 115

Resource Attributes and a Model In a household, someone has to decide what will be done; by whom it will be done; when,

where, and how it will be done; and which resources will be required. The person (or

persons) who does this is the manager. He or she makes decisions about how money is

spent, initiates goals, sets objectives, makes plans, keeps records and timetables, makes

doctor and dentist appointments, and performs a host of other tasks. The manager may be

one person, or management responsibilities may be split among several people. As children

grow older and more independent, they take on more responsibility for scheduling their own

time, money, and work.

The characteristic way an individual or family manages resources is shaped by five

forces:

1. Psychological/personality forces (including value orientations) that shape individual

choices and preferences

2. Economic forces that regulate the exchange of money, energy, materials, services, and

information

3. Technological forces that generate problem-solving inventions, tools, and methods

4. Sociocultural forces that regulate mores, norms, and customs

5. Political–legal forces that allocate power and provide constraining and protecting laws and

regulations.

These forces constantly interact with each other; any decision about resource allocation will

be affected by several or all of these forces.

attriButes Household resources can be classified as human (time, skills, energy of members) or physical.

Resources also have certain other characteristics or attributes such as their interdependence,

and, sometimes, their suitability to be stored or exchanged. Examples of resources include the

ability to think critically and tangible objects like books, furniture, and clothes.

Resources can also be characterized by their affective, cognitive, and psychomotor attri-

butes. Affective attributes refer to feelings about or expressions of resource use. Expressions

of love, gratitude, and caring are examples of affective attributes. Decisions regarding which

resources are shared and with whom are affected by feelings. Someone is more likely to share

private information with a friend, for example, than with a stranger.

Cognitive attributes refer to the knowledge aspects of resource use. Existing

knowledge based on past learning and experiences is applied to new situations. The

ability to synthesize (bring together information and knowledge), analyze, and evaluate new

situations is a crucial part of the cognitive attribute. A resourceful person has a high degree

of cognitive ability.

Psychomotor attributes refer to physical reactions to mental stimuli, such as the capacity

to respond to threats or to perform work. Being able to respond quickly and appropriately to

physical and mental demands is also a part of being resourceful.

Activities such as learning and teaching require all three attributes. For example, teaching

others to use computers requires good hand–eye coordination (psychomotor ability), knowl-

edge (cognitive ability), and the ability to communicate in an interesting way (affective ability).

Most jobs require all three attributes (e.g., surgeon, nurse, and child care worker).

116 chapter 4

foa & foa resourCe model Anything that can be used is a resource, but to think of resources in this way makes the

concept too expansive to be very helpful. Resources can be examined in a meaningful and

systematic way if they are arranged in an interactive model. One such classic model is the

Foa & Foa Resource Model, which illustrates the interdependence of resources (Figure 4.3).

Resource theory was first promulgated by Uriel Foa in 1971 and explained further in 1974

in Social Structures of the Mind, which he published with Edna Foa. The theory provides a

framework for understanding social interactions and relationships. These relationships provide

the means by which individuals can obtain needed resources—love, services, goods, money,

information, and status—from others.

In the model, the resources at the top of the circle (love, status, and services) are more

particularistic than the ones at the bottom (information, money, and goods). In other words,

people are more selective when exchanging love (only with family and friends) than when

exchanging money (with nearly everyone, including store clerks and bank tellers). In the

model, resources close to each other on the circle are more likely to be exchanged than

those opposite to each other. For example, a mother who loves her baby provides care by

feeding or diapering the baby (a service). Note that love and money are directly opposite to

each other.

Resource-Advantage Theory As mentioned earlier in the book, a number of disciplines have affected the study of

resource management as it relates to individuals and families. When it comes to resource

use, many insights can be gained from developments in marketing. This section will

describe resource-advantage theory, which applies entrepreneurship and leveraging to

resource management.

Money

Inform ation

Love

High particularism

Low particularism

Lo w

c on

cr et

en es

s High concreteness

S ta

tu s

G oo

ds

S ervices

Figure 4.3 Foa & Foa Model of resource exchange. Source: Foa, U., Converse, J., Tornblom, K., & Foa, E. (Eds.). (1993). Resource theory: Explorations and applications. San Diego, CA: Academic Press. Reprinted with permission of Elsevier.

Resources 117

Entrepreneurship is defined as innovative business ventures; an entrepreneur is a per-

son who organizes, operates, and successfully manages a new enterprise. An entrepreneur

takes advantage of opportunities and pursues the needs and wants of present and potential

customers. He or she is well aware that needs, wants, and circumstances change over time.

This is such a broad definition that it applies to human services or human sciences as

well as to marketing. Indeed, many family and consumer scientists (or human scientists or

human ecologists) are entrepreneurs. The field is being asked to be more enterprising, to

reach more people, and to be more entrepreneurial in the way family and community needs

are met. Also many people trained in human sciences are themselves business owners (of

bed-and-breakfasts or stores, for instance), estate managers, realtors or investors in real

estate, and public speakers or writers—or they engage in some other form of commerce.

An estate manager, for example, “can earn between $80,000 and $150,000 a year super-

vising household staff and financial matters for mansions of 20,000 square feet or more” or

for managing multiple homes, according to Mary Starkey, president and founder of Starkey

International Institute, a Denver-based training and placement firm (Maher, 2002, p. B8).

She says her business “fields between 30 and 40 calls per week from individuals or families

interested in hiring estate managers.” When it comes to positions such as estate manager,

there are many people who have started in another job and had a hobby or interest that

developed into a business or vocation; they are opening themselves up to more creative ways

to apply the basic principles learned in management. Being more enterprising, more open to

resource potential, is a way to not only survive but also thrive, especially in slow economic

times. Enterprising students find out about job opportunities and internships, contact com-

panies directly, use the career services center on campus, go on the Internet, and approach

speakers at trade fairs or other industry or campus events.

Leveraging means, most simply, doing more with less. It has to do with being more

effective in the use of resources. To succeed, businesses exploit underutilized resources and

skills and use creative means to contract, barter, borrow, share, rent, buy, sell, and outsource.

Leveraging means to go beyond mere efficient use of resources into more creative realms

where managers are not constrained by their current resource base. Through leveraging, man-

agers are able to do the following (Morris, Schindehutte, & LaForge, 2002, p. 8):

• Stretch resources

• Use resources in novel ways

• Use other’s people or other firms’ resources

• Complement one resource with another—bringing a higher value

• Use certain resources to obtain other resources

For example, smaller businesses lack resources which larger businesses have, so smaller

ones have to make up for the differential to compete. They could offer more personalized or

unique services or products. Covel and Flandez found that

Sales teams at small companies often are outmanned and outspent by large competi-

tors. Whether it’s perks like box seats at a professional sporting event or simply more

staff and newer technology, big businesses seem to have an advantage when it comes

to wooing potential clients to sign on the dotted line. But small companies often find

creative ways to level the playing field. (2008, May 29, p. B6)

The leader in resource-advantage (R-A) theory is Shelby Hunt, the professor of marketing at

Texas Tech University. He and others developed the R-A theory as a knowledge discovery

118 chapter 4

process (Hunt, 2000, 2003; Hunt & Morgan, 1996, 1997). Hunt says that R-A theory is signifi-

cantly broader than, but not inconsistent with, the way we view family resource management

(personal communication, April 9, 2003). He says one idea would be to consider the resource

of “family competence” or “household competence”—that is, some households are superior

to other households in doing things that produce valued outputs. In R-A theory,

Competition is in an ongoing struggle among firms to achieve a comparative advantage

in the marketplace. The source of advantage derives from innovation, which is viewed

as endogenous to competition. Specifically, superior financial returns flow to those firms

that are able either to create value more efficiently or to efficiently create more value for

customers; this represents the link to entrepreneurial behavior. Entrepreneurship is the

means by which firms discover, create, or assemble resource assortments that allow

them to produce valued market offerings.

. . . R-A theory defines resources broadly to include such phenomena as organiza-

tional culture, knowledge, competencies, and argues that many of these noneconomic

resources are replicable rather than scarce. (Morris et al., 2002, p. 9)

There is no denying that the word “competition” has some negative connotations.

Margaret Wheatley in Leadership and the New Science says,

I crave companions, not competitors. I want people to sail with me through this puzzling

and frightening world. I expect to fail at moments on this journey, to get lost—how could

I not? And I expect that you too will fail. Even our voyage is cyclical—we can’t help but

move from old to new to old. . . . To stay the course, we need patience, compassion, and

forgiveness. (1999, p. 174)

Resource-advantage theory has been widely used by organizations around the world, specifi-

cally in companies in Japan and Europe (including Germany) as well as in the United States.

Hunt (2003) notes that the factors affecting competition to the firm include

• Reinvestment

• Knowing self

• Adaptation

• Proactivity (moving ahead positively).

And the factors external to the firm are

• Consumers (who constantly change, may not like a firm’s products)

• Government actions (fair or not, more visibly successful firms are often a target)

• Competitor actions (including acquisitions, imitation of resources, substitution of

resources, and major innovations in resources).

What can applied social scientists, such as students of family resource management, glean

from this? For one thing, we can gain awareness, especially as a means to stimulate think-

ing: Do families and households compete with each other for scarce resources? Is the idea of

“keeping up with the Joneses” an example of this? Does the way neighbors often are at odds

with each other over property lines form another example? Perhaps a more positive way is

to ask, are families and households proactive in their approach to resource use? Are they as

effective in their resource use as they can be? To take it a step further, are some households

superior to other households in doing things that produce valued outputs, as Hunt suggests?

Much of the study of resource management from the social side is about knowing self,

Resources 119

knowing how to organize, strategize, and plan successfully—all advantages. Some people

may find the competitive aspects of R-A theory objectionable, but it is presented here as a

new way of looking at resource management—the idea of resource creation is important as

we explore the many ways individuals and families cope.

Other Resource Allocation Factors: Utility and Accessibility A basic concept in management is that resources are not useful unless they are perceived

as useful. Utility is the value, worth, applicability, productiveness, or, simply, usefulness of a

resource. Utility is in the eye of the beholder. For example, a papier-mâché castle made by

a  10-year-old boy may not have any market value, but to him it has great value and is useful

in play!

Newspaper surveys have found that their readers look for news they can trust and that

has utility (Ridder, 2003). If they read the local newspaper and don’t find anything they can

use, they will turn to other news sources.

Economists and anthropologists recognize different kinds of utility, such as time, place,

form, and diminishing utility, and also observe that various cultures view resources and utility

differently. The concept of utility is learned and subjective. Time utility refers to the availability

of a resource when it is needed. Arriving at a closed store with a fistful of dollars is a frustrat-

ing and useless activity. Place utility refers to location. Form utility means that the resource

is in an accessible and usable form. Diminishing utility refers to the concept that the first

use is more desirable than a later use. Drinking beer is a classic example. The first sip is more

tasty and satisfying than subsequent sips, and if too much is drunk, there is an undesirable

negative effect.

To be useful, a resource has to be accessible. Cell phones make messages more acces-

sible. As another example, money locked up in a bank vault overnight is not useful; with the

invention of the automatic teller machine, however, money is accessible day and night. The

24-hour grocery store, 24-hour catalog shopping services, and Internet shopping have also

expanded accessibility. The trend is toward greater accessibility of resources.

Decision Making and Resources In making any decision, an individual considers accessibility and other resource attributes.

By finding out all the information possible about a person, place, or situation before making

a decision, some potential problems can be avoided. In deciding which college to attend,

for example, a student considers location, tuition costs, housing options, and availability

of courses.

Decision making uses up a vital resource, however: time. A basic economic principle is

that the total cost of an item is equal to its monetary cost plus its time cost.

To save time, consumers rely on established shopping behaviors (e.g., going to the same

stores, buying the same brands, going to the same barber). They are open to change when

they have the time, when they perceive the need for a change, or when they realize there is a

disparity between what they want and what they are getting. When the motivation for change

is present, new alternatives are considered. From an economic standpoint, the best alternative

is the one providing the most benefit for the least cost in time and money.

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Knowledge, Education, and Health: Vital Resources Have you ever heard the phrase “without your health you have nothing”? For centuries,

scholars have debated the question of what our greatest resource is. Is it money, posses-

sions, land, health, capacity to love, or something else? Peter Drucker (1999) says that our

primary resource is knowledge, and that the leading social groups will be knowledge workers.

Knowledge is gained through experience or study.

E. F. Schumacher, author of Small Is Beautiful, says that education is the most vital of all

resources. He states that “all history as well as all current experience points to the fact that

it is man, not nature, who provides the primary resource: that the key factor of all economic

development comes out of the mind of man” (1973, p. 79). Schumacher suggests that the

development of nations should not start with goods, but with people and their education,

organization, and discipline. An educated population leads to economic development through

expanded work opportunities and better planning skills. Schumacher says, therefore, that

investing in human capital should come before other types of investment.

Cultural Perceptions of Resources Culture is the sum of all socially transmitted behavior patterns, beliefs, arts, expectations,

institutions, and all other products of human work and thought characteristic of a group,

community, or population. Language, ideas, customs, taboos, codes, tools, techniques,

music, rituals, and ceremonies are all part of culture. In families, culture is transmitted

from one generation to another. Members of cultural groups share common interests

and goals.

Margaret Mead, anthropologist and author of Coming of Age in Samoa, said,

Each primitive people has selected one set of human gifts, one set of human values,

and fashioned for themselves an art, a social organization, a religion, which is their

unique contribution to the history of the human spirit. Samoa is only one of these

diverse and gracious patterns, but as the traveler who has been once from home is

wiser than he who has never left his own door step, so a knowledge of one culture

should sharpen our ability to scrutinize more steadily, to appreciate more lovingly, our

own. (1928, p. 131)

As explained in the previous chapter, cultural values are generally held concepts of right

or wrong that are shared by members of cultural groups.

Cultures have the following six attributes:

1. They develop over time.

2. They supply boundaries or limits of acceptable behavior.

3. They provide a sense of belonging, identity, and security. Saying “I am an African Ameri-

can,” or “I am Catholic,” or “I am a member of the Smith family” implies an identification

with a cultural group.

4. They are so pervasive that they are often taken for granted. Familiar traditions, such as

turkey at Thanksgiving or a decorated tree at Christmas, are expressions of culture and

provide a sense of continuity and identity to individual and family life.

Resources 121

5. They can be constrictive. In a teenage clique,

members may feel forced to act, dress, and

think alike. Conformity to the group may

take precedence over the identity of the

individual.

6. They can be enriching or expressive. Culture

can provide a style or a format for intellec-

tual, social, or artistic expression.

Attributes 5 and 6 may seem contradictory, but they demonstrate that culture can be

many things. Culture can mold people and at the same time provide a means for individual

expression. The boundaries cultures set are called norms. Norms, which are based on cultural

values, are rules that specify, delineate, encourage, or prohibit certain behaviors in certain

situations. One norm of the classroom is for students to sit in chairs at desks. Standing on

the desks would go against the norm. Norms are useful because they guide behavior, letting

people know how to act in given situations. Manners and etiquette are other types of norms.

A number of studies have indicated that human cognition (the mental process or faculty

by which knowledge is acquired) is not the same everywhere. Humans come to know things

through perception, reasoning, and intuition.

No one is sure why differences exist, although clues may be found in child rearing and

social practices. Richard Nisbett, in The Geography of Thought: How Asians and Westerners

Think Differently . . . and Why, says that the characteristic thought processes of Asians and

Westerners differ greatly (Begley, 2003). For example, if you ask which of the following two go

together—a panda, a monkey, and a banana—a Japanese man is more likely to select the

monkey and the banana and a British man, the panda and the monkey. Westerners are more

likely to see categories (animals), whereas Asians are more likely to see relationships (monkeys

eat bananas). Why is this important to know? Understanding such differences is important for

cultural exchange, education, global business, and political relations. For example, Westerners

may believe a deal is a deal, and Easterners may be more inclined to change agreements

as conditions change: They see relationships between things. Americans are more likely to

predict a rise in life quality (an optimism), whereas the Easterners realize that upward trends

could very well reverse (Begley, 2003). None of this is set in stone, and many more studies are

under way, but there is enough evidence regarding differences in thinking styles to indicate

that cultures may have a difficult time understanding one other. For example, one researcher

on hearing the panda, monkey, and banana question said that the way they are arranged

(the order) may affect the choices made and that a great deal of research would have to be

done to rule out order effect. Ruling out that possibility and going back to the original idea,

of particular interest to researchers are the areas of the world that mix Eastern and Western

cultures such as Hong Kong. What happens when parents come from significantly different

cultures? Which culture becomes dominant, and how are the children raised? And what hap-

pens when workplaces mix two distinct cultures as in the case of an international merger such

as Daimler–Chrysler? This merger was dissolved after a few years.

Cultures and suBCultures Usually, a single dominant culture has the major influence on behavior. Citizens of a certain

nation share a common language, customs, and history. Subcultures, or subsystems of the

dominant culture, may have a strong influence also. These subcultures may have a religious,

Suggested Activity Identify a shopping situation where you want to respond in a more resourceful way, where you want to change from your usual way of shopping. Create a vision of yourself in the situation. How are you responding to the products offered? What do you see? How do you feel as you make choices?

122 chapter 4

ethnic, political, racial, social, or economic base. Individuals can belong to a dominant culture

and several subcultures at the same time.

Culture is transmitted through a variety of channels, including parents, schools, commu-

nity organizations, churches, employers, and government. An individual may live and travel in

many different cultures. Individuals may change their language, form of dress, or way of acting

as they move between different cultural systems. They may dress and act a certain way at

work and dress and act quite differently at home.

Resources, Families, and households Cultural expectations of families and households may have changed more rapidly than actual

behaviors. In other words, there may be a disconnect between what people are thinking is

happening and what is really happening.

When sociologists and family specialists study families, they find discrepancies between

ideals and behaviors when it comes to household work and child rearing.

Many women and men in the 21st-century America feel conflicts related to the “stalled

revolution”—the uneven changes that have occurred in gender ideologies and the structures

of work and family institutions (Gerson, 2002). Ideals about men’s and women’s proper roles

Culture is transmitted through families.

Resources 123

in paid work and family life have shifted over the past half century toward more gender-neutral,

egalitarian views alongside the massive movement of women, especially mothers, into the

paid labor force (Brewster & Padavic, 2000). In contrast to mothers’ greater investments in

market work, fathers’ complementary behavior in family caregiving has not changed as quickly.

Although fathers’ involvement in housework and child rearing has increased, it remains limited

(Robinson & Godbey, 1999).

To summarize, most people think things are more egalitarian, but studies show that

women still do about two-thirds of the housework. Child rearing is more difficult to study

because it involves many aspects that are hard to measure, such as nurturing and disciplining

activities. The amount of interaction time is often used as a measure.

There is no doubt that during the past 30 years, families and households have

undergone vast changes. The principal developments include increased labor force

participation by women, smaller households but more of them, more single-parent families,

an aging population, internationalization of the economy, changes in prevailing values and

attitudes, and technological innovations, especially in communications, information, and

transportation.

Nearly every social and economic institution has been altered. For example, there is evi-

dence that men are spending more time with their children. The Changing Workforce survey

of 2,877 workers showed that fathers were spending a half hour more each workday, and one

more hour each day off, caring for and doing things with their children than they did in 1977

(Shellenbarger, 1998).

As families become more mobile and both parents increasingly work outside the home,

raising children is becoming more difficult, and families rely more on outside resources. As

social historian Barbara Whitehead says, “Raising children isn’t an individual act. It is a social

and communal enterprise, involving kin, neighbors, other parents, friends, and many other

unrelated adults. Typically, hermits don’t raise kids; villagers do” (1990, p. 5). Secretary of

State and former Senator and First Lady Hillary Rodham Clinton’s book It Takes a Village

expressed a similar point of view.

Some solutions to family problems lie in changes in family and work policies in the private

and public sectors. The Family and Medical Leave Act, enacted in 1993, is one example of

a public policy designed to strengthen families. Through this act, companies with more than

50 employees must allow them (male or female) to take up to three months unpaid leave for

the birth or adoption of a child or the care of a critically ill family member. Essentially, workers

will not have to choose between their job security and their family’s well-being during times of

family crises, emergencies, or upheaval. Besides public policies, employers, schools, friends,

extended family, and community and religious organizations can also help support families.

Chapter 8 discusses specific human resource problems of families, and Chapter 10 has more

details about the Family and Medical Leave Act.

Consumption: China Using More Resources In 2011, China overtook the United States in terms of resource use. Over 300 million people

are moving to cities in China and the strain on resources is apparent. Of course, being the

largest country in the world population-wise adds on to the increased consumer demand for

goods. The number of Chinese tourists has increased incredibly in a few short years.

124 chapter 4

Food preferences have changed considerably with more meat in the typical Chinese diet than

ever before and meat production takes more resources than grain production.

Among the five basic food, energy, and industrial commodities—grain and meat, oil and

coal, and steel—consumption in China has already eclipsed that of the United States

in all but oil. . . . Although eating hamburgers is a defining element of the U.S. lifestyle,

China’s 2004 intake of 63 million tons of meat has climbed far above the 37 million

tons consumed in the United States. While U.S. meat intake is rather evenly distrib-

uted between beef, pork, and poultry, in China pork totally dominates. Indeed, half the

world’s pigs are found in China. With steel, a key indicator of industrial development,

use in China has soared and is now more than twice that of the United States. (Brown,

2005, p. 1)

By way of background, in the 19th century, both Canada and the United States practiced

“cut and get out” forestry (Aley, Burch, Conover, & Field, 1999). The 20th century saw more

sensitivity to the environment, but new building booms brought construction too close to

shorelines, which affected barrier dunes and floodplains.

Cities in desert areas and even areas previously filled with brimming lakes in the United

States grew beyond the capacity of the environment to sustain them. Dust bowls and soil

loss resulted, as did more strain on water sources. To consume means to destroy, use, or

expend. In the 21st century, the sustainability of our natural resources is an important issue

requiring a renewed look at (1) policy, (2) conditions, (3) planning, (4) household impact, and

the (5) management of ecosystems.

If this course of consumerism continues, waste management will become an increas-

ingly difficult problem worldwide. Although some waste generation cannot be helped, much

of the packaging and many of the products themselves are unnecessary. For a time, a U.S.

appliance manufacturer sold $25 lamps that were designed to be discarded when the bulbs

burned out. Lighters, razors, and disposable cameras are made to be used once and then

thrown away. Convenience has come to be valued over cost per use and sensitivity to the

environment.

From the perspective of resource conservation, is the use of disposables a good thing?

Obviously, not, many people are beginning to question or reject the notion of the throwaway

society as evidenced by a widespread acceptance of recycling and the increased purchasing

case study Tourism For the Starwood Hotels & Resorts Worldwide, growth prospects in China dwarf those in the United States, with 90 hotels slated for China compared to 33 in the United States. Starwood had the first Western-style hotel that opened in 1985, the Sheraton Great Wall in Beijing. It was built for Western travelers. The only Chinese were hotel staff. That has all changed. CEO Frits Van Paasscjem says, “Today 60% of our guests are identifiably native Chinese.

The next wave is Chinese travelers going to destinations outside of China . . . One of the things we’ve had to continue to work on is adapting [to] expectations about service levels. In countries [such as China] where wages tend to be lower there tends to be. . . . among high-end travelers a greater expectation of service. With Aloft Beijing we have room service and laundry and a greeter at the front door, typically things that an Aloft in the U.S. wouldn’t have.”

Source: Berzon, A. (2011, June 6). Starwood CEO heads to China to grow brand. The Wall Street Journal, p. B6.

Resources 125

of products made from recycled materials. Around the world there is an interest in ecotour-

ism, more natural golf courses, and local environment-friendly residential and commercial

landscaping.

Strategy and the Conservation of Resources Theory Underlying much of management is the concept of strategy. A strategy is a plan of action, a

way of conducting and following through on operations. Strategy implies the careful thinking

out of details and the consideration of outcomes. Usually, the word “strategy” is associated

with military or business management operations, yet it has many applications for individual,

household, and family management as well. Strategy revolves around the following questions:

• What do I want to accomplish? Or, what do I want to create?

• What is important?

• How will a plan contribute to goal achievement?

A successful resource strategy incorporates planning what is owned versus what is desired.

If a couple wants to buy a new house, they have to form a strategy to save for the down pay-

ment. A person who wants to lose weight should re-evaluate eating and exercise habits to form

a weight-loss strategy and then set a timetable and a goal for weight reduction. Similar plans

of action or strategy could be set up to reduce household waste, unnecessary spending, or

stress. Professor Stevan Hoboll (1989, 2002) developed a new way of conceptualizing stress

which he called the Conservation of Resources Theory although he applied this mostly to

stress it can be more widely used. He speculated about how people used their resources to

resist stress and increase their well-being. In his resource-oriented model he proposed that

people “strive to retain, protect, and build resources and that what is threatening to them is

the potential or actual loss of these valued resources” (1989, p. 513). As a strategy, someone

may invest their time and energy, two important resources, in order to obtain the highly prized

resources of power and money. Factors that will weigh in this pursuit are objects, conditions,

personal characteristics such as ambition and drive, and social network. Resources can be

valued in their own right such as health or they can be a means to a goal such as gaining more

social support (for a politician this would be votes), money, or position/title.

summarysummary Risk, scarcity, opportunity costs, satisfaction, and attributes of resources were covered in this chapter. Resources are central to the management process and to the pursuit of human satisfac- tion. They can be restored and replenished. Without human and material resources, there would be nothing to manage. We would not exist. For individuals, families, and communities, resources are the essential means of exchange (internal and external). Resources are used to attain goals and meet demands. We vary in our resource capacity and our reaction to what we have. An individual may feel his or her life is abundant whereas another person with the same set of resources might feel deprived.

For families and households, resource use provides a life space and a lifestyle around which individual and family needs are met. Knowledge, integrity, education, and health are vital resources, especially during times of turmoil, doubt, and fear.

The Foa & Foa Resource Model illustrates the interchange- ability of resources. From the fields of marketing and organizational behavior, resource-advantage theory explores the benefits of entrepreneurship and leveraging (doing more with less) and adds to our understanding of resource creation.

Resources can be looked at from many viewpoints, as resource use underlies all human endeavor. Owing to the scarcity

126 chapter 4

of resources, an individual tries to make choices that maximize benefits and minimize costs. The way a person goes about doing so is culturally defined. A number of studies indicate that human cognition is not the same everywhere: cultural differences in thought processes or perceptions exist. An ongoing issue is the gendered division of labor in the home for both housework and child rearing.

Management provides a way of looking at problems in an organized, rational, and yet compassionate manner. Material goods and wealth are not the sole determinants of happiness. Wealth and goods can help assure an easier life, but not necessar- ily a happy one. The elusive nature of happiness and the search to find the right life balance underlie the study of management.

Individuals make decisions purposefully, always seeking to better their circumstances. This constant striving drives people to seek better solutions and explains the “why” behind much of human behavior.

The next chapter takes the resource knowledge and puts it together in the decision-making process. Later in the book, the resource concepts covered in the present chapter will be applied to specific environmental and time and stress management prob- lems. As introduced in this chapter, Professor Stevan Hoboll created a new stress model called the model of conservation of resources. This model is based on the supposition that people try to retain and protect valued resources from perceived loss.

referencesreferences Aeppel, T. (2003, October 6). Three countries, one dishwasher.

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Begley, S. (2003, March 28). East vs. West: One sees the big picture, the other is focused. The Wall Street Journal, p. D1.

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termskey terms cognition 121 Conservation of Resources Theory 125 consume 124 culture 120 economic well-being 113 entrepreneurs 117 human capital 107 human resources 106

intangible resources 106 leveraging 117 material resources 108 norms 121 opportunity cost 111 private resources 114 public resources 114 Resource-Advantage Theory 116

resource capacity 103 resourcefulness 105 resource stock 108 scarcity 109 strategy 125 tangible resources 106 utility 119

questions 1. What are the main principles in Resource-Advantage

Theory? How do they apply to individual and family resource management?

2. Regarding friendships as a human resource, how many friends do you have? How long have you had them? Do you think certain friendships will continue over the next five years? Which ones and why?

3. What does the story about Picasso and the tourist illustrate about the nature of human capital? Name one skill, talent, or ability that you have built up over the years.

4. What does the Foa & Foa Model illustrate?

5. What role does strategy play in resource management? A college senior, Alison, figures that she will need a mini- mum starting salary of $35,000 to live in Charleston, South Carolina, based on a budget she has developed. She wants to live in Charleston because she has friends there, but she is having trouble finding a job because she goes to school 500 miles away. Alison’s main expense will be at least $800 a month for rent. If you were Alison what would you do next? In other words, what would your strategy be?

review questions

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129

You can have any color you want as long as it’s black.

—Henry Ford, referring to his new automobile line in 1914 5

Decision

Main Topics

Decisions Defined and Explored decision Making as Part

of Management Steps in decision Making Self-doubt, Self-Ambivalence,

and decision Making Models, rules, and Utility reference Groups Personal decision Making

Family Decision Making, Including Division of Household Work Consumer decision Making in Families Getting out of the House

Problem Solving definition, Analysis/Timing, and Plan of Action Uncertainty, risk, and Success The Go Model: Visualization of a Problem-Solving

Process

DiD you know that . . .?

. . . Fathers are more likely to help with cooking and grocery shopping than in the past.

. . . American households today spend 30 percent less time per week doing housework than they did in 1965.

Making anD ProbleM solving

130 chapter 5

O n a more conventional level, consider the managing technology situation at the Person household. Trevor Person of Alexandria, VA, has what he calls a “squeaky clean” inbox: He keeps

just 10 to 25 emails in it at a time. His wife has about 16,000 emails in her inbox.

Many people consider crowded inboxes to be status symbols, says Mr. Person. But he

suspects that his wife’s hoarding of emails actually exacerbates his compulsion to be

an inbox neatnick. He has reached a realization: His wife feels “validated” by a jammed

inbox. He feels validated by an empty one. (Zaslow, 2006, p. D1)

How do you manage your inbox? Are you more like Mr. Person or Mrs. Person? Or, some-

where in between? Making decisions and solving problems are the subjects of this chapter.

Mrs. Person does not see her 16,000 emails as a problem, but Mr. Person does. If hoarding is

a problem, here are some tips for paring down inboxes:

• Send less email (the theory is that less will be returned)

• Have a system for deleting email, such as deleting all emails over a month old. Some

companies and government agencies have this as a rule; emails more than a month old

are automatically deleted.

• Old emails may be kept for sentimental reasons (old lovers, former friends) or as a way

to keep a track record of work correspondence. It is up to you to decide when is the time

to let go.

Managing inboxes is mostly an individual decision, but here is an example of family decision

making:

Imagine volunteering for a lifestyle that forces you to give up nearly half your household

income, sell your toys, forgo vacations of the kind your friends enjoy, and work as if

three or four lives depended on your next paycheck. That’s the world of many solo-

breadwinner dads. Bo Rogers, Mesa, Ariz., sold his motorcycle and gave up his gym

membership, workouts and racquetball games after he and his wife Melanie had the

first of their two children, so she could quit her job. Now, Bo, who is paid solely on

commission as a heating and airconditioning salesman, feels pressured and stressed.

(Shellenbarger, 2003, p. D1)

case study google Founders Rapid decisions moved Google founders, Sergey Brin and Larry Page, from pursuing their PhDs in computer science at Stan- ford University to being listed in the top 20 of U.S. billionaires by 2005. They left Stanford in 1998 to form Google. Along the way early employees became rich as well. Susan Wojcicki is best known for renting out her Menlo Park, California, garage to them when they were just getting started. She became their

18th employee and now is senior vice president at the search engine company. She oversees all their advertising, which means nearly all their revenue. Talk about opportunity, talk about getting in on the ground floor, the world of technology is filled with such stories. Larry’s father was a computer science professor at Michigan State University, so there is a family story in here as well.

Decision Making and Problem Solving 131

These are the kinds of decisions that young families make. Reversing a trend of nearly a

quarter of a century, more families are opting to have a stay-at-home mother. According

to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the number of such families is increasing from a low of

35.2 percent in 1994. It is too early to declare it a lasting trend, but the numbers seem to

indicate a move toward more stay-at-home moms or dads at least when their children are

small. Trade-offs of child care are also common.

Here is a way one young mother handles her work and family situation: As a hairdresser

she stays home Sunday–Wednesday to take care of her two-year-old son. She works at

the salon Thursday–Saturday. On Thursdays her sister takes care of the boy, on Fridays her

in-laws take over, and on Saturdays her husband is home from his accounting job and takes

care of their son. This is an example of patching together child care and work arrangements,

which is very common.

This combining of care or blurring of the work and personal worlds is not just a social trend

but also a response to technological change. Computers and the Internet have made it more

difficult to determine who is employed for pay “outside the home” and who is not, because

so much can be done from any location. So it is difficult to know whether the stay-at-home

mothers are completely unemployed or are working part-time from home, although in the case

of the hairdresser, she goes to a salon to meet her clients and also enjoys the camaraderie of

being there during the busiest days. Some families also may have a family-owned business

or may be working seasonally. One woman was told by her doctor to stay in bed for the last

three months of her pregnancy. At that time she was writing her dissertation, so her husband,

a librarian, brought her books and articles for her research and she typed away happily, and

the baby was fine.

Not everyone is choosing to have children—another trend to consider that may seem to

contradict the one just described:

Anne Hare and her husband made a momentous decision three years ago: They would

not have children. It’s not that they don’t like kids, she says. They simply don’t want to

alter the lifestyle they enjoy. “With kids, especially young kids, infants and toddlers, you

really can’t do the active stuff we like to do,” said Hare, 43, a fitness-program coordi-

nator from Gainesville, Ga. Hare is among 26.7 million women ages 15 to 44 who are

childless, according to new Census Bureau data. . . . The number of women forgoing or

putting off motherhood—nearly 44 percent—has grown nearly 10 percent since 1990,

when 24.3 million were in that class. (Armas, 2003, p. 8A)

Besides personal choice, some influences on this trend include more women going to col-

lege and entering the workforce, then delaying motherhood or deciding not to have children;

more families choosing adoption; changes in societal attitudes; more reliable forms of birth

control and health and economic factors. The women most likely to be childless are Asian (just

over half), followed by non-Hispanic whites (46 percent), blacks (39 percent), and Hispanics

(36 percent).

Good decisions meet several criteria. As the previous examples show, they have to be

acceptable to the persons most involved—the family, perhaps the physician, and the employer.

Acceptance signifies that the key players in the decision acknowledge that it is reasonable and

workable. Decisions also have to have quality, flexibility, and clarity.

Quality means that the decision meets some standard, objective, or goal. If the decision

does not do so, or if someone involved in the decision does not accept it, then the decision

is likely to be ineffective. Thus, family decisions are more likely to succeed if they have the

132 chapter 5

support of family members and are linked to an agreed-upon standard, objective, or goal.

In other words, in families, as in other groups, decisions that are co-created have a better

chance of success than those that are individually created.

Flexibility means that the decision should not only be appropriate to the situation but also

be adjustable if the situation changes. For example, becoming engaged to be married may

seem like a good decision under certain circumstances, but when attitudes or circumstances

change (e.g., compatibility wanes, expectations change, another love interest comes into the

picture), the couple may choose to break the engagement or wait a while.

Clarity refers to how clear the decision is. Vague decisions do not work because they lack

definition and commitment.

Regarding fathers working and mothers staying at home (or vice versa), David Stevenson,

an art director for a New York publishing house, who works so that his wife, Noreen, a former

media buyer, can stay home with their two small children, says,

You both commit not just to the marriage, but to this structure that you’ve set up—this

notion that she will stay at home, I’ll work, and we’re in it together. . . . You gain a certain

strength from that—the stamina to press on when things get crazy. (Shellenbarger,

2003, p. D1)

He adds that they remind themselves that the rough spots are only temporary and try to laugh

about the problems, knowing they will pass. Another employed dad says, “If they want me

to work longer hours, I work longer hours. If they want me to travel, I travel” (Shellenbarger,

2003, p. D1).

Decisions Defined and Explored Decisions are conclusions or judgments about some issue or matter. Management recognizes

the influence of values on decisions and the role of goals in providing direction to decisions.

The decision process begins when a thing or a change is desired. Decision making, the

Relatives happy to be together.

Decision Making and Problem Solving 133

process of making a choice between two or more alternatives, is an integral part of the overall

management process (see Figure 5.1). In systems terminology, decision making is part of the

transformation process that incorporates various inputs and culminates in outputs. Sometimes

the process involves negotiation or bargaining with others. The previous chapters on values,

attitudes, goals, and resources have laid the groundwork for a full discussion of the decision-

making process.

This chapter begins by explaining the relationship between decision making and

management, and then describes the steps in decision making. Decision models and rules

are examined, along with their application to individuals and families. The chapter explains the

difference between decision making and problem solving and explores the concepts of risk

and uncertainty.

Decision Making as Part of Management Why do we spend so much of our time being active? Why don’t we just lie in bed and watch

the world go by? Because when it comes to living, we are programmed as humans to be

active, to accomplish things, and to find out what is going on. We want to make an impact.

An active life requires decisions and effort. We want smooth relationships. People want to

have something they do not have, and they have to make decisions and plans to bridge the

gap between what is and what could be.

Decision making is essential to maintaining and improving life conditions, including

home design. Values guide decisions. A decision maker values an issue or a life condition

enough to spend time thinking about it. Values also influence decision makers because

they realize that the choices they make will have positive or negative consequences. For

example, “design decisions influence how comfortably we live and how much it costs us

to attain the lifestyle we aspire to, and thus deserve extraordinary consideration” (Chiras,

2000, p. 2).

Decisions vary in intensity and importance. The purpose and content of decisions are

related to other aspects of the management process, such as planning, implementing, and

cost–benefit analysis. For example, each decision entails a cost in time and energy and

sometimes money. Decision makers try to minimize the costs and maximize the benefits of

a decision.

Chapters 1 and 3

Step 1

Chapter 3

Step 2

Chapter 4

Step 3

Chapters 5 and 6

Step 4

Chapter 6

Step 5

Decide, plan, and implement

Accomplish goals and evaluate

Identify resources

Identify problem, need, want, or goal

Clarify values

Environment

Feedback

Chapters 2 and 7

Chapters 2 and 12

Figure 5.1 The management process.

134 chapter 5

This desire to maximize positive outcomes and to minimize mistakes motivates individu-

als to make the best decisions that they can. Curiously, the plots of many movies, books,

and television shows feature individuals who do just the opposite. These characters make

decisions that minimize positive outcomes and maximize mistakes. Watching the characters

disentangle themselves from their mistakes and put their lives back in order can be interesting

and enlightening. Observing how others make decisions and solve problems on television,

especially on dating, game, and reality shows like Survivor, can help sharpen an individual’s

own decision-making and problem-solving skills.

Decision situations present both problems and opportunities. In analyzing decision

situations, individuals appraise alternatives and identify useful information and resources.

An important resource is time. An individual or family can save time by eliminating alterna-

tives that do not fit their values. Why waste time considering an alternative that is morally

or ethically unacceptable? Ralph Keeney (1988), a values expert, suggests that if “we begin

with values,” then “we might not even think of situations as decision problems, but rather

as decision opportunities”: “Periodically, we might examine achievement on the basis of our

values and ask, ‘can we do better?’” (p. 466).

As it is value based, decision making is highly personalized. Each individual’s personality

and usual modes of thinking and acting influence the way he or she makes decisions. Mood

affects decision-making ability and styles. There is one’s personal way of reacting to moods

and also we can “catch” the mood of others. If someone is upset at work and acting out then

others can pick up on the mood or situation and the whole workplace can operate under

a shadow or a cloud. Each person’s decision making also tends to follow a pattern, with

successful decisions being repeated again and again. The characteristic way that a person

makes decisions is called his or her decision-making style. Thus, decision-making styles

are affected by individuals’ values, knowledge, ability, and motivation. The types of decisions

made, the speed at which decisions are made, and the amount of information gathered before

making a decision are all part of a person’s decision-making style. For example, some indi-

viduals are quick deciders; others are more deliberate. Differences in style are also evident in

the evaluation phase at the end of the decision-making process. Some individuals look back

and agonize over every thought and action, whereas others think about past decisions only for

a few minutes and then go on.

Some decision styles are irritating. Suppose you go to a meeting, and the boss asks

for your opinion. You invest time and effort and present an opinion only to find out that

the  decision had already been made. How would you feel? Similarly, in a family how would

children feel after being asked for their opinion if they find out that their parents had already

made the decision?

It has been said that deciders suffer alone, but those who don’t make decisions make

others also suffer.

It’s easier to extract a wisdom tooth than a decision from some managers—even if

there aren’t any wisdom teeth to pull. When David Turnley was a technical writer for

a financial-data software company, his boss made so few decisions that no one ever

knew what she wanted. Yet, she had to be involved in every decision that she never

made. Mr. Turnley himself had some direct reports, and rather than try to explain what

he thought she might want done, he frequently let them work directly with her, he says.

Her indecision stemmed from a fear of being viewed in a poor light from above. But it

was contagious and nerve-racking to those below. (Sandberg, 2008, p. B1)

Decision Making and Problem Solving 135

Steps in Decision Making Decision making involves a series of steps that result in the choice of an alternative. The pro-

cess can be long or short. This section will discuss the parts of a decision plan which involves

several steps. However, new international research shows that the brain appears to make up

its mind 10 seconds before a person becomes conscious of a decision.

“We think our decisions are conscious,” said neuroscientist John-Dylan Haynes at

the Bernstein Center for Computational Neuroscience in Berlin, who is pioneering this

research. “But these data show that consciousness is just the tip of the iceberg. This

doesn’t rule out free will but it does make it implausible.” . . . In ways we are only beginning

to understand, the synapses and neurons in the human nervous system work in concert

to perceive the world around them, to learn from their perceptions. (Hotz, 2008, p. A9)

Dr. Haynes and other scientists have found that regions involved in decision making become

active up to 10 seconds before subjects in experiments consciously chose a button to press.

This was done with brain scans. About 70 percent of the time the researchers could tell ahead

of time what button would be pushed. Dr. Haynes says, “It’s quite eerie.”

Of course not all decisions are made quickly. When the process is long and complicated,

and includes a sequence of intentions, it constitutes a decision plan. Decision plans can be

specific or general. For example, Zak’s plan to buy his favorite cereal and milk at the grocery

store this afternoon is a specific decision plan. Jen’s plan to buy a car next year is a general

decision plan because she does not know what kind of car she wants or exactly when she will

buy it. Because decision making is a transformation process, the inputs, such as how much

money and time Zak and Jen have, will affect the decisions.

Decision makers use different strategies for different situations. The strategy selected will

depend on (1) the decision involved, (2) the characteristics of the decision task, and (3) the

decision-making style of the decider. In general, though, most people follow six steps in

making decisions. The acronym DECIDE (also called the DECIDE Model) provides an easy

way to remember these steps (Malhotra, 1991).

• Define the decision (distill and define the issue).

• Estimate resources.

• Consider alternatives.

• Imagine (visualize) the consequences of alternative courses of action.

• Develop an action plan and implement it.

• Evaluate the decision.

Critical Thinking

Have you ever been in a similar situation as Mr. Turnley, working with an indecisive boss? Do you think indecision in an employment situation can stem from being viewed in a poor light? In a home setting, a couple or family may never entertain because they feel their house or entertaining skills are not good enough. Would that be understood or not by their friends?

136 chapter 5

These steps are discussed in detail in the next paragraphs.

Step 1: Define the Decision. In defining the decision, the individual should take into

account the purpose of the needed behavior, and the relevant background informa-

tion—what information is needed, and how it will be used in decision making. In so

doing, the layers of a potential decision are peeled back to reveal the core of the

situation. Once the decision has been defined, the decision maker can move on to

the next step.

Step 2: Estimate the Resources Needed. The decision maker has to decide what

resources will be needed. As discussed in the previous chapter, resources include

time, energy, money, information, and anything else that is useful to the decision and

subsequent planning and action. The number of possible alternatives is limited by

the resources possessed or anticipated in the future. A ski vacation in Utah is out of

the question if a person has only a hundred dollars to spend.

Step 3: Consider Alternatives. What we are looking for in this step is compatibility or

congruency. Given the limitations on their resources, individuals seldom consider all

alternatives. For example, test-driving every car on the market before choosing one

would be impractical. Instead, a prospective buyer would eliminate many models

because of their cost, accessibility, features, and style or because they did not suit

her tastes and preferences; then she would test-drive just a few cars. Narrowing

down the possibilities to one or two acceptable alternatives is an important part of

the decision process.

Step 4: Imagine the Consequences of Alternative Courses of Action. Imagining or

thinking through the most likely alternatives is the next step. Envisioning what will

happen if a certain decision is made is so enjoyable or distasteful that some people

get stuck on this step. For example, in consumer decision making, this step involves

prepurchase expectations, which are beliefs about the anticipated performance of

a product or service. Before buying, people usually try to imagine how much pleasure

or pain they will get from the purchase.

Step 5: Develop an Action Plan and Implement It. Once an alternative is selected, a

course of action, a strategy, must be developed.

Putting the decision into action is called implementation. During this step,

the decision maker monitors the progress being made and evaluates how well

implementation is proceeding. Are  things going as planned? On schedule? Are

adjustments to the plan necessary?

Step 6: Evaluate the Decision. After the process has been completed, the decision

maker looks back to judge how successful the decision was. “Did I make the

right decision?” “Should I have done something else?” In consumer decision

making, this step involves postpurchase dissonance. After a major purchase,

such as a car, the buyer is likely to seek some reinforcement for the decision by

talking to other owners of the same model or reading advertisements or news

stories about the car. Being assured that the right decision was made reduces

doubt or anxiety. The right decision will also be reinforced if, for example, the bag

boy or girl at the grocery store says, “hey, cool car!” when loading groceries in

the car’s trunk.

Decision Making and Problem Solving 137

The chances of postpurchase dissonance, at least the doubt about whether one made

the right decision or not, are reduced if there were no or few alternatives to start with. Let’s

say someone moves to a town, and there is only one house for sale. The person will buy it

and not look back, because there were no other choices at that time. However, if confronted

with dozens of choices, that homebuyer is more likely to wonder whether he or she made the

best decision.

Self-Doubt, Self-Ambivalence, and Decision Making Self-perceptions including self-doubt and self-ambivalence affect decision making. Self-doubt

can cloud the ability to make decisions or to accept decisions once made. Some people have

no choice but to make fast decisions.

Presidents and parents, after all, are expected to make crucial decisions on a dime.

Doctors are being asked to save lives, and graduate students to know how Aristotle’s

conception of virtue differed from Acquinas’s conception of—uh-oh. Who’s kidding

whom? (Carey, 2008, p. D5)

Social psychologists have studied the imposter phenomenon since the 1970s when they

found that high-achieving women often suspected that they really weren’t as capable as

others thought, that somehow they had fooled everybody, and that their success was owing

to some kind of luck rather than achievement. Since then other studies have documented the

same effect in adolescents and adults, male and female, of all ages. Perhaps this is a reflection

of being an anxious or self-critical person or a societal stereotype, or it could be the phenom-

enon that limits them or affects their future goal-setting.

Questionnaires to determine self-doubt and feeling like an imposter may ask respondents

to react to the following types of statements:

• If I receive a promotion or award, I am hesitant to tell others.

• I can give the impression that I am more competent than I am.

• Sometimes I feel my success hinges more on luck than anything else.

case study caitlin’s Dilemma Caitlin is a senior at Celia K. Ward High School. She is finding it difficult to decide what to do after graduation. Two of her choices are going to the nearby community college or finding a full-time job. Her friends have told her about jobs in local businesses or she can stay working at the yogurt shop if she wants to and eventually move up to Assistant Manager. Her mother would like her to go to college and feels it is a mistake if she falls out of

the habit of studying. If she goes to college she will have to stay at home because she won’t be able to afford her own apart- ment unless she takes on a lot more hours at the yogurt shop or elsewhere. What values are Caitlin and her mother expressing? What alternatives should she explore further? What decision would you make if you were Caitlin?

How could the DECIDE model help her?

138 chapter 5

Respondents have to indicate whether they would strongly agree or disagree with these

statements, or whether they would fit somewhere in the middle. In a Wake Forest University

survey, psychologists investigating students’ test-taking behavior found that students who

scored high on an imposter scale would tell the experimenter that they would do poorly on

the upcoming test of intellectual and social skills: “Sure enough, the self-styled imposters

predicted that they would do poorly” (Carey, 2008, p. D5). They went in with a mind-set of

self-doubt. But, when they were asked privately—anonymously, as they were told—how they

thought they did on the test, the same people rated themselves higher. This shows that what

other people think—in this case, the experimenters—affects this “I am an imposter” response.

It would seem all this is rather negative and holding people back, but other studies have

shown that it appears not to be paralyzing. In one study, college women who scored high on

anxiety level and imposter feelings as they approached academic goals actually also scored

high on a desire to show others that they could do better. In other words, they had the com-

petitive spirit and tried harder (Carey, 2008). So, self-doubt is a factor to consider in decision

making, but it does not appear to hold individuals back, and emotionally well-adapted people

also feel self-doubt some of the time.

Self-ambivalence has not been as thoroughly researched as self-doubt but what

self-ambivalence refers to is uncertainty or indecisiveness as to what course to follow

(e.g., what to purchase) because of a conflicted attitude toward the self. A self-ambivalent

person may report that they are torn between different parts of their personality and thus this

interferes with decision making. It may exist because there are conflicting thoughts or feelings

about a person, an object, a product, or idea. Someone would be said to be ambivalent and

self-ambivalence may be linked to low self-esteem (Riketta & Ziegler, 2006). In the workplace,

an employee could feel ambivalent about a boss or a coworker or they could feel ambivalent

about themselves.

Models, Rules, and Utility Although change is a necessary part of life, many individuals are reluctant to change and

continue to follow existing patterns of behavior. Adhering to established goals and objec-

tives and the plans, strategies, and tactics devised for attaining those goals is referred to

as “maintaining the status quo.” According to Silver and Mitchell (1990), when faced with

uncertain alternatives, most people tend to stay with the status quo. But if a person, family, or

organization wants to change or to understand the mechanisms of decision making, they may

find decision-making models useful. These models assume that rational decision makers will

evaluate alternatives and then make the best possible choice.

As decision making is an abstract concept, decision-making models are useful because

they provide a way to visualize how the elements of a decision interact. Figure 5.2 shows

examples of the central-satellite and chain models. In the central-satellite model, a central

decision is surrounded by decisions that are

offshoots of the central decision. In the chain

model, each decision builds on the previous

one, forming a sequence of decisions, such as

the steps involved in preparing a meal. The chain

model is appropriate for smaller, systematic

decisions, whereas the central-satellite model is

suitable for larger, more complicated situations.

Suggested Activity Put one example of your own decisions in each of the central-satellite and chain models. Remember that the chain model is sequential, and the other has a large decision in the middle surrounded by smaller decisions or categories of decisions.

Decision Making and Problem Solving 139

Businesses such as catering services or conference- and wedding-planning services use both

models to organize receptions, banquets, meetings, and events.

As illustrated in Figure 5.3, values lie at the base of decisions. Two other concepts in

management, resources and goals, also play important roles. Decision trees are not only

used in business strategy sessions, but they can also be used by individuals in personal and

professional decision making. The model shows that people select alternatives based on their

goals and perception of available resources and that values underlie decisions. A more usual

Child care

Transportation Attend classes

and study

Tuition and books

Family support

Decide what food to make

Find ingredients and recipes

Assemble equipment

Prepare Serve

35-year-old woman returning

to college

Central-satellite model

Chain model

Figure 5.2 Examples of decision situations using the central-satellite and chain models.

Alternative 2Alternative 1

Decision

Resource(s) 2Resource(s) 1

Goal(s) 2

Values

Goal(s) 1

Figure 5.3 A decision tree: Values lie at the root of all decisions.

140 chapter 5

method used by many individuals in choosing between alternatives (e.g., whether to move to

one locale or another, which job offer to select) is to make a pros-and-cons list.

Decision Rules Models operate on certain principles or rules of logic. Decision rules are principles that

guide decision making. One decision rule is that decision makers will seek the best outcomes.

Another decision rule is that individuals will try to use their time to best advantage, wasting

as little as possible. However, this varies by situation and by culture. A study of Chinese

students found that they were not very time-conscious, but they were quite price- and quality-

conscious (Fan & Xiao, 1998).

utility One of the most important decision rules is the necessity to optimize utility, or the usefulness,

of decisions. The concept of utility underlies much of the study of economics and is strongly

associated with the study of management.

Rational decision makers are assumed to seek the maximum utility (satisfaction) from

the decisions they make. Furthermore, the utility concept focuses on how choices are made

and on how that process can be improved. A related decision rule is that consumers have

limited information; they may not be aware of all the alternatives that exist. The next section

on reference groups provides one explanation of why individuals may have only partial

knowledge.

Reference Groups Decisions have histories. For example, Allison orders pepperoni pizza because she knows

from past experience that she likes it. Besides past experiences, past and present relation-

ships affect an individual’s decision making. If Allison begins dating Trae, who is a vegetarian,

and he prefers pizza with cheese, green peppers, olives, and onions, they have several

options: They can order two pizzas, or they can order a pizza that is half pepperoni and half

vegetarian, or Allison can learn to skip the pepperoni. This simple joint decision- making situa-

tion illustrates how many choices exist and how individual tastes and relationships affect

those choices.

The people who influence an individual or provide guidance or advice are members of

that person’s reference groups. Trae and Allison are members of each other’s reference

groups. Figure 5.4 illustrates a typical college student’s reference groups. An individual does

not have to be present in person or geographically close to be a member of a reference

group. A person is considered part of a reference group if the memory of his or her values

and attitudes affects someone’s decision making. For example, Rob, a newspaper editor,

has not seen his high school journalism teacher for many years, but she is still a member of

Rob’s reference group because he thinks of her often and when he makes decisions about his

paper, he remembers what she taught him.

Reference groups can be divided into two types, primary and secondary, depending on

the amount of contact the individual has with a person or group. An individual has regular con-

tact with the people in primary reference groups; family, coworkers, and close friends fall into

this category. Secondary reference groups include those individuals and groups with whom

Decision Making and Problem Solving 141

contact is infrequent, such as distant relatives, organizations, and professional

associations. The influence of reference groups on decision making and

behavior cannot be overestimated.

Personal Decision Making Although all decisions—from which car to buy to whether to smoke—are

influenced by others, ultimately the individual is responsible for his or her own

decisions. Individuals begin to learn decision making at an early age.

During the socialization process, children are given the opportunity

to  make choices and to learn from decision situations. By the time they

become adults, most people assume themselves to be competent decision

makers. In reality, however, this assumption may fall short if there is a dif-

ference between the actual and perceived quality of decisions. The actual

quality of decisions refers to what is truly happening. The perceived quality

of decisions refers to what an individual thinks is happening in the decision

process. Potentially, then, people can deceive themselves into thinking that

a poor decision is a good one or at least an acceptable one. Experience and

improved decision-making skills can narrow the gap between the perceived

and the actual.

Decision-making style is affected not only by an individual’s socializa-

tion, knowledge, ability, and motivation, but also by his or her personality traits

such as compulsiveness, open-mindedness, innovativeness, self-confidence,

and courage.

Coworkers

Employer

Hometown friends

Other family members

Professors, advisors, and

coaches

Sorority or fraternity, clubs, and associations

Student

Immediate family

College friends

Figure 5.4 A college student’s reference groups.

Keeping a calendar (written or digital) helps with organization

142 chapter 5

Another factor that can affect decision-making style is self-esteem. Low self-esteem

often results in indecisiveness. In other words, someone who is unsure of his or her ability to

make sound decisions is likely to be indecisive. Indecisiveness can be a major problem for

individuals, families, and organizations. Possible causes of indecisiveness are

• Stress

• Ill health, depression

• Fear of the unknown

• Procrastination

• Fear of making a wrong decision or mistake

• Fear of acting on one’s own

• Lack of “good judgment”

• Feeling overwhelmed

• Fear of taking responsibility or standing alone on an issue

• Overdependency on other people’s opinions

inDecisiveness anD the PeteR PRinciPle Some individuals always seem to be indecisive; others are indecisive only in certain situations.

Lawrence J. Peter and Raymond Hall (1969) proposed an explanation for indecisive behavior.

They suggested that people may reach a point in their work at which they can no longer

successfully function.

Specifically, Peter and Hall said that people tend to be promoted until they reach a level

beyond their competence—a point at which they can no longer make and implement effective

decisions. They called this phenomenon the Peter Principle. Even though the Peter Principle

is pervasive, it can be avoided by fitting the right person to the right job and by making perfor-

mance expectations clear from the outset. Examples of this principle can be found in a variety

of organizations and settings, including the home and the community.

avoiDing Decisions Being indecisive is linked to another decision-making phenomenon—avoidance. Passing the

decision-making buck is one way individuals avoid decisions.

Avoidance typically results in statements such as the following:

• “I thought you were going to settle this.”

• “That’s not my job.”

• “You’re the boss. Don’t ask me what I think, just tell me what to do.”

• “Why is it up to me?”

Failure to assign clear responsibility for tasks in the home or at the office may lead to some of

these remarks. When chores are not assigned and the dishes are not done or the garbage is

not taken out, family members may all say, “That’s not my job.” Parents and children need to

have a clear understanding of who will do what in the home. At the same time, tasks, chores,

and duties are not static. Nonperformance may also result because goals and priorities have

changed; there are no longer commonly held beliefs about how to act. There is a fundamental

difference between compliance and commitment. Complying means going along with some

idea or action. Commitment signifies belief in an idea or action. High-commitment workplaces

and households are more productive and are more comfortable places to be.

Decision Making and Problem Solving 143

DeciDoPhobia Not making decisions is also a decision. Decidophobia is the fear of making decisions,

specifically the fear of failure. Sometimes the problem stems from being overwhelmed with

choices. Sherwin Williams has over 1,400 different colors of paint; how could a decidophobic

choose given that array of choices?

Here is another example of consumer overload: In one year U.S. manufacturers came up

with 150 new deodorant and antiperspirant products, whereas a few years earlier the number

was only 20 (Forelle, 2003).

A person with decidophobia is frozen and cannot choose an alternative or form a plan of

action. Decidophobics see decisions as problems, not as opportunities.

Here are a few ways decidophobics can break out of the nondecisive mode:

• Use the decision-making models and the DECIDE acronym, which divide decisions

into parts. Often it is easier to break a big decision into smaller parts and make those

decisions first.

• Moderate expectations.

• Start each day with the single most important task and complete it. If you are a list maker,

do not have more than five items on the list; that way you are more likely to get everything

done and feel a greater sense of accomplishment and control.

• Step back from the decision; sleep on it overnight; give it some time. You might even

think about a vacation or a change of scene as a way to get perspective.

• Talk it over with caring friends or family members: Perhaps there is a fresh approach,

an avenue you have not considered, or perhaps talking about it will at least offer the

chance to clarify what you really want. Mark Twain said, “I can teach anybody how to get

what they want out of life. The problem is that I can’t find anybody who can tell me what

they want.”

Decidophobia is a learned behavior; it is a type of helplessness (dependency on others);

and it is a form of perfectionism. So that they don’t establish this pattern, young children

should be given the opportunity to experience decision making (e.g., choosing the red shirt or

the blue one, the apple or the orange) in order to develop decision-making skills. Setting up a

variety of activity areas or learning centers in preschools or kindergartens is an excellent way

to provide children with early decision-making experiences. During free time, the children can

choose the activity they want to engage in, whom they want to be with, and what they want to

accomplish—all useful life preparation skills.

intuition Intuition plays a role in decision making. One way to increase decision-making acumen is to

trust feelings and instincts (Kaye, 1996). A multistep approach, like the one mentioned earlier

in the chapter, is not always necessary to select a course of action.

Sometimes decisions are influenced by intuition, or the sense of knowing what to do

without going through rational processes. For example, Brad accompanies Kirsten, his wife,

to two out-of-state interviews. Brad likes one state but cannot stand the other, although he

cannot give specific reasons for his feelings. Fortunately, Kirsten gets offers from both employ-

ers, and she and Brad choose the state they both feel good about.

As it is difficult to measure, intuition is one of the least scientific aspects of decision

making, but it is still recognized as a factor. As another example, when making an offer on

144 chapter 5

a house, should you pay the suggested price of $250,000 or should you offer $240,000

or $245,000? What does your research of house prices in the area (price per square foot

and so forth) tell you? What does your intuition tell you? Should you go lower and hope the

homeowner takes the offer, but be ready to renegotiate if necessary? Or should you offer

the suggested price? Sizing up situations involves rational decision making and information

seeking as well as intuition.

Family Decision Making, including Division of household work The main difference between personal and family decision making is that the latter is more

complex. The more people involved in making a decision or potentially affected by a deci-

sion, the more complex the decision process is likely to be. Consider, for example, how

difficult it can be for five coworkers to decide where to go to lunch or for a group of friends

to decide which movie to see. Similar difficulties can arise in a family setting, depending

on how many family members are involved in each decision. In a simple situation, only one

family member is involved in making a decision and everyone else simply accepts whatever

that person decides. For example, one person may suggest going to the school basketball

game, and the entire family agrees and accepts the decision. In a more complex situa-

tion, each family member may suggest a different course of action. Instead of agreeing to

go to the basketball game together, the family members go off in different directions: The

teenage son goes to the basketball game, the mother to a PTA meeting, the daughter to

a friend’s house, and the father to a club meeting. If the family has only one car, this is

going to be a difficult situation to manage. These examples illustrate two of the questions

raised by family decision making: Will the manager alone make most of the decisions, or

does each family member have a say? Are most decisions made smoothly, or is conflict

more usual?

Homes and families can provide a base for cooperation, coordination, and negotia-

tion. Family members bring to this base their own needs and wants, but sometimes one

family member’s needs and wants are in conflict with another’s. When conflict rather than

harmony is characteristic of the home or family, the decision-making process becomes more

complicated.

A practical example of a family decision-making situation is who does what in the home.

Women are more likely to do the laundry, prepare meals, shop for groceries, clean the

house, care for children, buy gifts, make decisions about furniture and decoration, and wash

dishes. Men are more likely to do yard work, make minor home repairs, and keep the car

in good condition. Although this is changing in recent years, with men doing more than in

the past in child care and food preparation, women still spend more time in housework than

men. Men do more housework when they live alone but spend fewer hours on it when they

live with their parents (Baxter, Haynes, & Hewitt, 2010, p. 1523). A fundamental question

in marriage and family research is whether cohabitating before marriage affects or leads to

more equalitarian housework arrangements. The answer is probably yes, that equal division

of labor is well established before marriage in previously cohabitating couples (Baxter et al.,

2010, p. 1506).

Decision Making and Problem Solving 145

Coltrane (1989) concluded: “Generally, mothers were more likely than fathers to act as

managers for cooking, cleaning, and child care, but over half of the couples showed respon-

sibility in all areas” (p. 480).

For information on time use in the home please refer to the American Time Use Survey

taken by the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Here are some of the results from the 2010 survey.

• Less time continues to be spent overall on housework. (American households spent

30 percent less time on household chores than in 1965.)

• More husband participation, with fathers tripling their domestic work since 1965.

• More shared responsibility in the home.

To break this down further,

• In 1965, married women spent an average of 33.9 hours per week on housework; in

1995, the number was 19.4. In the latest American Time Use Survey, mothers with

full-time jobs and young children have the largest total workload, logging five more hours

a week than dads.

• For married men, the average weekly housework hours in 1965 were 4.7 compared to

10.4 in 1995 (Bianchi, Milkie, Sayer, & Robinson, 2000).

case study The beckers “With three kids and a home business, and a disabled mother living with her, Kristen Becker often lets the dishes and laundry pile up. ‘I am very comfortable with chaos,’ she says. Her husband isn’t. He organizes his clothing by type, color and pattern, alphabetizes his CD collection and keeps rubber gloves in his car for unexpected

spills, she says. He sometimes goads his wife into being neater by making only his half of their king-size bed, heaping the maga- zines and bills splayed across the kitchen counter into teetering stacks, or moving his wife’s mound of laundry across the room. Mrs. Becker retaliates by letting her messes pile up even higher.”

Source: Bernstein, E. (2009, November 17). When Mr. Clean meets Ms. Messy. The Wall Street Journal, p. D1.

Critical Thinking

What do you think of the following passage? “Like Betty Friedan’s unhappy housewife, today’s working dad may be suffering from

gender idealization, which pressures him to be both breadwinner and involved father. ‘There are many reasons to be concerned about men,’ says Ellen Galinksy of the Families and Work Institute, which just released a report concluding that long hours at work and the blurring of boundaries between the office and home are to blame. That study and other new research show how much dads are feeling squeezed.” In a survey by the Families and Work Institute at Boston College, 57% of men agreed with this statement “in the past three months, I have not been able to get everything done each day because of my job.”

Source: Konigsberg, R. D. (2011, April 8). Chore Wars. TIME, p. 48.

Men Feeling squeezed

146 chapter 5

In more and more households, partners share activities such as child care and grocery shop-

ping. For example, one study revealed that in 14 percent of the households men and women

share grocery-shopping duties. In response to this and the research finding that men are

more likely to buy whatever they see, Audrey Guskey, a marketing professor at Duquesne

University, says that stores court men with end-of-aisle displays of chips, beer, and soft

drinks—items men commonly buy on impulse (Meyer, 1997). Who shops and who does what

in the home continue to be contested terrains. Household members need to have clean living

quarters, food to eat, and clean clothes to wear; and if there are children, they need to be

cared for. Homes that are clean and neat seem calmer, roomier, and healthier. The critical

thinking exercise brings up the point that men are cooking more in the home and this surge is

part of a more balanced division of labor in most households.

Critical Thinking

In recent times in the United States more men are cooking inside the home (according to one survey, fathers participate in nearly one-third of the time that a family spends cooking) and more women are joining the ranks of professional chefs, historically a male domain. The White House chef under the George W. Bush and Barack Obama admin- istrations is a woman following on many previous administrations with male chefs. Why are more men cooking at home and more women becoming chefs? Any thoughts? Could it be as cultural theorists surmise that Americans are making more and better food choices whether they dine in or dine out and that there is a higher interest in food quality and preparation regardless of gender or place?

Source: Baksian, A., Jr. (2011, May 21–22). Guys and dollops. The Wall Street Journal, p. C7.

Food for Thought

Individuals who live together have to decide on a standard of living, a comfort zone they

can live with. Possible solutions to getting the housework done more efficiently and more

pleasantly include

• Trying teamwork: picking a half hour or an hour a week to clean together, perhaps

Saturday morning, and concentrating on tasks like mopping floors and cleaning

bathrooms.

• Keeping communication lines open, renegotiating tasks.

• Not wearing shoes in the house and having a place or box near each entry door where

shoes can be kept; or at least having outside mats to rub shoes on before entering

the house.

• Having a chart or checklist; rewards for completion of tasks.

• Buying the latest equipment and products to make the tasks easier. For a two-story

house, putting cleaning supplies and vacuum cleaners on each floor; in a multi-bathroom

house, putting cleaning supplies in each bathroom.

• Multitasking by listening to music while cleaning; folding laundry while watching television.

• Using time fragments, cleaning for short periods of time and taking a break.

Decision Making and Problem Solving 147

• Cleaning from the top down. As dust settles, starting at the top of a bookshelf or ceiling

fan and working downward.

• Using space fragments, dividing a room into areas and cleaning one area at a time.

• Attacking the area that is most visually bothersome first.

• Reading labels, making sure the products are being used correctly. If the label says to

leave the product on for 10 minutes for best results, do it.

• Hiring help, outsourcing. At what point does doing so make financial sense, figuring in

satisfaction and pleasure?

Economists are looking at household production in a fresh way. A finding of the Bureau of

Labor Statistics in its 2003 Survey was that if a person’s income is more than $44,000 a year,

it makes more financial sense to hire a lawn service than do it oneself (assuming the person

dislikes this task). Tasks can be divided into two categories: consumption, which is enjoyable,

and production, which feels more like work. Take gardening, for example. Is that work or

leisure? If a person hates it, then hiring someone to do it makes sense.

Families, enviRonment, anD the elbing moDel According to Marshall (1991), “the future of American families is not predetermined, but

depends heavily on the choices made by families, employers and especially public institutions”

(p. 5). Consequently, family decision making is strongly influenced by families’ awareness of

what is feasible and acceptable in the environment in which they live. Alvar Elbing developed

a model (see Figure 5.5) to illustrate how two individuals in a family make decisions given their

reference groups, perceived and acceptable alternatives, and environmental constraints. The

ABCD: Family decision situation X: Family member Y: Family member

Z: Environment RGx: Reference group for member X RGy: Reference group for member Y

XZ: Alternatives perceived by X and acceptable in existing environment.

YZ: Alternatives perceived by Y and acceptable in existing environment.

XY: Alternatives perceived by both X and Y but not acceptable in the environment.

X1 and Y1: Alternatives perceived by one member but not acceptable in the environment. Z1 and Z2: Acceptable alternatives not

perceived by family members. Solution

XYZ: Alternatives perceived by both family members and acceptable in the environment.

X

A D

CB

Y

X1

Z1 Z2

Y1

XY

XZ

Z

RGy

YZ

RGx

XYZ

Figure 5.5 The Elbing model for viewing alternatives in a family decision situation. Source: A. Elbing (1978). Behavioral decision organisations (1st ed.) © 1978. Electronically reproduced by permission of Pearson Education, Inc., Upper Saddle River, New Jersey.

148 chapter 5

Elbing model demonstrates that decisions are influenced by many factors and considerations.

The XYZ section in the center of the model represents the solution, because alternatives in this

section are perceived by both individuals and are acceptable in the environment.

accommoDation, consensual Decision making, anD De Facto Decision making There are three types or styles of family decision making: accommodation, consensual, and

de facto. In accommodation, the family reaches an agreement by accepting the point of view

of the dominant person. Power is a critical factor in accommodation. In consensual decision

making, the family reaches an agreement equally acceptable to all individuals involved.

De facto decision making is characterized by a lack of dissent rather than by active assent.

It usually occurs when no one really cares about the outcome of the decision. For instance, no

one in a family may have strong feelings about which television show to watch.

Families in which husband and wife share equally in making most of the decisions are

syncratic. Families can also be autonomic, which means that an equal number of decisions

are made independently by each spouse. Thus, in syncratic families the decisions are shared,

whereas in autonomic families the spouses make an equal number of separate decisions.

Usually, the partner who commands the greater amount of material resources will achieve

greater power in spousal decision making.

Newer studies suggest that decision-making power in couples is also related to their

emotional interdependence, and ability to control each other and influence the ultimate degree

of consensus. Godwin and Scanzoni (1989) theorized that the more modern the gender role

preference of the wife, the less control her husband had. Their study of 188 married couples

revealed that socio-emotional factors affected both coerciveness and control. Specifically,

emotional bonding contributes to spouses’ influence over each other and also to whether they

reach a consensus. “Spouses who reached higher levels of consensus included husbands

who had patterns of previous cooperativeness during conflict situations, more equitable

economic resources of the spouses, wives whose communication styles were less coercive,

and spouses who demonstrated greater control” (p. 943). Further, husbands who were

committed to the marital relationship were more likely to respond positively to their wives’

suggestions, ideas, and directives.

In conclusion, it appears that explaining decision-making power (who decides what and

to what extent) in couples is more complicated than simply looking at who contributes the

greater amount of resources. Other important factors include how close to each other the

husband and wife are, the degree of cooperativeness and communication between them, and

their levels of education. For example, a study in India revealed that literate women participated

to a greater extent in decisions related to health and size of the family, their children’s educa-

tion, and the family’s investments and savings than did illiterate women (Mohanty, 1996).

The types of decision making discussed so far have involved couple-centered families

in which most decisions are made by the spouses. An alternate scenario is child-centered

families in which the children make or affect most of the decisions of the whole family, includ-

ing the choice of foods, television shows, and activities. Actually, the difference between

couple-centered and child-centered families is not absolute, for children affect decisions in

every family. Nevertheless, children do have more influence in some families than in others.

The next section will discuss family and couple consumer decision making and show how

children influence parents’ buying behaviors.

Decision Making and Problem Solving 149

Consumer Decision Making in Families Scottish professors Monika Schroder and Sabine McKinnon (2007), researching the learning

of good judgment in regard to key consumer skills, found that the family in its primary role as

creator of values was considered the most important agent in the consumer education pro-

cess. Why? Because, according to the subjects in the study, the family establishes a routine

pattern of decision making. The researchers say that families are value transmitters. Other

sources of consumer skill development were the support from social networks in the wider

community and real-life experience through trial and error.

Consumer decision making in the marketplace provides an excellent illustration of

family decision making. How one family spends money may not seem that important, but,

collectively, family spending amounts to billions of dollars when multiplied across all families.

For this reason, manufacturers and advertisers spend enormous amounts of money on con-

sumer research to determine who decides what in a family and why. In short, consumer

decision making is big business and the driving force behind the well-being of national

economies.

Complicating this interaction between consumers and the marketplace is a level of

distrust. After interviewing people of several nationalities Schroder and McKinnon said:

Respondents made it clear that the balance between consumer and producer power

was not entirely satisfactory. In particular, it emerged that the motives of market-

ers are still viewed with suspicion. Respondents spoke of “being manipulated”

(Danish female; Polish male), “ripped off” (French female), “falling into traps” (Spanish

female), “don’t believe all you see on TV” (Spanish female). (Schroder & McKinnon,

2007, p. 158)

Families must decide (1) what to buy, (2) where to shop, (3) how much to pay, (4) when to

buy, and (5) who should buy. The first decision is the most important—families have to decide

whether they want to buy something. This decision leads to the other four. Deciding what to

buy is more difficult when there are countless brands to consider. For example, 34 new food

products are launched each day in the United States (Mogelonsky, 1998). Let’s consider the

“when-to-buy” decision.

There are life change points that radically affect consumption. Examples are marriage,

having children, moving, getting a job, getting a dog, buying a house, empty nesting, and

retiring. Newlyweds are the ultimate consumers, buying more in the first six months of marriage

than a settled household does in five years (Ellison & Tejada, 2003). The publisher of Bride’s

and Modern Bride magazines estimates that U.S. newlyweds spend $70 billion establishing

their households. In many instances, life changes stimulate gift buying as well as buying for

one’s own consumption. A growing number of couples register for gifts and some ask for gift

cards. One couple who were remodeling their house and with the wife-to-be aged 43 asked

for Home Depot gift cards and received nearly $3,500, enough for plenty of remodeling sup-

plies and a few appliances (Shellenbarger, 2011, p. D2). Jason, a 24-year-old recent college

graduate, explained it this way:

All my friends are getting married. So my girlfriend and I are buying wedding gifts every

couple of months and we’ve never done this before. We try to find something that fits

what they like to do, like cooking, keeping in mind what their style is—contemporary or

traditional.

150 chapter 5

Cueing into life changes has not escaped marketers:

Corporate marketers say certain points in life make consumers especially vulnerable to

sales pitches, with the soon-to-be-married often being the most susceptible.

It’s a time when they aren’t just choosing a marriage partner, but also are making

brand decisions about toothpaste, detergent, and appliances that could last even longer.

Unless a couple has been living together for years, weddings represent a moment when

two sets of habits and brand preferences meet and usually only one survives. (Ellison &

Tejada, 2003, p. B1)

The family decision-making process involves eight distinct roles (see Table 5.1). These

roles provide a way of conceptualizing how family members make decisions—some family

members are buyers, others users, still others influencers, and so on. For example, a mother

or father buys disposable diapers, the baby uses them, and the parent who changes the

diaper disposes of it.

Purchases based on family decision making can involve conflict. For example, a couple

may differ about the amount of money to spend, the brand or type of good to buy, the stores

to shop in, or who should do the purchasing. Conflict will decrease if the couple agrees on

which goals are desirable.

Purchasing decisions may be influenced by a number of variables, including reference

groups, work life, leisure pursuits, culture, subculture, social class, stage in the life cycle,

mobility, geographical location, and children. For instance, young families with preschool

children have different buying decisions to make than do retired couples. Joint decision

making is most common among the middle class, whereas autonomous decision making is

most likely in the upper and lower classes (Loudon & Della Bitta, 1988).

Children have a significant influence on their parents’ buying habits. A study by Infocus

Environmental of Princeton, New Jersey, found that one-third of parents changed their shop-

ping habits because of environmental information their children gave them. When questioned

Eight Roles in Family Decision Making There are eight distinct roles in the family decision-making process. A look at these provides

further insight into how family members interact in their various consumption-related roles:

1. Influencers: Family member(s) who provide information to other members about

a  product or service

2. Gatekeepers: Family member(s) who control the flow of information about a product

or service into the family

3. Deciders: Family member(s) with the power to determine unilaterally or jointly whether

or not to purchase a specific product or service

4. Buyers: Family member(s) who make the actual purchase of a particular product or

service

5. Preparers: Family member(s) who transform the product into a form suitable for

consumption by other family members

6. Users: Family member(s) who use or consume a particular product or service

7. Maintainers: Family member(s) who service or repair the product so that it will provide

continued satisfaction

8. Disposers: Family member(s) who initiate or carry out the disposal or discontinuation of

a particular product or service. The number and identity of the family members who fill

these roles vary from family to family and product to product.

Source: Leon G. Schiffman and Leslie Lazar Kanuk, Consumer Behavior, 4th ed. © 1991 Pearson Education (Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice-Hall, 1991), p. 341. Adapted with permission of Pearson Education.

Table 5.1

Decision Making and Problem Solving 151

about their information source, the children said they learned about the environment in school.

The study reported in Marketing News (Schlossberg, 1992) indicated that children affect their

parents’ buying and shopping habits by encouraging them to purchase items in recyclable

packaging (24 percent) and to avoid products in containers that are not recyclable or biode-

gradable (17 percent). The study concluded that children are influencing far more than the

particular foods their parents purchase and that they are having a significant impact on their

parents’ environmental consciousness.

Getting Out of the House Much of the previous coverage has been on children, consumption, and household responsi-

bilities, joint decision making, and so on. It is also important to note that a surprising number of

Americans are less home-focused: They are getting out of the house—going to gyms, parties,

restaurants, clubs, and bookstores.

This trend is called hatching, a term that refers to local-area nesting, finding other places

outside of the work or the home where one can spend time. Hatching has also been called

“the third space” and is epitomized by television shows like Cheers and Friends and How I Met

Your Mother.

People are looking for ways to reconnect through discussion groups, book clubs,

investment clubs, and jogging or biking groups. They may purposely move to planned urban

developments (PUDs) with built-in activities and town centers with shops and restaurants,

join bird-watching groups, or take up garden-

ing, hiking, photography, running, and boating.

Some of these activities are free and some

are costly. For individuals returning to outdoor

activities a whole range of equipment, clothing,

and accessories is necessary.

Getting out there isn’t cheap:

“My husband would have a stroke if he knew the price,” says Jackie Menefee, who

put together a quick weekend getaway to get out for a change. The couple made a

two-hour drive from their Chesapeake, Va., home to an ocean resort for two nights of

pampering and a Champagne tasting. They had a good time, but she wasn’t prepared

for a $600 tab. “It was very upscale,” she says. (Daspin, 2003, p. W9)

On a more modest scale, one home owner drives to Home Depot or Lowe’s, home supply

stores, every Saturday morning and looks around and drinks a cup of coffee. Others go to flea

markets, garage sales, or antiquing with friends.

Carol Ann Band says she’s just happy to get out. Between growing her own vegetables

for home-made baby food to weekly Sunday dinner with relatives, all the time spent

in the house is wearing thin. Now the 37-year-old in Fresno, Calif. has hit on a way to

relieve the stress: she joined a women’s tennis league and is playing a couple times a

week. “I’m a better mom for the hours I take away,” she says. (Daspin, 2003, p. W9)

As we know from systems theory, activities wax and wane. There is a cyclical, or wavelike,

effect, and the nesting instinct is not immune from it. It goes in and out of fashion. In the

early 1980s the term “cocooning” caught on big as people retreated from the dirt and crime

of the streets into their safe and warm homes. Baby boomers were buying their first homes

Suggested Activity Is there a life change point in your immediate future? If so, how will it affect your consumption patterns?

152 chapter 5

and filling them up with oversized furniture and children’s equipment. The phrase “couch

potato” emerged. September 11, 2001 brought another wave of nesting behavior as families

drew closer in the wake of the terrorist attacks and the uncertainty that followed. National,

international, and business travel slowed. Huge sectional sofas began to sell as well as home

theaters costing $100,000 or more. At the same time, sociologists noticed a countermove-

ment of people looking for companionship and connectedness outside the home. Church

attendance and library use went up for a while. Perhaps there is a limit to how much home and

family time is possible. “You can only cocoon with your family for so long,” says Erik Gordon,

a professor who studies consumer trends at the University of Florida. “Even if they don’t drive

you nuts, they bore you” (Daspin, 2003, p. W1). In 2011, when people were isolated in their

homes without power because of Hurricane Irene and other storms they longed to get outside

and reconnect with the rest of the world.

The search for the right balance of time inside and outside the family/home continues,

and much of it is driven by a person’s life stage as well as by environmental and economic

conditions. Much of what this book is about is that search and the factors that play into it.

Problem Solving Problems are questions or situations that present uncertainty, risk, perplexity, or difficulty.

Problem solving involves making many decisions that lead to a resolution of the problem. In

some disciplines, the terms “decision making” and “problem solving” are used interchangeably,

but in family resource management they are used differently. Decision making encompasses

all sorts of situations (many of them routine), needs, and wants, whereas problem solving

implies that a certain degree of difficulty or risk is involved. An example of a decision is whether

to wear a blue shirt or a green shirt. A problem is more complicated than that—there are more

factors, more variety. As noted earlier, the more number of people involved in a decision, the

more complex the decision process. Thus, family problem solving is usually more complex

than individual problem solving.

Because problems arise from difficulty or crises, they put even more strain on families

than routine decision making. If any family member has hidden agendas or demands, problem

definition or analysis can be extremely difficult. Skilled family managers can often spot potential

problem areas and try to resolve them before they become full-blown problems involving

intense family conflict.

An example of a problem situation for families is who to invite to a wedding and another

is how to deal with child care or elder care emergencies. Put yourself in the role of decades

long family arguments with marriages and remarriages. Or, the situation of working at a job

and receiving a call from the day care center that your child is running a temperature and you

need to come right away to take the child home, or the nursing home calls and says that your

dad fell down and has been taken to the hospital. Another situation is your grandma is in an

independent living community and your family gets the call that grandma can no longer func-

tion because of Alzheimer’s disease. On her own, she can no longer find her apartment or the

dining room. She crossed a four-lane highway by herself and wandered down the street and

had to be brought back. The facility is asking your family to remove grandma and find a more

appropriate place with more personal services.

Decision Making and Problem Solving 153

While child-care problems get more attention in the workplace, the emergencies that

beset the aged—a fall, a stroke, the errant behavior of dementia—tend to be more

disruptive, forcing working caregivers to drop everything and rush to the scene. But

how do you lay the groundwork at work for a crisis you can’t foresee? From consul-

tants, coaches and caregivers, here are some ideas: Work as if you’re leaving tomorrow

for vacation. “Get your backlog as close to zero as you can, and keep it there,” says

David Allen, a productivity coach. Create an understandable system to track projects

and documents. (Shellenbarger, 2008, p. B1)

Dealing with unpredictable long-term caregiving like elder care is different from short-term

emergencies like the one or two stay-home days for a child. Experts also suggest marshalling

resources (know your employer’s time-off policies, your rights under the federal Family and

Medical Leave Act), gathering medical information, and making arrangements. “When caring

for her late parents, Diana Abouchar, Northbrook, Ill., made a habit of working long hours and

finishing projects promptly. When a crisis called her away, she says, ‘I left no trace’ of undone

work” (Shellenbarger, 2008, p. B1).

Critical Thinking

How do you plan for the unplannable? If you were a manager and an employee needed to rush to the hospital 30 minutes away to check on an injured family member, how would you deal with that situation? Who would fill in for the employee? How would you help the distressed employee who had to leave suddenly?

Definition, Analysis/Timing, and Plan of Action Usually people do not spontaneously become aware of a problem and then suddenly

decide to search for and analyze relevant information (Fay & Wallace, 1987). Instead,

the person or family is motivated by dissatisfaction with the current state of things. As

motivated processes, problem awareness and analysis are subject to five levels of motiva-

tion influences:

1. Needs, motives, and goals of the problem solver;

2. Perceptions and beliefs of the problem solver;

3. Values of the problem solver;

4. Resources of the problem solver;

5. Learning, background, and previous experience of the problem solver.

These influences affect the way a person defines a problem and makes decisions to solve the

problem.

154 chapter 5

PRoblem DeFinition Problem recognition or definition is the first step in problem solving. The person has to

recognize the problem as such before engaging in purposeful behavior to resolve the situa-

tion. Problem definition is a creative process requiring the individual to see common threads

and sense important cause–effect relationships. For example, the person needs to uncover

the underlying symptoms that have caused the problem. How does one go about this?

According to David Nylen, “Problems are best defined in the form of questions. Doing so

provides clear direction for the rest of the process. The task of the decision maker becomes

one of providing a solution or decision that will answer the question. . . . The final decision must

fulfill and reflect the underlying cause of the situation” (1990, pp. 51–52).

Complicated problems demand more energy and attention because their cause (or

causes) may be hidden or multifaceted. Once the problem is defined, the individual can move

on to the next step in problem solving—problem analysis. As a practical example, the next

sections will show how Michelle engages in problem solving after her boss tells her that she

has been denied a promotion because she lacks administrative experience.

PRoblem analysis/timing Depending on the type of problem and the individuals involved, problems can be viewed as

messes or as experiences that simply require a logical and reasonable response. For example,

after being denied a promotion, Michelle could respond or act in many ways. She knows she

has a problem (the problem is clearly defined); now she has to decide what she is going to do

about it.

No two problems are the same because each involves its own unique timing, individuals,

and circumstances, and stems from a specific situation. To solve complicated problems, the

individual needs to systematically follow the decision steps discussed earlier in this chapter.

Taking shortcuts in the decision process will only result in incomplete information that will

complicate the problem situation further.

As many complex problems involve the interaction of subproblems, one approach

is to divide the problem into subproblems and analyze each separately. One of the most

difficult aspects of problem solving is timing. Sometimes it is wise to deliberately delay a

decision, in case life changes occur or better options turn up. “Real-options thinking

puts a high value on flexibility,” says Glenn Daily, a fee-only life insurance planner in New

York (Quinn, 2001). He suggests that you lean toward the choice that keeps more of

your options open rather than choosing a single-option path. “Real options” is a catchall

phrase referring to staying open, waiting and watching for the right opportunity, such as in

making financial decisions—planning when to invest, buy insurance, pay off debt, and so

forth. Perhaps your parents said to you, “leave your options open” or “there are other fish

in the sea.” How do you tell the difference between lasting changes (moving in the right

direction) and impulsive moves (instability)? Consider these guideposts of lasting change

(or real options):

• They are based on your values and goals, something you have thought about for a long

time, bringing beliefs to life.

• They are one option among many.

• Embracing a challenge, the change should be challenging but worth the effort. There is

the feeling of moving forward rather than fleeing or avoiding.

Decision Making and Problem Solving 155

Henry David Thoreau said:

I learned this, at least by my experiment: that if you advance confidently in the direction

of your dreams, and endeavor to live the life which you have imagined, you will meet

with a success unexpected in common hours. You will put some things behind, you will

pass an invisible boundary.

Plan oF action Once the defining and analyzing phases are over, the individual designs a plan of action.

Planning involves putting together the activities or steps to follow. The objective of plan-

ning is to produce systems or solutions that can provide satisfaction to the problem solver

and other stakeholders in the problem. Michelle decides to get administrative experience

so that the next time an opening occurs she will be qualified. Her subproblems include

whether her current workplace can provide the necessary experience or whether she will

have to get experience elsewhere. Perhaps her boss could be more explicit about the work

experience she lacks. Michelle also turns to her colleagues, friends, and family for advice.

After she considers their advice and her own perception of the problem, she forms a plan

of action. Forming a plan makes her feel more in control of things. Resource management

as a discipline encourages individuals to gather as much information as possible, objectively

examine their problems and options, and form a plan of action that will help get them what

they want.

Motivation is a key part of problem solving. The motivation to solve the problem will

depend on the extent of discrepancy between the desired and the actual state and the

importance of the problem. Most people will not waste inordinate amounts of time on

minor daily decisions such as what to wear or what to eat. Routine decisions such as

these rarely are problems. They can become problems, however, if the involved person

defines them as a problem or if the decision has a far-reaching impact. For example, what

to wear to a job interview or what to serve at a banquet for 500 people may become major

problems involving substantial amounts of money and a variety of alternative choices and

consequences.

Another essential part of problem solving is the search for information. The search leads

to the opening up of alternative courses of action and evaluation. Looking within oneself for

information for making decisions is called an internal search. Michelle did this first. After

her boss told her she had been denied the promotion, she went back to her office, shut the

door, and thought over the problem. An internal search is easier and more common than an

external search, which involves gathering information from family, friends, other people, and

the media. When Michelle asked others for advice, she engaged in an external search. As

part of her external search, she watched a television news report and read magazine articles

about how many people around the country were being laid off from their jobs owing to corpo-

rate downsizing or were turning to home-based work because they were tired of working for

someone else or commuting. This information helped Michelle put in perspective her failure to

receive a promotion. She reasoned that at least she had a job she liked, and she felt sure that

given time she would get herself promoted through her effort. As in Michelle’s case, complex

problem solving usually requires both internal and external searches.

As the search proceeds, the problem becomes more narrowly defined and refined. At all

times, decisions should be linked to the primary goal sought. If the goal is landing the best

job possible, the job seeker continually looks for information, work experience, and contacts

156 chapter 5

leading to that goal. The desired end state is a solution. Michelle would be well advised to

spend time getting the training she needs to get ahead, if not at her present job, at another

organization.

Uncertainty, Risk, and Success The problems associated with career advancement and job hunting are good examples of

uncertainty and risk. In both cases, the individual searches for information to reduce the levels

of uncertainty and risk. The more an employee or job seeker knows about a company, such

as its policies and track record, the more confident he or she will be on the job or at job

interviews.

This is why the office grapevine or gossip is useful: Employees need to know what is

going on and what is about to happen. Advance knowledge moderates individuals’ percep-

tions of uncertainty and risk and gives them time to adjust/strategize.

The concepts of risk and uncertainty were introduced in Chapter 2 in the discussion of

risk aversion theory. This theory says that rational people will try to reduce or avoid risk, and

that risk is subjective because individuals define the level of risk and uncertainty they can

handle. For example, a blind date is a risk. To reduce the amount of risk and uncertainty, the

couple will try to find out as much as possible about each other before going out on the date.

Uncertainty is the state or feeling of being in doubt. Risk is the possibility of pain, harm,

or loss from a decision. Risk is subjective; that is, each person defines what risk is. A person

weighing uncertainty and risk is judging the probability, or likelihood, of a good or bad

outcome. Shopping, particularly catalog or Internet shopping, involves risk and the consider-

ation of probable outcomes.

Success is the achievement of something desirable. It can be a specific such as

milestones reached, money earned, and honors won, or it may be a desired state, such as

happiness, contentment, fame, or prosperity, often expressed as a successful outcome. It

may be the result of planned activity or, on rare occasions, chance. True success is defined

by the individuals themselves, not by parents, friends, employers, society, or the media. The

reason success is included in this discussion is that often success involves risk and uncertainty.

Critical Thinking

Describe a problem you are trying to solve. Consider possible outcomes to your problem.

positive outcomes negative outcomes

________________________________ ________________________________

________________________________ ________________________________

________________________________ ________________________________

As you look at these outcomes, what strikes you as the best way to solve this problem?

outcomes

Decision Making and Problem Solving 157

Success involves being open to every possibility, realizing that one may experience success

in unexpected ways, and being ready for success when it comes. Success is complex. “For

example, success is presumed to be rewarding for all individuals, but for some this experience

becomes closely linked to joy and pride in many achievement situations over time, whereas

for others it does not become linked to joy and pride across achievement situations in this

manner” (Elliot & Niesta, 2009, p. 62).

Critical Thinking

Consider the writings of psychologist Heidi Halvorson who says, “when you find something relatively easy to do, it’s very motivating to focus on giving the best possible performance and validating your goodness, and it will probably pay off for you. A very different picture emerges, however, when the road gets rockier—when people are dealing with unfamiliar, complex, or difficult tasks, with obstacles, or with setbacks. That’s where the advantages of focusing on growth over glory become clear.” What does she mean by focusing on growth over glory? Can you give an example of this?

Source: Halvorson, H. (2011). Succeed: How we can reach our goals (p. 64). New York: Hudson Street Press.

Focusing on growth over glory

First step in job seeking is being aware and researching. Second step is to apply.

A town manager of a small community was very surprised when the town’s employees,

from groundskeepers to the police, threw her an appreciation party. She was not near retire-

ment and the party was not to denote a landmark year of service. It was strictly a “thanks for

your effort” party—just to say we appreciate you and want you to know it. Before, during,

and after that party, she felt very successful because she had found the right fit between her

158 chapter 5

talents and place of employment. She cares so much that on her morning jogging route she

carries a plastic bag to pick up any trash she sees, and when she drives in and out of work in

her pickup truck she throws trash in the back. The town is so small that everyone knows this;

it is genuine effort on her part that has gone on for years. They know someone is watching out

for them: Isn’t that what a town manager should do?

An individual’s perception of uncertainty leads to the perception of risk. For example,

John, a recent college graduate, may be uncertain whether to wear shorts and a T-shirt or

a sports shirt and slacks to his first company picnic. He may also be uncertain about the

weather on the day of the picnic. If he thinks it may rain, he might try to reduce his risk of

getting wet by taking a hat and a jacket. Although deciding what to wear to a picnic is not

a high-risk venture, John wants to dress appropriately so that he will fit in. In contrast, Sam,

one of John’s coworkers, has not even given a thought to what he will wear to the picnic. His

perception of risk in this problem situation is minimal; in fact, he does not even think of dress-

ing for the picnic as a problem situation.

At the picnic, Sam is the only person wearing shorts, and for the next two months, he

must endure gentle ribbing about his “bony knees” and plaid shorts. Risk can be perceived as

occurring before, during, or after a decision.

tyPes oF Risks As discussed in Chapter 2, six types of risk affect decision making: functional or perfor-

mance risk, financial risk, physical risk, psychological risk, social risk, and time risk. In the last

example, John was seeking to reduce physical, psychological, financial, and social risks. If

he worries about the best time to arrive at the picnic, then he would add time risk to his list

of concerns.

To reduce risk, people search for information or behave in ways that will decrease their

uncertainty, such as asking others for advice or repeating behaviors that have worked for

them in the past. Saving for retirement involves big risk: Increasingly, workers have to make

decisions about saving and investing for retirement, and in uncertain economies, doing so

is becoming more and more difficult. Many of life’s most important decisions concern the

management of financial resources.

at-Risk chilDRen Certainly, many individual, family, and societal problems are far more difficult than what to

wear to an event. A disturbing societal problem is at-risk children. An estimated 7 million

children, one in four of those aged 10–17 in the United States, engage in high-risk behaviors

and are in “jeopardy of not growing into responsible adults who can effectively parent, work,

or vote” (Dryfoos, 1991). According to Dryfoos, at-risk children are likely to be low achievers,

drug abusers, or premature parents; they are also likely to be in trouble with the law. Many

of these children live in high-stress family situations and have little parental support and

supervision.

Questions have been raised about what schools can do to help at-risk children

(Katz, Dalton, & Giacquinta, 1994). A consensus is forming that school programs as

they currently exist cannot solve the rapidly rising incidence of depression and stress,

emerging from dysfunctional families. New types of school-based support programs

Decision Making and Problem Solving 159

and  curricula are suggested as a means for dealing with educational, health, and life

issues of at-risk populations.

In New York State, the Home and Career Skills (HCS) curriculum concentrates

on  developing the critical thinking skills of students so that they can make rational decisions

and prepare to meet their responsibilities as consumers, home managers, wage earners, and

members of families (Katz et al., 1994). Similar curricula are being used in other states under

various names, including Life Management

Skills. In addition, families, both nuclear and

extended, community groups, and health orga-

nizations need to do all they can to reduce the

number of at-risk children and give all children

the best possible start in life. Helping children

learn to make responsible decisions at an early

age is a good starting point, to be followed by

continued attention and support through the

later years.

For those in the helping professions, the emphasis when working with families should

be on assisting them in making their own decisions and solving their own problems, not

imposing the professional’s own decisions or solutions. Expressing gratitude to others,

mentoring troubled youths, foster parenting, giving the gift of time, forgiving a wrong, and

serving in the community are all positive steps toward reducing the number and severity of

at-risk children.

The GO Model: Visualization of a Problem- Solving Process Professors Holly Hunts and Ramona Marotz-Baden of Montana State University developed the

GO model of problem solving because they believed that teaching problem-solving processes

may well be one of the most important tasks of family economists/management specialists.

GO stands for “goal-oriented.”

The purpose of the GO model (see Figure 5.6) is twofold:

1. To further the theory about problem solving into a goal-oriented model that can help

students understand how individuals and families make choices that help them

reach goals.

2. To bring about a new method for teaching

students about problem solving and goal-

oriented strategies. Family systems theory

and pedagogical strategies (different learn-

ing and teaching styles) serve as its base.

Within the model, the situation requiring action

is defined, alternatives are ranked, leading to

the best alternative and then to a course of

action and implementation that leads ultimately

Suggested Activity Describe success for yourself. What end state or activity would be a sign of success? What attitudes, decisions, and behaviors would you need to be successful?

Name three successful people and explain why you think they are successful. What qualities (e.g., courage, generosity, care for others, self-confidence) made them successful?

Suggested Activity The GO model works best on current problems you are facing. Start at the top of the model; enter a situ- ation and work through the process. An example that Hunts and Marotz-Baden have used in their classes is, “Describe the goals and boundaries of the ideal marriage for you. Using the GO model, discuss how feasible your ideal is if you were to marry the person you care most about now” (Hunts & Marotz-Baden, 2003, p. 11). Another example they have used is to imagine the situation in which two roommates or housemates are arguing over bills left unpaid by a third person who moved out suddenly.

160 chapter 5

Passive acceptance

Recall an existing

goal

Formulate a new goal

Store other acceptable alternatives

Best alternative

Information feedback

Develop action plan and

implement

Results

Acceptable results

Unacceptable results

Information feedback

Return to Phase 1

Information feedback

Phase 6: Information feedback

Phase 5: Results

Phase 4: Action

Phase 3: Choosing the best alternative

Phase 2: Goal-oriented generation of alternatives

Phase 1: Acknowledge the situation

Return to phase 1

Begin

Generation of alternatives

Assessment tools; values,

resources, opportunities, competing goals

Situation

Discard unacceptable alternatives

Acceptable alternatives

Imagine effort and consequences of acceptable alternatives and

rank them using satisficing, optimizing, risk/benefit analysis, maximum result with least effort

or illogical thinking

Figure 5.6 The goal-oriented (GO) pedagogical model. Source: Reprinted with permission of Holly Huntes and Ramona Marotz-Baden, Montana State University.

to results in Phase 5. Phase 6 provides information feedback that may be acceptable

or unacceptable.

The feedback provides information as the process starts all over again in Phase 1, thereby

affecting future situations. “In a goal-oriented approach, problems are barriers to be overcome

if goals are to be achieved. In other words, the emphasis in the goal-oriented approach is

on increasing the probability of goal attainment by using problem solving to overcome these

barriers” (Hunts & Marotz-Baden, 2004).

Decision Making and Problem Solving 161

summarysummary Success is complex and as active, busy people, we make decisions and solve problems. We try to choose the best alternatives from the choices available; in so doing, we seek to reduce uncertainty and risk and increase the probability of good outcomes.

A decision plan is central to the management process. The acronym DECIDE is an easy way to remember the six steps of decision making. However, it was pointed out that new research shows that we should not overthink a decision; many are made in less than 10 seconds and unconsciously. Brain regions involved in making choices activate before people are consciously aware that they’ve made a choice. More research is underway about how we make decisions and whether quick ones can work.

The family is critical to the development of decision-making skill. The Elbing model of family decision making demonstrates that each decision has a history and is influenced by members of refer- ence groups. The central-satellite and chain models of decision making show the interrelationships among decisions. The decision tree illustrates that values underlie decisions and that resources and goals affect the alternatives considered. Decision making involves rules and rational patterns of thought as well as intuition.

Mothers with full-time jobs and young children have the largest total workload although since 1965 fathers have nearly tripled their domestic contributions. Although these shifts occur the fundamen- tal principle is that individuals and families seek to maximize their satisfaction through sound decision making. Families may engage

in individual (husband- or wife-dominated), couple-centered, or child-centered decision making. The number of childless women has hit record highs, but for those couples who have children, there is a steady or slightly increased trend toward more fathers working and more mothers staying at home with small children.

Decision making is an art or skill that can be improved through reasoning and practice rather than avoidance. Decidophobia is the fear of making decisions, specifically the fear of failure. Much of a person’s success depends upon his or her ability to identify the causes of problems and to develop workable solutions for resolving them. Personality comes into play. Self-ambivalence refers to the co-presence of positive and negative evaluations making it difficult to make decisions. The person is torn by different sides of their personality.

Problem solving differs from decision making in that problem solving involves difficulty, perplexity, risk, and uncertainty, whereas decision making refers to all sorts of situations, needs, and wants (some problematic, others not). The GO (goal-oriented) model of problem solving ranks alternatives to help choose the best one, so that a course of action can be implemented, leading to the desired result; feedback assists in making future decisions.

To be effective, decisions need to be implemented, evalu- ated, and communicated. Planning, implementing, and evaluating are the subjects of the next chapter, and communication will be discussed in Chapter 7.

termskey terms accommodation 148 autonomic 148 consensual decision making 148 decidophobia 143 decision making 132 decision-making style 134 decision plan 135 decision rules 140 decisions 132

de facto decision making 148 external search 155 hatching 151 internal search 155 intuition 143 Peter Principle 142 postpurchase dissonance 136 prepurchase expectations 136 probability 156

problem solving 152 real-options thinking 154 reference groups 140 self-ambivalence 138 success 156 syncratic 148 uncertainty 156

questions 1. Are you ever ambivalent about a purchase decision? Is it

better to make a snap decision or to make no decision at all? General Patton called the no-decision strategy “ready- aim-aim-aim-aim syndrome.” In a crisis situation, does someone need to take command and make decisions? Give an example illustrating your answer.

2. What is the Peter Principle? How is it related to decision making?

3. The German poet and playwright Johann Wolfgang von Goethe said, “I have come to the frightening conclusion that I am the decisive element. It is my personal approach

review questions

162 chapter 5

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165

Nothing ventured, nothing gained.

—Geoffrey ChauCer 6

Planning,

Main Topics

What Is Planning? The Planning Process and Task Need fulfillment Time, Stress, and Planning Planning in families and other Groups Standard Setting Scheduling, Sequencing, and Multitasking

attributes of Plans Types of Plans

What Is Implementing? actuating Checking and Controlling

What Is Evaluating?

DiD you know that . . .?

. . . 54 percent of adults say that they have purchased or would be willing to purchase containers, furniture, file  systems, or similar products to help them get organized.

. . . About 10 percent of Americans consider themselves extremely organized.

imPlementing, and evaluating

166 chapter 6

T he Stuart Wood’s case study is an extreme example of someone who likes to control his lifestyle and has the means to do it. The story goes on to explain that his desk area, in particular, is exactly the same in each residence. He sits down and goes straight to work. The problem is the outside world sometimes intrudes on his routine.

Recently his favorite restaurant within easy walking distance of his Park Avenue, New York

City, co-op closed, one he went to for decades to meet with fellow writers. This was enough

of a change for him to question whether he wanted to keep that particular apartment.

In the last chapter questions were raised about how do you plan for the unplannable? For

example, a tornado or a canyon brush fire in the middle of the night does not allow for much

planning. But, with some forethought, a family might have discussed ahead about emergency

situations and what they would do, where they would seek shelter, or where they would go.

Forethought (asking the “what if” questions) and strategizing are parts of planning.

Many of us make lists, mental and physical. Lists form the core of daily planning. Do you

make lists? Do you use a calendar or day book (electronic or in print) to schedule appoint-

ments and to write down test dates? The problem with these is that they are only useful

if the individual consults them enough. Especially with the electronic forms, individuals may

enjoy inputting information but forget to retrieve on a regular basis so they miss events and

appointments.

Online lists can be a lot of fun or a lot of work depending on how you use them. Some

users find them addictive because they allow for listing of every trip you have ever taken or

book you have read, past fashions and fads you were part of, and so on. Then you use them

for planning by adding things you want to do, books you want to read, and places you want

to go. According to a reporter:

This week, I tested a new Web site called Mesophere.com that encourages users to

check off lists related to topics ranging from cars they owned to former hairstyles to

countries they visited. When the answers from these lists are compiled, they create a

mesosphere (emphasis on “me”), or an overall glance at one’s life history. Mesophere.

com by Mesophere LLC was launched in March as a way to catalog details about your-

self or someone else, led a Web-based memory book. It offers some 2,500 lists, and

new lists are added daily by users and site managers. . . . One of the funniest lists I filled

in was titled Fads You’ve Done, Bought or Worn; it walked me down memory lane as

Case Study Planning When it comes to planning a lifestyle it is hard to beat this. “Best selling writer Stuart Woods likes to control his environment in a way that minimizes external fluctuations. Since he feels best at a temperature of around 70 degrees, he owns three homes for different seasons: a co-op in New York, where he spends spring and fall; a home on Mount Desert Island, in Maine, for summer; and a residence in Key West, Fla for winter. He has decorated

each one nearly identically, attiring them almost exclusively in Ralph Lauren furnishings, including leather chairs, tweed curtains, sofas and beds. Each one of the four yellow labs he’s owned has been named Fred, each replaced by a new Fred upon death. ‘You get into certain grooves. I have certain requirements,’ said Mr. Woods, 73, best known for his Stone Barrington series of novels.”

Source: Keates, N. (2011, July 22). One home, three locations. The Wall Street Journal, D. 7.

Planning, Implementing, and Evaluating 167

I read the items and checked off Leg Warmers, Electric Slide Dance and Jelly shoes.

Another list that made me laugh out loud was Hairstyles You’ve Worn—ah, the ’80s.

(Boehret, 2007, p. D6)

Planning is more than about what was past or even what is to come; it also has to do with

the present and your typical behavioral patterns. For example, do you multitask (do several

things at once)? In our sped-up world, more of us are multitasking—sometimes it works, and

sometimes it doesn’t, a subject to be discussed in this chapter. One wonders whether we are

accomplishing more or less!

Research indicates we waste a lot of time in ordinary activities. For example, an

average adult spends about four minutes a day searching for lost keys, remote controls, cell

phones, and so forth. Not having enough time is the biggest excuse most people use for not

being organized.

They spend so much time looking after their stuff and getting places that they

don’t have time to plan and organize; all their time is taken up just keeping up. About

10 percent of Americans categorize themselves as extremely organized. (Fetto, 2003)

Do you fall into this category? “Regardless of one’s level of organization, however, 89 percent

of Americans say they could use help tidying up some corner of their life . . . there are

scores of Americans who would be willing to take action and even pay for some help” (Fetto,

2003, p. 11).

Planning, implementing, and evaluating are the subjects of this chapter. Examples of

plans are college plans, financial plans, lunch plans, weekend plans, wedding plans, national

health care plans, and affirmative action plans. As the list indicates, plans can range from the

mundane to the significant, but all plans are important to the individuals involved. Without

plans there would not be birthday cakes or gifts under Christmas trees, nor would there be

any roads or businesses. In short, life as we know it would not exist.

In fact, planning is so crucial to human existence that it has been the subject of sayings

and fables since ancient times. Think how often you have heard someone say “If you fail to

plan, you are planning to fail.” Countless generations of children have heard the story of the

industrious ant that planned ahead and stored food for the winter while the foolish grasshop-

per frolicked in the sun. Of course, when winter came, the grasshopper’s failure to think ahead

proved fatal.

As the “ant and the grasshopper” story indicates, planning is prevention—a good plan is

a management tool that can save countless hours in revising, restructuring, and other ineffec-

tive actions. The amount of planning needed varies, however, from situation to situation and

from individual to individual.

Planning needs also change over the life cycle. For example, the oldest members of the

baby boom generation are entering retirement and must plan for reduced incomes, in most

cases, as well as for more leisure time and potential health problems.

Like individuals, families make plans, and their plans involve the same type of consider-

ations (i.e., time, energy, personnel, cost, schedules) as do other plans. For example, family

tasks and responsibilities are planned and assigned.

A family’s plan may include driving the children to school, picking up groceries for dinner,

taking the garbage out, and so on—with a family member performing each task. Yet, despite

the amount of planning that families do, how often do they sit down and really think about all

they do and evaluate the effectiveness of their planning?

168 chapter 6

This chapter addresses several questions: How are plans made? How can they be more

effective? What forces drive planning behavior? As social and economic conditions worldwide

transform, these questions are becoming more and more critical. The world’s growing popu-

lation is straining its resources, increasing the necessity for better planning. In the consumer

area, life is moving so fast that individuals are having trouble devising enough plans to handle

all the choices and changes that confront them. Several years ago, the Wall Street Journal

highlighted this problem:

Mr. Cialdini, the psychologist, believes that consumers are resorting increasingly to what

he calls “click whir” behavior. Life has become so complex that consumers can’t possibly

analyze the merits of all of their decisions, he says. So they are more susceptible to cer-

tain cues and symbols like “discount” or “last day of sale” and take less time to analyze

fundamental questions like need or cost. When we react to symbols instead of informa-

tion, then what we do doesn’t make sense anymore, he says. (Morris, 1987, August 4)

Critical Thinking

What corner of your life could use some tidying up? Have you let some assignment or studying slip? Or car repair? What action should you take?

As this chapter will show, situations, events, and other factors affect planning, implement-

ing, and evaluating. Besides exploring the complex nature of planning and implementing, the

chapter also examines the motivating forces behind these processes.

Why do people plan? What are they trying to accomplish? How successful are their plans?

Key topics include the influence of personality and style, as well as of social contexts and

environments, on planning. Examples of planning, implementing, and evaluating will be given,

providing a blend of theory and practice. With real-world examples, this chapter is intended to

be an important learning resource for students of individual and family management.

This chapter also contributes to the understanding of the management process model first

presented in Chapter 1 and repeated here in Figure 6.1. Planning is a process (a subsystem)

Chapters 1 and 3

Step 1

Chapter 3

Step 2

Chapter 4

Step 3

Chapters 5 and 6

Step 4

Chapter 6

Step 5

Decide, plan, and implement

Accomplish goals and evaluate

Identify resources

Identify problem, need, want, or goal

Clarify values

Environment

Feedback

Chapters 2 and 7

Chapters 2 and 12

Figure 6.1 The management process model.

Planning, Implementing, and Evaluating 169

within the larger process (system) of manage-

ment. Step 4 in the model is “decide, plan,

and implement,” and step 5 is concerned with

accomplishing goals and evaluation. Thus, this

chapter explains the culmination of the manage-

ment process.

what is Planning? There has been a lot of coverage in this

book on goal pursuit. The goal of finding a

job requires a plan from applying to inter-

viewing to accepting. Along the way the

applicant and the employer are monitoring

progress and evaluating. Planning is a process

involving a series of decisions leading to need

or goal fulfillment. A plan is a detailed schema,

program, strategy, or method worked out

beforehand for the accomplishment of a desired end result. For example, students planning

to graduate in May or June follow a plan of action that entails completing required courses

and filling out the paperwork necessary to ensure graduation. As the graduation date

nears, they must rent or buy a cap and gown. Graduation plans, among others, require a

systematic approach to problem solving and goal attainment.

Planning or organizing tools include containers, furniture, files, or similar products used to

get organized and also online or electronic organizers; as an example see Microsoft Outlook.

A survey showed that 54 percent of American adults say they have purchased or would be

willing to purchase these types of things (Fetto, 2003). According to the same source, an

American Demographics/Harris interactive survey revealed that among the kinds of things

Americans would need to organize are finances, books and magazines, audio and video

collections, kitchens, and games.

When it comes to objects, some people like their shoes all neatly lined up in a closet;

others just toss their shoes in; and still others don’t use closets and leave their shoes all over

the house. A 30-year-old single man living alone had two master closets, so he put his suits

and work clothes in one, along with the matching shoes; and he put casual clothes and athletic

shoes in the other. Everything was organized by color and season. Only 12 percent of the

population alphabetize their spices, according to the New England Professional Organizers.

Maybe it is more remarkable that 12 percent do this than that 88 percent do not. What do you

think about alphabetizing spices, lining up shoes, and organizing clothes by season, color,

and function?

The need to organize is a cultural phenomenon, according to Dean McFarlin, a professor

of management at the University of Dayton:

“We are a culture that embraces a monochromic view of time,” he said, “We believe time

is a commodity and it can all be lost. This is why we see California Closets doing so well

and why third-graders are getting pocket planners. It’s a cultural response to the per-

ceived pressures that are increasing, the feeling that we can’t escape from work, our cell

phones, our Palm Pilots.” (Matchan, 2002, p. 6F)

Keeping up with financial news is part of this woman’s plan to succeed.

170 chapter 6

The Planning Process and Task This chapter follows the chapter on decision making because planning is a more complex

process than decision making. A process is a system of operations that work together

to produce an end result. The word “process” implies movement or change. Something is

happening—steps are being taken.

Planning is a thinking and information-gathering process involving a series of decisions. It

is a process because formulating plans requires several steps, such as information gathering,

sorting, and prioritizing; then, based on this information, the planner must decide which plan

is most likely to succeed.

The decisions and steps are not random, but proceed in an orderly, logical sequence.

For example, after living in a dormitory for a semester, a college student may decide to

move into an apartment the next semester, but she will not move out of the dormitory

without doing some planning. She must decide how much rent she can afford, whether

she will  look for roommates or live alone, and in what parts of town she would like to live.

Before finally selecting an apartment, she will probably talk with several friends and look at

several apartments.

To help understand the role of planning in management behavior, researchers have con-

structed models that depict the various stages of the planning process. The principal aim of

such models is to predict future behavior: How does a person normally plan? Will the plan

be repeated?

Figure 6.2 shows one such model of the planning process. In the model, the first

step is awareness—an individual becomes aware that a plan is needed. In the next step,

the person gathers and analyzes information. In the third step, the information is put into

the context of the situation, including consideration of others, and a plan is formed. The

plan is a series of decisions, including decisions about resource allocation. Finally, in the

fourth and fifth steps, the plan is implemented and evaluated. As the model shows, plans

are made within an environmental context—the person considers what is possible within

his or her environment. A beach party is not a practical plan in Minneapolis in the winter,

for example, nor is a sit-down dinner with five courses a good choice for a four-year-old’s

birthday party.

When individuals and families plan, their main task is to figure out what needs to be done

and how to go about doing it. In a competitive world where there are many demands on

people’s time, energy, money, and ability, survival and growth require accurate knowledge,

decisions, and implementation. How should people act? Where should they go? How can

they prioritize among conflicting activities and responsibilities? How do they choose between

work and family duties?

Step 1 Step 2 Step 3 Step 4 Step 5

Implementing the plan

Evaluating the plan

Forming a planAwareness

Gathering and analyzing information

Environment

Figure 6.2 The planning process model.

Planning, Implementing, and Evaluating 171

A plan should have a purpose; it should be going somewhere. What does the planner

hope to achieve? Management theory stresses the necessity of planning if an individual or

a family hopes to achieve the goals that have been set. One of the reasons individuals and

families engage in planning activity is that it helps them visualize what may or may not happen.

Among the questions they may consider are the following:

• Will others cooperate?

• Is there enough money?

• Is there enough time?

• Is there enough information?

By reviewing these questions, the planner is trying to anticipate problems before they arise.

Answers to these questions may lead directly to implementation of the plan or to more plan-

ning and different courses of action.

Need Fulfillment Generally, people arrive at their needs through a complex subjective assessment based on

their inherent motivations and their perceptions of the external world (Foxall, Goldsmith, &

Brown, 1998). For example, if a new product is to succeed, consumers must perceive that it

will satisfy some need or combination of needs. Likewise in management theory, if a plan is to

succeed, individuals must perceive that the plan and its implementation will be useful and will

satisfy some need or combination of needs.

Time, Stress, and Planning Planning takes time and motivation when both may be in short supply. Individuals, families,

and organizations may become so caught up in everyday activities and crises that they have

no time to plan. In that case, they are victims of Gresham’s law of planning, which comes

from the better-known Gresham’s law (Simon, 1993). Thomas Gresham, a financial adviser

Critical Thinking

“Do a quick Google search of ‘planning quotes’ and you will be up to your ears in exam- ples of famous politicians, writers, business leaders, and Founding Fathers who have sung the praises of making a good plan. Management consultant David Allen, in his highly acclaimed book Getting Things Done, writes that one of the key objectives of the organi- zational techniques he teaches is ‘disciplining yourself to make front-end decisions about all the ‘inputs’ you let into your life so that you will always have a plan for ‘next actions.’ In fact, you’d be hard-pressed to find a public figure advising anyone in earnest that the road to success lies in ‘just winging it.’” (Source: Halvorson, 2011, p. 171). What do you think of this quote? Try Googling planning quotes and see what you find.

Winging it doesn’t always Work

172 chapter 6

to Queen Elizabeth I, observed that “bad money drives out good,” so that “if two coins have

the same nominal value but are made from metals of unequal value, the cheaper will tend to

drive the other out of circulation” (Encyclopedia Britannica, 1989, vol. 5, p. 489). Applying

Gresham’s law of planning to management, Herbert Simon observed that “short-term con-

cerns create priorities and deadlines that absorb managerial attention and energy at the

expense of long-range concerns” (1993, p. 139).

There are a number of indicators to the fact that families have less and less time that they

can devote to planning. One of the ways they are coping with time stress now is to plan further

ahead than ever before. Families today live months ahead of themselves:

They rent next year’s summer home before Thanksgiving; buy Christmas concert tickets

in the summer; apply to favorite schools for next year, even before this year’s class has

had a chance to warm the seats. . . . In Chicago, Robin Cohn has her children’s after

school activities planned for the next eight months; all that is in question is whether her

son, a third grader, will play soccer or basketball this spring. “And we’ll decide that in a

week or two,” she says. (Kronholz, 1997, p. A1)

Part of the reason why individuals and families plan so far ahead is that many of them are

competing for the same activities or spaces. They have found that planning is necessary if they

are to get what they want. They have learned that many organizations schedule around the

egalitarian principle of first-come, first-served, so the “first” come earlier and earlier. As another

example of this, a professor found that she needed to book a New York City room one year in

advance at her university-owned townhouse. Staying there will only cost her $10–$20 a night

in a good location! No wonder it was popular with faculty, students, and alumni.

The drawback of advance planning is the lack of spontaneity. The paradox of planning

is that it can create stress and also relieve stress. Stress is relieved when people are more

relaxed once a decision is made—for example, once the cruise ship tickets are bought

the trip is expected to go on as scheduled. But what happens when the cruise, for which

tickets were bought six months ahead, is canceled when a hurricane hits right where the

ship is going?

Stress can arise from feeling too boxed in, too committed, or too rigid so that changes or

new opportunities cannot be readily taken advantage of. This is one of the major plot lines of

many television shows including the syndicated television show Sex and the City.

Certainly, people who live entirely for the moment haven’t got it right, says Chicago’s

Mr. Csikszentmihalyi. But those who spend their lives planning their lives don’t either.

“You end up finding that you have squandered opportunities for really living in order to

prepare yourself for living in the future,” he says. (Kronholz, 1997, p. A1)

Thus, planning is affected by time constraints, stress, and the choice between living in

the moment and thinking long-term. But there are other factors that affect planning, such

as situational aspects and personality characteristics, including motivation. These will be

discussed next.

Situational FactorS Situational factors, including environmental context, shape wants, needs, and goals. These

factors can include a specific precipitating circumstance, such as a broken computer. Until

the computer broke down, the owner had no need to consider how to fix or replace it,

Planning, Implementing, and Evaluating 173

but now she must either have the computer repaired or buy a new one. Individuals and

families continually respond to such changes in situations or circumstances. A problem,

need, want, or goal motivates them to plan and act. For example, they may drive up to

a restaurant and find it closed. They then must formulate a new plan for where to go

and what  to eat. Among the situational influences to be considered in making plans are

the following:

• Physical surroundings: Location, decor, lighting, cleanliness, sound, heat, or cold

• Social surroundings: Other people, crowding, and relationships

• Time: Time of the day, month, year, and season

• Task: The reason the person is there. What needs to be done?

Task saturation occurs when people (co-workers, family members, political campaign

workers) are so busy doing things that they cannot plan or lead effectively. Signs of task

saturation are people canceling meetings or showing up late, or constantly complaining about

paperwork. One professor said that she was expected to attend five different committee

meetings during a one-hour period, so she had to choose the most important one and stay

for the entire time or run around and put in a “guest” appearance at two or three. This is an

example of task saturation: one person and too many time conflicts. How did she make the

final decision? She incorporated the first rule of management, which is to focus on what is

important (which committee mattered the most), not on what seemed most urgent or press-

ing. On evaluating the situation, it was obvious that she was serving on too many committees;

she quit a couple at the end of the year and waited for the rest of her terms of appointment

to run out.

The importance of situational influences cannot be overestimated:

At a more immediate level, is our behavior determined more by our internal attributes

(personality traits, attitudes, beliefs, values, self-concept) or situational forces? While

many people assume their behavior is largely determined by their internal attributes,

social psychological research, with its interpersonal orientation, demonstrates that sit-

uational factors often have a very powerful effect on what we do. Situational forces

are particularly visible in studies of helping in emergencies, conformity, and pressure to

comply with orders to behave in hurtful ways.

Three general conclusions can be drawn from these studies. First, our behavior is

dramatically influenced by what other people do in the same situation; they serve as

models and provide information about how to interpret the situation and what the con-

sequences of various behaviors are. Second, most people are genuinely unaware of

how strongly their behavior has been influenced by the behavior of others. And third, it

is very difficult for the average person to resist the pressures to comply with the wishes

of others. (Bingham, 1991, p. 36)

PerSonal traitS and characteriSticS Although situational factors are important, the person making the decision lies at the heart of

the planning process. The planning and implementing that will take place will be based on how

that individual assesses the situation. Thus, personality and characteristic ways of behaving

play crucial roles in planning.

174 chapter 6

introvertS and extrovertS According to Foxall et al. (1998), personality refers either to an extensive range of separate

behavior traits (honesty, perseverance, and hostility, for instance) or to overall types of charac-

ter and response (extrovert vs. introvert). Introverts tend to think about themselves first; their

thoughts are directed inward.

Do you know someone who needs hours alone every day? Who loves quiet conversa-

tions about feelings or ideas, and can give a dynamite presentation to a big audience,

but seems awkward in groups and maladroit at small talk? Who has to be dragged

to parties and then needs the rest of the day to recuperate? Who growls or scowls

or grunts or winces when accosted with pleasantries by people who are just trying to

be nice? If so, do you tell this person he is “too serious,” or ask if he is okay? Regard

him as aloof, arrogant, rude? Redouble your efforts to draw him out? If you answered

YES to these questions, chances are that you have an introvert on your hands. (Rauch,

2003, p. 133)

Extroverts are less interested in self and more interested in others and in the environ-

ment. They often have a hard time understanding introverts. Extroverts assume that their

company and their thoughts are always welcome. They dominate public life in politics,

in sports, and in entertainment, so we tend to be more aware of them than we are

of introverts.

Introversion and extroversion are orientations. People are rarely either completely intro-

verted or completely extroverted, but they do tend to exhibit more traits of one than of the

other. Recent studies indicate that people can choose to act more outgoing or assertive and

in so doing their outlook on life will actually improve. Students in those studies who were told

to act like extroverts during a group discussion had more fun and enjoyed the group more than

the ones told to be passive and shy. William Fleeson and colleagues suggest that personality

influences happiness and, thus, we have some control over our personalities. “Individuals may

have the potential to contribute directly to their own wellbeing by changing their behavior,”

says Fleeson.

How does being introverted or extroverted affect planning? One difference is in the way

information is gathered and processed. For example, after purchasing a camera, an introverted

Critical Thinking

The famous writer Anais Nin in The Diary of Anais Nin wrote, “When I cannot bear outer pressures anymore, I begin to put order in my belongings. . . . As if unable to orga- nize and control my life, I seek to exert this on the world of objects.” Does this technique work for you also?

Organizing as a Way to Reduce Pressure

Planning, Implementing, and Evaluating 175

person might more likely read the instruction booklet or go online or figure out through trial and

error how to operate it, whereas an extroverted person would be more inclined to ask for help

from the camera store owner or friends, or through blog.

other PerSonality FactorS and exPertiSe Many other personality factors also affect planning. For example, is the individual primarily a

dreamer or a realist? Consistent or inconsistent? Precise or imprecise? Impatient or patient?

Individuals definitely differ in their need for:

• Adventure

• Novelty

• New objects or products

• New experiences

Consider the difference between a homeowner who rearranges furniture often and repaints

interior rooms every 5 years versus someone who hasn’t touched a stick of furniture, picture,

or a wall in over 20 years. The person who never travels or goes to the same cabin every sum-

mer on the same week is quite different from the individual on an airplane going to different

places several times a month.

Besides differing in personality traits, some individuals are simply more expert than

others in planning. They have more foresight, organizational and analytical skills, and

imagination. They are motivated to change things and do not accept the status quo. Perhaps

their families provided more models of planning behavior than did the families of less expert

planners. Planning ability varies between professions as well as between individuals.

Consider the range of planning skills necessary in day care centers, hospitals, and urban

and regional projects.

The ability to perform tasks successfully and dependably is called expertise.

It increases as the person acquires more detailed knowledge, has more contact with

experts, and develops more memory and experience.

Expertise then refers to the characteristics, skills, and knowledge that distinguish

experts from novices and less experienced people. In some domains there are objective

criteria for finding experts, who are consistently able to exhibit superior performance for

representative tasks in a domain. For example, chess masters will almost always win

chess games against recreational chess players in chess tournaments. . . . (Ericsson,

Charness, Feltovich, & Hoffman, 2006, p. 3)

As it often takes 10 years or more of practice to become an expert, it naturally follows that

young children have less expertise in most subjects and situations than do adults. Notable

exceptions would be the 16-year-olds who win gold medals in gymnastics at the Olympics

(who may or may not have started practicing before age 6) or child geniuses.

Experts recall more information about messages and situations and are more likely to

draw conclusions and make comparisons rapidly. Thus, experts not only have more access

to information, but they also tend to recall, reorganize, and respond to messages to a greater

extent than others do. Expertise affects beliefs and planning style, which in turn affect

intentions to behave and actual behavior. Experts sustain motivation and effort over long

periods of time.

176 chapter 6

Planning in Families and Other Groups In a family, one family member may have more mechanical ability than the others and may

therefore be expected to fix things, whereas another may have more planning ability and may

therefore be in charge of organizing family events or vacations. Other family members will

check with the organizer before scheduling events of their own. It’s difficult to associate orga-

nizational skills with specific demographic traits:

Disorganization appears to be an equal opportunity trait, with equal numbers of Americans

across most demographic groups saying that they are organized. What does seem to

matter is marital status. . . . 61 percent of married adults say they are either “extremely”

or “mostly” organized, compared with just 54 percent of never-married singles and

49 percent of divorced, separated or widowed adults. (Fetto, 2003, pp. 10–11)

In groups here are possible steps to follow in planning through evaluation:

• Define the goal or problem. Explain what the group needs to accomplish.

• Research, find information, but before going outside for answers, first determine what the

group already knows, what contacts they may have, and so forth.

• Brainstorm, which means to generate ideas for accomplishing the goal or fixing the

problem. Outlandish or wild ideas should be encouraged at this stage, write all the ideas

down (later they can be eliminated or fine-tuned).

• Prototype. Detail your ideas and build on them. In this stage, drawings may be made or

steps listed, maps drawn. In this stage you are trying to find what might work, a possible

solution or innovation. At the end, ideas should begin to come together.

• Choose. Out of everything discussed, what should be selected? Be prepared to explain

the choice.

• Implement. Putting plans into action (more on this later in the chapter).

• Learn or evaluate. What did the group (and the individual participating) learn from this

process? Any unexpected results or learning?

Driver or passenger? Which is your preferred role?

Planning, Implementing, and Evaluating 177

Motivational FactorS Motivated planning behavior is thinking activity that is directed toward a particular goal

or objective. Achievement-motivated individuals are able to keep goals in mind as they

plan and complete tasks. When competing activities come their way, they are able to keep

focused on their goals such as writing a book, exercising more, filling out job applications,

and so on.

Motivation has four main aspects:

1. The goal or objective must be attractive and desired by the seeker.

2. The goal or objective seeker must be persistent.

3. The seeker becomes discontented if she or he does not reach the goal or objective.

4. The goal is possible given the amount of time.

Persistence refers to a person’s staying power; it is the personality trait of not giving

up when faced with adversity. Psychological factors, such as depression, may affect moti-

vation and persistence—in a job search, for example (Smith & Price, 1992). According to

Maslow’s theory of the hierarchy of needs, which was introduced in Chapter 1, a person

attempts to satisfy a more basic need (such as shelter) before directing behavior to higher

needs (Maslow, 1954).

Maslow proposed that the typical adult satisfies about 85 percent of physiological needs;

70 percent of safety and security needs; 50 percent of belongingness, social, and love needs;

40 percent of esteem needs; and 10 percent of self-actualization needs. In the years since

Maslow introduced his theory, many people have criticized his percentages—in particular, the

percentage for self-actualization, which they think is too high. It depends how one thinks of

this. If self-actualization means one is always at the top, totally fulfilled, this would indeed be

rare but if it means many times or in most ways one’s needs are actualized then this is more

likely. In any case, Maslow’s basic theory—needs motivate human behavior and unsatisfied

needs lead to frustration and stress—is still widely accepted.

Applying Maslow’s theory to planning, one might say that a person is motivated to

plan and act by some state, condition, or situation, perhaps a social drive (the need to be

liked or be more popular) or a physiological drive (hunger or thirst). Figure 6.3 provides a

Critical Thinking

Jamie was appointed to a year-long committee. The committee voted to meet twice a month but in reality with all the cancellations because of things that came up they only met as a group once a month on average. She had originally proposed that they meet once a month and thought twice was too often for the work that needed to be accomplished. Jamie thought she learned from this experience to relax more and realize that the amount of meetings would settle to, in her mind, the right amount. Have you ever been in a simi- lar situation when you thought one way and the group another?

Plans vs. Reality

178 chapter 6

model and an example of motivated planning behavior. The example of a hungry person

eating to satisfy his or her hunger is a simple one. Achievement motivation can be far

more profound.

Think of all the individuals and the steps involved in planning a new museum or a mission

to the international space station. Many organizations use flow charts to graphically illustrate

how an operation, such as the development of a new car or a community, is progressing.

Some people seem especially oriented toward the achievement of goals. Achievement-

motivated people, such as Donald Trump, Bill Gates, Oprah Winfrey, and Hillary Rodham

Clinton, continually set new goals and develop new aspirations. They refuse to rest on their

laurels. This characteristic explains why individuals who have made millions in a business

venture will, upon selling it, immediately look for another venture to invest their energy in.

Money is not their primary objective; rather, the obtaining of it (the process) is the motivator.

For such people, the excitement is in the chase; they value each success more for its message

“I’ve succeeded” than as a vehicle for obtaining life’s luxuries. Thus, motivation is an internal

drive that is fueled by the process of striving for and attaining goals. Planners have to be moti-

vated; they must want their plans to succeed.

Standard Setting Standards are another important part of the planning process. Standards were defined in

Chapter 1 as quantitative and/or qualitative criteria that reconcile resources with demands

and serve as measures of values and goals (DeMerchant, 1993). The procedures, conduct,

and rules of individuals, families, and organizations all incorporate standards. For example, an

industry may set a certain standard or level of excellence.

In planning, standards provide the criteria for action. The standards that are set affect the

assessment and allocation of resources, leading to the clarification of demands, decisions,

plans, and action. It is important that the plan fit the standards of the individual or situation.

In business, a poorly conceived management plan will not meet the standards set by

the company.

Likewise, a poorly devised personal or family plan of action may not meet the standards

of most families. For example, a 14-year-old son with a grade of F in science may not meet the

standards for educational achievement set by the family. Standards emanate from the values

and the goals of family members. What do they want, and how do they want to go about

getting what they want? What makes sense to them?

Standards evolve or develop over time. A newly married couple gradually develop com-

patible standards and define what constitutes a comfortable life together. They explore what

they value, and define what they want as individuals and what they want as a couple. Over the

course of their married life, they may go from a tiny apartment to a large house, from a small

Hunger

Need

Want to eat

Want

Select desired food

Proposed benefit

Reduce hunger

Motive

Eat

Goal object

Hunger is satisfied

Goal fulfillment

Figure 6.3 Motivated planning behavior: Model and example.

Planning, Implementing, and Evaluating 179

income to a large income, and at the end of their married life back to a small apartment again

and a reduced income. Throughout these changes, the couple’s standards will adjust to their

needs, life stage, and resources.

Scheduling, Sequencing, and Multitasking Almost all plans include schedules or sequences of events and activities. “Scheduling refers

to the specification of sets of time bounded projected activities which are sufficient for the

achievement of a desired goal set” (Avery & Stafford, 1991, p. 327).

Written plans with deadlines or end points, diaries, lists, and timetables are all exam-

ples of schedules. Consider list making. A list may be a series of activities or appointments,

such as 8:00–11:00, go to classes; 11:00 see adviser; 11:30–12:30 lunch; 12:30–5:00 work.

Another common type of list is a grocery list. The generally accepted belief that writing a

grocery list will eliminate or reduce impulse buying has been challenged by two researchers,

Jeffrey Inman of the University of Wisconsin at Madison and Russell Winer of the University

of California at Berkeley. They found that list makers are just as likely to make spontane-

ous purchases as those who shop without them (Inman & Winer, 1999). According to a

report on their study in American Demographics, 59 percent of all supermarket purchases

are unplanned.

Scheduling involves the mental process of sequencing. Sequencing is the ordering of

activities and resources necessary to achieve goals. One action succeeds another until the

need or the goal is fulfilled. Activities or tasks can be independent, dovetailed, interdependent,

or overlapped. These four types will be discussed next.

Independent activities take place one at a time. They stand alone. For example, a

person who first watches television, then does an hour of homework, and then gets ready

for bed is engaged in three independent activities. Each activity is independent of the others

because the person could choose to go straight to bed and not watch television or do home-

work. In other words, none of the activities depends on the others.

Multitasking (also called dovetailing) occurs when two or more activities take place at

the same time. Some examples are eating popcorn and watching a movie, doing homework

and listening to the radio, and talking on the telephone while making dinner. People often think

dovetailing is a desirable way of organizing activity and getting a lot done in a short time, but

it can be ineffective if it leads to unacceptable consequences. Sometimes people try to do

too many activities at once. Trying to talk on the phone, answer the doorbell, cook dinner,

and watch a small child all at the same time can result in a burned dinner and a crying child.

As this example suggests, dovetailing is not a panacea, though it can sometimes be a useful

time management tool: doing more activities at the same time does not necessarily produce

better outcomes. Each individual must decide how many activities she or he can reasonably

handle at once.

While many people believe that women are better multitaskers than men, the evidence

does not completely support that notion. Both men and women say they are multitasking

more now than ever before; the types of multitasking at work include:

• Reading email or instant messaging while on the phone

• Skimming printed material or sorting junk mail while on the phone

• Shopping or doing research online while on the phone

• Writing personal “to-do” lists or reading notes or talking on cell phones during meetings

180 chapter 6

In many high-pressure occupations, such as air traffic controller or pilot, a successful person

has to be able to multitask. “If you saw the movie ‘Top Gun’ (1986), you’ll remember what

all you see Tom Cruise doing in the cockpit. He’s got to pick and choose when he does

what, that is, multitask very carefully. The chance that he’ll successfully conclude a flight in

a fighter jet depends not only on his capabilities and limitations but also on his equipment

(David Meyer quoted in Anderson, 2001, p. 4).

Multitasking takes place during leisure hours, too. Why simply work out on a treadmill

when you can read a magazine, watch television, and talk on a phone at the same time?

Should we worry about the long-term effects of multitasking?

“Not to worry,” says Marcel Just, co-head of Carnegie Mellon University’s Center for

Cognitive Brain Imaging. While overloading the brain causes distress, which has its

own physiological hazards, the brain seems to recover with rest. (Shellenbarger, 2003,

March 20, p. D1)

In this quotation lies one of the antidotes to our sped-up lives: getting enough rest to recover

and bounce back, a subject to be covered in Chapter 11. In the short run, the warning signs

that multitasking is getting out of hand include anxiety about the lack of completion and

the following:

• Lapses in attentiveness

• Loss of concentration

• Gaps in short-term memory

• Communication problems

• Stress symptoms such as shortness of breath (Shellenbarger, 2003, February 27).

We can do several things at the same time, but not without a cost. The process of switching

back and forth takes time away from the original motivation of multitasking, which is usually

to save time—at some point the brain crashes. To get back into balance, a person can con-

sciously stop and refocus by listening for the important messages, a technique called living

in the moment or living in the present. A lot of this depends on the activity itself: something

easy and repetitive, like tying shoes, can be done while someone is talking to you, whereas

attempting a more complicated set of tasks, like reading a report while someone is talking to

you, will be more frustrating. Multitasking is becoming more common, and each individual has

to decide how much is effective and at what point it’s time for a break. The editors of Real

Simple magazine said, “We love multitasking (when it makes sense), innovation (when it has a

Critical Thinking

The multitasking of others can be distracting. For example, you take a seat at a confer- ence table and your boss is text-messaging during the meeting and reading email and keeps saying “right, right” as if following the conversation taking place around the table, but clearly she is not. What message is the boss giving to her employees? Are they allowed to do likewise?

distracting

Planning, Implementing, and Evaluating 181

purpose), and a clean home (especially when it can be done quickly)” (2003, April, p. 36). Who

can argue with that?

Overlapping activities involve a combination of activities that require intermittent and/

or concurrent attention. For example, college students with children combine child care with

schoolwork, going back and forth between the activities. Brittany, for example, comes to

the state university for her graduate courses during the week and goes home on weekends

(a three-hour drive one way) to see her three-year-old daughter who her mother is caring for

during the week.

Activities are interdependent when one activity must be completed before another

can take place. In other words, one activity builds on another and is not effective in

isolation. For example, hiring someone before a position exists and allocating money for a

salary would be senseless. Similarly, a newspaper article is not complete until the people

involved in the story are interviewed or at least contacted for comment. It is not always

easy to differentiate among overlapping, dovetailing, and interdependent activities. People

may switch back and forth among the three types of activities in a short period of time.

Regardless of type, the behavioral goal of scheduling and sequencing is to provide the

desired flow of activities.

Sequencing and scheduling preferences are closely associated with the personality

or temperament of the planner as well as with the task itself. How many college students

have exactly the same class schedule? Even when they have the same class schedule, it is

highly unlikely that they will also eat, socialize, and sleep at exactly the same time. In a family,

plans should accommodate the different scheduling needs and preferences of the individuals

in the household.

Attributes of Plans Workable plans have the following attributes: They are clear, flexible, adaptive, realistic,

appropriate, and goal-directed. Clear plans are understood by everyone. For example, if

an advertisement for a concert says that the concert will start at 8:00 p.m., the audience

assumes that it will start promptly, and they should plan to get there ahead of time. In

this situation, the concertgoer’s plans will have to be flexible because traffic and parking

conditions are not totally predictable. Is arriving 10–15 minutes ahead of time suitable? If

several people are going to the concert together, how will they adjust their schedules to

be ready on time? “Adaptive” refers to the ability of the plan to respond to unanticipated

events that may occur. If an organization seeks to be adaptive, “it needs to open itself

in many ways”:

Especially important is the organization’s relationship to information, particularly to that

which is new and even disturbing. Information must actively be sought from everywhere,

from places and sources people never thought to look before. And then it must circulate

freely so that many people can interpret it. (Wheatley, 1999, p. 83)

“Realistic” implies that the plan is feasible and likely to work. Being appropriate means

that the plan is suited to the situation and the people involved.

As has been suggested throughout this chapter, successful plans are goal directed.

Specific, challenging goals lead to higher task performance than do specific, unchallenging

goals, vague goals, or no goals (Locke, Smith, Erez, Chah, & Schaffer, 1994).

182 chapter 6

Types of Plans Many different types of plans exist. Plans can be categorized by time as short-term and

long-term plans. Plans can also be distinguished by the parties involved: individuals, house-

holds, organizations, communities, or nations. This chapter will concentrate on three types of

plans (directional, contingency, and strategic) that are commonly associated with individual

and family resource management. Given different situations, a manager can pick the best

type of plan.

Directional plans progress along a linear path to long-term goal fulfillment. A plan to

graduate from high school, graduate from college, and then go to law school to become an

attorney is an example of a directional plan. Because a certain degree of work experience

is a prerequisite for a higher-level position, career planning is usually directional, although

less so now than it used to be because people today change jobs more frequently than

in the past.

Contingency plans are backup or secondary plans to be used in case a plan does

not work. The military is known for contingency plans: If one strategy does not work, they

have several others ready to be initiated. Similarly, chess players think of several different

potential ways to respond to an opponent’s move. Organizations often use a contingency

approach. The basic idea behind this approach is that there is no single best way to

manage: a method that is successful in one situation may not be successful in another.

Therefore, a business manager will devise several plans after assessing the characteristics

of the individuals and groups involved, the organizational structure, and his or her own

leadership style (Ivancevich & Matteson, 1990). If one plan is not successful, the manager

will try another. Likewise, in a family, the manager (or managers) sizes up the situation

and  the family members and others involved, and prepares several plans leading to a

solution. Here again, the manager will be prepared to substitute another plan if one plan

does not work.

As an example of how an individual uses the contingency approach, consider

Shannon, a 22-year-old who applied to eight different graduate schools. Her plan was to

apply to three schools known to be hard to get into, two schools that were moderately

difficult to get into, and three easy-to-get-into schools. Shannon wanted to be sure that

by September she would be accepted by at least one school, and she did everything she

could to ensure that result.

As explained in Chapter 4, a strategy is a plan of action, a way of conducting and follow-

ing through on operations. Strategic plans use a directional approach and include both a

proactive search for new opportunities and a reactive solution to existing problems (Wheeler &

Hunger, 1987).

The terms “proactive” and “reactive” are discussed in detail in the next section, but here

they mean simply that the strategic planner utilizes a forward-looking approach while realizing

that past business also must be concluded.

Strategic planning focuses attention on the initial stages of the decision-making

process—the opportunities and occasions for choice and the design of new action strate-

gies (Simon, 1993). To conclude, strategic plans are not only associated with the military,

business, or politics, but they also occur in individual and family life. For example, job hunting

involves many strategies, such as résumé writing (making a record of one’s past achieve-

ments and experience), reading, prioritizing, and responding to job announcements. Financial

Planning, Implementing, and Evaluating 183

crises stimulate the need to strategize. Here is the advice of Elizabeth Warren and Amelia

Tyagi, the authors of The Two-Income Trap:

A family facing a financial crisis should think like a family at war. You must concentrate

on preserving what matters most, and you must let the other things go.

When the trouble comes, ask the central question: Which of your assets do you

most want to hold on to? Maybe it’s your car, your home, or your health insurance

policy. Decide which things you value most, and pay those bills first. . . . Once you are in

trouble, you will need to fight—and you should be fighting for the things you care about,

not trying to satisfy the loudest or most aggressive creditor. (2003, p. 168)

Proactive verSuS reactive Stephen R. Covey’s groundbreaking book The 7 Habits

of Highly Effective People delineates seven good habits:

• Habit 1: Be proactive.

• Habit 2: Begin with the end in mind.

• Habit 3: Put first things first.

• Habit 4: Think win–win.

• Habit 5: Seek first to understand, then to be

understood.

• Habit 6: Synergize.

• Habit 7: Sharpen the saw.

The titles of several of these “habits” are self-evident, but

a few deserve further explanation. The last one, “sharpen-

ing the saw,” means pulling it all together, moving along

to higher planes of learning, commitment, and activity.

To synergize means to produce a third alternative,

which is not my way or your way, but a third way that

is best, a product of group thinking. This is a systems

approach to problem solving: The whole is greater than

the sum of its parts. Synergy comes about when two or

more people get together and come up with an idea or

achieve an effect that would not be possible individu-

ally. It is a creative process. According to Covey (1989),

“Synergy means that 1 + 1 may equal 8, 16, or even

1,600” (p. 271). “Win/Win is a frame of mind and heart that

constantly seeks mutual benefit in all human interactions.

Win/Win means that agreements or solutions are mutually

beneficial, mutually satisfying” (p. 207). This is a coopera-

tive versus competitive approach to life.

Being proactive means taking responsibility for

one’s own life. It is about the freedom and the power

to choose. According to Covey (1989), “Our behavior is

a function of our decisions, not our conditions. We can

subordinate feelings to values. We have the initiative and Financial planners provide steps to follow and can reduce anxiety.

184 chapter 6

the responsibility to make things happen” (p. 71). Proactive people accept responsibility for

their own actions; they do not blame others or circumstances for their behavior. “Proactive

management involves change-oriented planning where the desired change is conceived by

a person or family and the implementation of the change alters the environment” (Dollahite,

1991, p. 374). Thus, in proactive management, the individual or family is actively seeking solu-

tions to problems by forming plans, including strategic plans.

Proactive (and the next type, reactive) can also apply to leadership in groups. Is the

leader more:

• Forceful in style, strategic, and directive or

• Advisory in style, expert, referent, and respectful of others, patient and participative? Both

of these types want change but they go about it in different ways.

Reactive people are often overly affected by outside forces, such as changes in the

weather or a schedule (such as a cancelled event), or the bad attitudes of their co- workers.

According to Covey (1989), “When people treat them well, they feel well; when people don’t,

they become defensive or protective. Reactive people build their emotional lives around the

behavior of others, empowering the weaknesses of other people to control them” (p. 72).

Proactive people also notice the weather or the social conditions around them, but they

respond differently than do reactive people. They have more resilience. Values such as hon-

esty and self-respect drive the behaviors of proactive people more than outside forces do.

Other people’s opinions matter less to proactive people than they do to reactive people. As

Eleanor Roosevelt said, “No one can hurt you without your consent.” Typical phrases used

by proactive and reactive people are listed in Table 6.1. Notice that the reactive person says

“I can’t,” whereas the proactive person says “I choose.” Proactive people believe their lives

are the sum total of the choices they have made. Planners with proactive styles approach life

challenges more assertively than reactive people do. Management theory supports the notion

that effective managers tend to be proactive and goal-oriented (Sharpe & Winter, 1991).

Proactive management can help a person or family avoid crises or stress through active antici-

pation of events to come. In proactive management, an “individual or a family actively clarifies

values, makes plans, sets goals, organizes activities, and makes changes before experiencing

stressors” (Dollahite, 1991, p. 374).

The three types of plans discussed in this section—directional, contingency, and

strategic—are not limited to individuals and families. They are potentially applicable to all

Reactive versus Proactive Language Reactive Language proactive Language

There’s nothing I can do. Let’s look at our alternatives.

That’s just the way I am. I can choose a different approach.

They make me so mad. I control my own feelings.

They won’t allow that. I can create an effective presentation.

I have to do that. I will choose an appropriate response.

I can’t. I choose.

I must. I prefer.

If only. I will.

Source: From Covey, S. R. (1898). The 7 habits of highly effective people, Free Press, an imprint of Simon & Schuster, New York.

Table 6.1

Planning, Implementing, and Evaluating 185

organizations and situations. For example, Coca-Cola, in a strategic move to market its

product worldwide, seized the opportunity to go global rather than being confined to the

United States. Airlines are constantly searching for more profitable routes. Fast-food restau-

rants look for new locations and new products to expand their share of the market. Likewise,

individuals and families try to maximize their chances at improving their lives. For example,

a proactive, goal-setting foreign-service officer will try to get an appointment overseas in a

desired location rather than wait to be assigned anywhere the government decides to send

him or her.

The specific planning mode used (directional, contingency, or strategic) reflects

the  individual’s or the family’s perceptions of what type of plan will be most suitable.

Key decisions flow from the dominant planning mode and the choice of a proactive or

reactive approach.

what is implementing? Remember that planning leads to implementing meaning putting plans into action and control-

ling that action. All action has a purpose. One of the purposes may be goal fulfillment such as

saving up to buy a car. Controlling takes place because once plans are activated, they need to

be checked to make sure that they are leading to the desired end state. As everyone knows,

it is easier to make plans than to initiate and monitor them. In monitoring, the person asks,

“How am I doing?” A letter saying you’ve been hired or you’ve won an award is an example

that one is doing well.

Environmental, economic, social, and a variety of other forces and conditions can

positively or negatively affect the outcome of even the most carefully prepared plan. For

example, planning a dream house and building an affordable house are two different things.

The factors affecting implementing are the same ones that affect planning: situations,

personal traits and characteristics, and motivational factors.

Possible blocks to successful implementation include:

• Distractions.

• Environmental constraints.

• Other people. They may not believe in the same plans you do, or they may drag their feet.

• Costs and other restrictions.

• Competition. Perhaps there are competing plans that are better. For example, 14 architects

may be invited to submit plans for a new university building—only one will be selected.

• Crises. Long-term plans may be put on hold if resources are required for more immediate

needs.

• Procrastination or lack of motivation.

• Closed-mindedness.

Several strategies can be employed to avoid these blocks. The main strategy is to intel-

ligently size up the situations that arise and respond accordingly. In the end, implementing

requires a scanning sensibility—a monitoring of your actions and the actions of those around

you. Scanning is an activity in which individuals or families “read the world,” looking for

signals and clues (i.e., information, messages, feedback) that could have strategic implica-

tions. Three of the elements that play into this—actuating, checking, and controlling—are

discussed next.

186 chapter 6

Actuating The difficulty here is what action to take, not any action but the right action. Actuating refers

to putting plans into effect, action, or motion. For example, Mike, a teenager, has been read-

ing car advertisements and talking with friends for months about buying a used car. Finally, he

decides he is ready to look at some cars.

Plans can be actuated in stages. A teacher may interview for a job in January that does

not start until August. Within the family system, parents might start saving for their child’s

college education soon after the child’s birth and add money to the college fund on each

birthday. Positive and negative feedback (discussed in Chapter 2) play a large part in actuat-

ing. Feedback from others may prevent a person from actuating a plan—she or he may want

to wait until the time seems to be right. Also, if things are going well, an individual may decide

not to “rock the boat” and to let things simply evolve for a while; at other times, a more active

and controlling approach is necessary.

Checking and Controlling Once the plan is activated, different situations or personal factors may indicate the need for

corrective action. To be successful, plans need to be checked and rechecked. This checking,

or adjusting, activity is a type of controlling. For example, a person may make a reserva-

tion months in advance of an important event and reconfirm the reservation a day or two

before the event.

Checking is defined in management as determining whether actions are in compliance

with standards and sequencing. An individual determines whether plans are unfolding as they

should, in the right sequence, and in a timely fashion. If a check reveals that they are not,

a correction is necessary.

For example, changes in planning and implementing can occur when an individual goes

grocery shopping with a list. The list is a plan of action; but, while shopping (actuating the

plan), the shopper may make several changes, such as substituting one product for another

or adding several more items to the grocery cart. In this way, the list serves as a guide. Most

plans can be envisioned as a guide—a mental plan of action.

If overdone, checking can produce undesirable effects. Too much checking by the plan-

ner or by the implementer of the plan can lead to frustration, resentment, or pressure. Consider

the potential frustration of a person on a diet who checks his or her weight several times a

day. Or consider how employees feel when the boss stands over them when they are trying to

complete a task. Or how an interviewer feels when a potential employee keeps calling about

the result of an interview. In the latter case, too much checking can ruin the person’s chances

for employment. The goal is to have a sufficient amount of checking to ensure a positive out-

come (e.g., a weight loss, a completed task, or a job), but neither too much nor too little.

Controlling and corrective action take time. Therefore, the implementer has to weigh the

costs against the benefits of spending time and energy on checking. Controlling is most effec-

tive at significant milestones or critical points in a plan. Teachers and professors do this by

giving tests or assignments at appropriate intervals of learning; it is their way of checking the

learning progress.

As with so many other aspects of management, the key to successful planning and

implementing is a balance between wants, goals, and actions. Particularly in the checking

phase, achieving a balance is essential to obtaining a successful outcome.

Planning, Implementing, and Evaluating 187

what is Evaluating? The word “evaluation” comes from an Old French verb, évaluer (to be worthy or to have value).

To evaluate means to determine the worth of an effort. Thus, evaluation is a process of

judging or examining the cost, value, or worth of a plan or decision based on such criteria as

standards, met demands, or goals. It occurs throughout the management process: in setting

goals in the first place, and at each step along the way. As discussed earlier, people may

encounter obstacles to goal achievement, such as crises and unplanned-for events.

What are some of the criteria in the evaluation process? An individual may seek to deter-

mine the quantities (was enough money saved?) or qualities involved in an action or they may

look for the satisfaction of family members.

As judgments are subjective, evaluations can turn out to be flawed or biased. To ensure

better end results, people engage in assessments. Assessment involves the gathering

of information about results, the comparison of those results with the results of the past,

and the open discussion of the meaning of those results, the ways that they have been

gathered, and their implications for the next moves of the family or the individual (Senge

et al., 1999).

Since evaluation can be painful, people often ignore this step and proceed immediately to

the next problem or goal. Nevertheless, looking back and evaluating past decisions are crucial

steps in becoming a better manager.

Improving management skills is important because competence in problem solving

has been identified as an essential part of healthy marriages and family systems (Rettig &

Bubolz, 1983). To build on success, individuals should acknowledge the things that have been

accomplished and the ways they have changed or grown. What decisions are you most proud

of? Maybe it was trying out for a school play or a team sport. Whether it worked or not, you

learned from the trying more than what you would have if you had not tried. Thomas Edison

conducted 50,000 different experiments to find a working storage battery!

When asked if he was frustrated, his reply was “What failures? I now know 50,000

things which do not work.” Once evaluation is over, work on restoring your energy, clearing

your calendar, relaxing, and taking care of things that you’ve been putting off. Are there

new priorities?

Storyboarding is a technique used by advertisers, movie screenwriters, and televi-

sion scriptwriters to show the main scenes in a commercial, movie, or television show. A

storyboard is a comic-strip type presentation complete with pictures, dialogue, and words to

describe the action (Levinson, 1999). Storyboarding can be used as a planning technique in

other situations to show the consecutive steps that lead to desired outcomes. It allows a per-

son to visualize the steps to be taken. Figure 6.4 shows a storyboard from a commercial. Use

the blank spaces provided in Figure 6.5 to create your own storyboard. The last frame should

be your desired outcome.

At the end of the management process, a final evaluation takes place. If a goal is

achieved, the manager can look back with satisfaction on how things turned out. Other

possible outcomes are the achievement of a new or a substitute goal (not the ones initially

set), the solution to a problem, the satisfaction of a need or want, or perhaps none of these.

Whether the outcomes are effective or whether they are ineffective, the manager should

review what went right and what went wrong with the process so that she or he can learn

from it for future decisions.

188 chapter 6

Figure 6.4 A sample storyboard layout. Source: Reprinted by permission of Wells Fargo Bank.

Planning, Implementing, and Evaluating 189

Desired outcome or goal:

Steps: What do you have to do first, second, third, and so on to reach the desired outcome? Use words or draw pictures to illustrate the main steps or actions needed to reach your goal. Note: You may need less than eight steps (frames).

Desired outcome or goal should be written or drawn in here.

1

3

5

7 8

6

4

2

Figure 6.5 Storyboarding: A planning technique.

190 chapter 6

summarysummary As the opening case study showed, individuals and families plan their lives and lifestyles. Some of us need more consistency than others. Resource management theory focuses on conscious deci- sion making, leading to the formation and implementation of plans to achieve goals. Planning, implementing, and evaluating are the main subjects of this chapter. They represent both mental and physical activity. Planning begins with mentally organizing activities to accomplish a desired end state. It requires vision, energy, and motivation to succeed. Implementing includes both actuating and controlling.

Task saturation refers to being so busy doing things that there is no time to plan or lead effectively.

Planning and implementing require the ability to order and sequence steps in a rational manner. Personality, situations,

standards, and the environment all affect planning outcomes. Proactive and reactive personality types differ in how they approach planning. Their language reflects these differences.

Scanning is an activity in which individuals or families “read  the world” by searching for signals or clues that have strategic implications. Assessment involves the gathering of information about results. Storyboarding was introduced as a technique for visualizing the steps in planning leading to a desired outcome.

People vary in their planning expertise. Planning ability can increase with experience and maturity. As Emerson said, “That  which we persist in doing becomes easier—not that the nature of the task has changed, but our ability to do has increased.”

termskey terms actuating 186 adjusting 186 assessment 187 checking 186 contingency plans 182 directional plans 182 dovetailing (multitasking) 179 evaluation 187 expertise 175 extroverts 174

Gresham’s law of planning 171 independent activities 179 interdependent activities 181 introverts 174 multitask 167 overlapping activities 181 persistence 177 personality 174 plan 169 proactive 183

process 170 reactive 184 scanning 185 scheduling 179 storyboarding 187 strategic plans 182 synergize 183 task saturation 173

questions 1. Do you know anyone similar to author Stuart Woods

described in the introductory story in this chapter? Someone who has several houses or doesn’t like changes in home environments or who names their pets the same name over and over? Explain.

2. What influences affect planning? Include a discussion of Gresham’s law of planning in your answer.

3. What is the difference between proactive and reactive styles? Give an example of each in your own life.

4. At the end of Clint Eastwood’s Dirty Harry movie, the main character says, “A man’s gotta know his limitations.” What are the limitations to multitasking (or are there any)?

5. The musician John Lennon wrote a song lyric that said “Life is what happens to you while you’re busy making other plans.” What do you think he meant by this? What is your opinion about how much of life can be planned and how much just happens? Give an example of something that you planned to do, but “life” got in the way.

review questions

Planning, Implementing, and Evaluating 191

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Good communication is as stimulating as black coffee and just as hard to sleep after.

—Anne Morrow Lindbergh 7

CommuniCation

Main Topics

Communication as Part of the Management Process Channels, noise, and Setting Sending and receiving Listening Messages Channels and Feedback

Communication Conflicts in Families Cultures and Subcultures

Communication in Small Groups group discussions and Cohesion

Information and Communications Technology Social networks and Social network Sites information overload and habitual decision Making The internet and the human Capacity to Process

information The role of the home and the individual

DiD you know that . . .?

. . . We speak about 150 to 200 words a minute.

. . . Thirty-six percent of employees attend group meetings.

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A mong the many forms of communication and dialogue to be discussed in this chapter, there are group interactions as highlighted in the case study and also the commercial versions such as in the selling of products. The essence of successful advertising is to convince people they need a product.

Previously unknown in the United States, energy drinks are now a $3.7 billion category

with hundreds of competitors, led by Red Bull. How did that happen? I don’t mean in the

descriptive sense of a brand’s or a product’s movement from one group of consumers

to another, until it becomes familiar to almost everybody. I mean on an individual level.

We all have our thirsts—real and metaphorical. How do we decide what will quench

them and what won’t? How are those decisions affected by the commercial persuasion

industry and the billions it spend to influence us? (Walker, 2008, p. xii)

Dialogue, whether commercial, personal, or professional, implies a two-way process, a

genuine interaction, reaching out. The objectives are to express concern for the other person

and/or their views to be supportive or empathetic. A monologue is the opposite of a dialogue.

In a monologue one person speaks and the other listens.

Case Study alpha males “One evening a week, a group of CEOs meets in a Manhattan psychiatrist’s office and engages in an ancient ritual. Ostensibly, it is a support group. Inevitably, it becomes a battle for dominance. ‘Whenever you put alpha males together, the most aggressive will overpower the others,’ says T. Byram Karasu, the veteran psychiatrist who has run the sessions for the past 23 years.

The fighting is subtle, but it’s vicious. ‘Even giving advice is geared toward lowering the others’ self-esteem. Those at the lower end of the group come away doubting themselves, and their testosterone falls’ . . . It isn’t easy being an alpha male. Getting to the top and staying there takes a physical toll.”

Critical Thinking

Chad receives an email that he is not accepted into the graduate school he wanted most. As a neighbor and friend, you want to help him. What would you say or do?

Source: Beck, M. (2011). Are alpha males healthy? The Wall Street Journal, p. D1.

How do you talk so people will listen? Instead of allowing our words to mislead, we can

learn to communicate more effectively. Conversational skills are the hallmark of management,

an integral part of every step of the management process.

Communication 195

Feedback connects the steps together, forming a loop, as shown in Figure 7.1. Although

communication and feedback are normally thought of as verbal, both can be nonverbal as

well. For example, a look can often convey more than words.

This chapter will examine both verbal and nonverbal communication. An example of

nonverbal communication is Dunkin’ Donuts recruiting teenagers to wear temporary tattoos

with its brand name on their forehead. Other topics to be covered include the process of

communication, conflict, information overload, keeping the lines of communication open, and

the value of listening.

Encouraging the reader to communicate more effectively is the behavioral goal of this

chapter. Presenting the types, forms, and problems of communication in families, in small

groups, and in commercial or professional settings is the informational goal. It is important in

the workplace because:

• 40 percent of employees use oral communication face-to-face or one-on-one regularly

• 36 percent of employees regularly attend group meetings

• 30 percent of employees talk on the phone

• 8 percent of employees participate in group conferences (Miller, 2010).

By the chapter’s conclusion, readers should be more aware of how they and others

communicate. The chapter begins with a discussion of communication as part of the man-

agement process.

Communication as Part of the Management Process Communication is the process of transmitting a message from a sender to a receiver. We

connect in various ways including:

• Electronic media

• Networking

• Books

• Newspapers (digital and ink-stained) and magazines

• Multiple TV and radio channels

Chapters 1 and 3

Step 1

Chapter 3

Step 2

Chapter 4

Step 3

Chapters 5 and 6

Step 4

Chapter 6

Step 5

Decide, plan, and implement

Accomplish goals and evaluate

Identify resources

Identify problem, need, want, or goal

Clarify values

Feedback

Chapters 2 and 7

Chapters 2 and 12

Environment

Figure 7.1 The management process model.

196 chapter 7

• Face-to-face

• Over the phone or the Internet

• Over the fence, porch, or balcony

• Yelling “It’s time for dinner!” or whispering “I love you”

Pace refers to the speed at which you speak or communicate. Since 150–200 words a minute

is normal if you speed up it may indicate you are happy, excited, or surprised and if you slow

down it may indicate boredom, talking down to people, or wanting to make a point.

Interference is anything that distorts or interrupts messages. Effective communica-

tion occurs when the receiver interprets the sender’s message in the same way the speaker

intended it.

Because information transmission is an integral part of management, to be effective, a

manager has to be an effective communicator. In systems terminology, communication is part

of the transformation process—transforming inputs into outputs. In transforming information

resources (inputs), communication uses up time and energy. The average person spends

approximately 70 percent of his or her waking hours in some form of communication—

writing, reading, speaking, and listening (Robbins, 1989). Given this time investment, it

follows that one of the forces most likely to inhibit successful life management is a lack of

effective communication.

Much of a manager’s time must be devoted to goal setting, which also requires effective

communication. Goal setting is a sequence that starts with thinking and proceeds to acting,

which includes communicating goals to others and engaging their support and interest. As part

of this process, managers need to communicate several key decisions, including the following:

1. What goals will be sought?

2. Which goals have the highest priority?

3. How are the goals related?

4. How long will it take to achieve the goals?

5. Who should be accountable for achieving the goals?

The answers to these questions guide the present and future behavior of individuals,

families, and other groups. Effective communication is

• clear

• concise (if you take too long to get to a point, everyone quits listening)

• consistent

• creative

• sensitive to audience

• persuasive (or it explains rather than demands or threatens)

• open to differing opinions

These characteristics are important in both family and professional life. An effective

communicator has the ability to pass along information, giving advance notice of impend-

ing changes and plans. Talking through problems and listening carefully to what other family

members have to say adds to family cohesiveness. In professional life, communication skills

can be crucial to getting ahead. Peter Drucker, an expert in business management, said:

Your success as an employee—and I’m talking of much more than getting promoted—

will depend on your ability to communicate with people and to present your own

thoughts and ideas to them so they will both understand what you are driving at and be

persuaded. (1977, pp. 262–263)

Communication 197

As Drucker’s comments indicate, communication is indeed a process rather than a

finished end state; and, as such, it allows individuals to share information, ideas, and feelings.

For example, consider the following conversation between Heather and Sam, two college

students who have been friends for over a year, but have never dated each other:

Sam: I haven’t seen you around for weeks. Where have you been?

Heather: I’ve been working on two projects and they’ve taken all my time. I’m worried

about my grades.

Sam: Hm. You do look stressed.

Heather: Yes, I am. But it’s almost over—everything is due this week.

Sam: You’ll do all right. You always worry about your work and then you make A’s.

Why don’t we get together this weekend?

In this exchange, Sam and Heather have communicated information and feelings.

Their remarks show that their relationship has a past, present, and future. Sam puts

Heather’s concerns into perspective. His comments show that he likes her. If the conversation

continues, what are some of the responses Heather might give? Notice that only the verbal

communication between Sam and Heather has been presented. Their nonspoken or nonver-

bal communication is not included. Does Sam smile or grin at Heather? Does he try to show

he cares by his tone of voice or stance? Is Heather yawning?

Channels, Noise, and Setting Communication has long been considered part of everything from who gets elected president

to who remains married. It is far more than words: It is about relationships, winning and losing,

succeeding and not succeeding. It includes channels, noise, and setting. The channel is the

method by which communication travels from source or sender to receiver. As Figure 7.2

shows, these elements interact to create the total communication environment. Would Sam

Source/ sender Encoding

Channel message

Feedback Response

Setting

Noise

Decoding Receiver

Figure 7.2 A model of the communications process.

198 chapter 7

and Heather’s conversation be different if it took place in a crowded cafeteria rather than a

deserted hall? A quiet setting allows senders and receivers to concentrate on each other;

a noisy setting is full of distractions.

Sometimes the messages are blurred or inaccurate. For example, a man might say “I’m

not much of a consumer” right in the middle of a grocery store while he is filling his basket.

A consumer columnist says:

I guess nobody wants to define himself or herself as “a consumer,” because it feels a

little trivial. Still, once whoever I’m listening to has established the necessary noncon-

sumer credentials, what usually follows is an opinion about a product or brand that

I’ve written about lately. If it’s something that she would not personally buy, then she’s

amazed anyone would: if it’s something that he has personally bought, than he assures

me that I failed to capture the real quality or style or excellence of whatever it was.

Obviously, we’re all consumers. And probably we all think we’re better at playing the

consumption game than most people. (Walker, 2008, p. xix)

Noise, defined as an unwanted sound that interferes or distracts, is a barrier to learning

and communication. There are two types of noise: external and internal. External noise

comes from the environment. An airplane overhead, the hot blinding sun, a howling wind,

or lightning are all examples of external noise. Notice that in communication theory, noise

includes more than just sounds, as the sun and lightning illustrate. Internal noise occurs in

the sender’s and receiver’s minds. They may be thinking about something else during the

communication—their minds are not on the conversation taking place.

Daydreaming during a class lecture or thinking about a family member at work instead of

listening to co-workers discuss the copy machine’s breakdown are examples of internal noise.

Often internal noise occurs when a word or allusion in the current conversation reminds us of

something else.

An interesting experiment revealed how much internal and external noise affects the

recall of advertising. Marketing professors Bob Wu and Stephen Newell (2003) found

that external noise wasn’t as important as internal noise in affecting subjects’ ability to

recall  advertising (i.e., brand recall and message recall). They suggest that advertisers

consider how they advertise during the holidays when consumers are preoccupied with

cooking, travel, shopping, and gift buying; maybe this is not the best time to introduce a

new product or idea.

Perhaps a better time would be a few months earlier when things are more settled or

in January if it is a new diet plan or toothpaste or system of organizing/storage containers.

Internal worrying about shocking current news or events may also take away from advertising

messages being heard. These findings have implications not just for the marketplace but also

for family and household management. Introducing a new way of doing things may go over

better during less hectic times.

Noise is any interference in the communication process that prevents the message from

being heard correctly, and it can occur at any point in the process. The sender may send

out confusing messages, the channel may be distorted, or the receiver may be distracted.

There is more noise today than ever before. Because of all the noise, advertisers are having

a difficult time getting customers to notice their messages. On the home front, spouses

may wonder whether their mates are listening to them when the television is blaring in

the background.

Communication 199

In today’s fast-paced world, too many conflicting messages are vying for everyone’s

attention. The importance of the setting cannot be overestimated. There are appropriate

places and times for discipline, compliments, whispers, shouts, and disputes. Being sensitive

to environmental conditions as well as to words is part of being an effective communicator.

One way to build a positive environment for communication is for individuals to let others know

that they care about them.

Providing a climate of acceptance fosters human functioning and teamwork. For exam-

ple, children need to know that their parents love them. Likewise, employees need to know

that their employers are concerned about their welfare. When there is trust, people feel freer

to exchange information, ideas, and feelings. As mentioned in Chapter 2, the greater environ-

ment in which individuals and families live has a significant effect on the way they manage. The

setting, or physical surroundings, is where management messages are communicated. Some

settings, such as a church or a boardroom, are more formal than others. Communications

should be appropriate for the setting.

Public speakers check out the setting before their speech, so they can match their

posture, speaking voice, and microphone volume to the room size and potential audience.

The design of homes, offices, and campuses communicates to the user the type of

relationships that will occur in that setting. A campus with winding walkways, fountains, and

botanical gardens has a different atmosphere than a campus consisting of high-rise con-

crete buildings. Indoor lighting and color affect communication. Warm colors, such as red and

orange, and bright lights tend to accelerate talking, whereas cool colors, such as soft blue

and green, and low lights tend to subdue communication. Institutional atmospheres are not

conducive to quiet personal conversations. Even clothing is part of the setting. Research has

shown that the style of clothing therapists wear will enhance or detract from their relationship

with clients (Heitmeyer & Goldsmith, 1990).

Sending and Receiving Communication is a two-way process between sender and receiver. Sending is saying what

one means to say, with agreement between verbal and nonverbal messages. Modulation is

the loudness or pitch of your voice. In good sending, the person must know what she or he

Critical Thinking

A neighborhood lady noticed that if she gave in-home sales parties for household or kitchen items in September and early October they were far more successful than if she gave them in the summer. She said women attending were relaxed and buying holiday presents. Another good time for sales was late January and February, but then women were inclined to buy small items for themselves. The saleslady would alter her approach. Do you think season affects the ability to listen to sales pitches and respond by the opening of wallets and purses? Can you give another example? Have you noticed that television advertising changes as it nears holidays?

200 chapter 7

wants to say and then say it. The sender should make eye contact with the receiver and speak

slowly and distinctly. Receiving entails listening to the verbal messages and observing the

nonverbal messages. If the message is getting through, the receiver will probably show his or

her response through facial expressions. A good sender talks with people, not at them, and

considers the listener’s feelings, personality, and opinions.

Usually, people are receivers and senders at the same time. Communication is not as

simple as having one person speak, another listen and then speak, and so on. For instance,

more than one listener may be involved. Also, the sending and receiving can be simultaneous.

A sender can also be called a source, or communicator. The receiver is the destination,

or audience. The sender’s task is to reach the audience, whether it is one person or a million

people. Because of sweeping changes brought on by advances in communications technol-

ogy and the ease of movement of people (physical and virtual) in today’s world, people are

communicating and connecting faster and in more ways now than ever before.

The sender and receiver use four communication functions: encoding, decoding,

response, and feedback. Encoding is the process of putting thoughts, ideas, or information

into symbolic form. Decoding is the process by which the receiver assigns meaning to the

symbols. Responses are the individual reactions that follow a message. Feedback is the total

response pattern between sender and receiver. An individual’s communication style is closely

tied to her or his personality, self-concept, family of origin, and past experiences. Sometimes

a message is distorted by a hidden meaning. When a child says, “I hate soccer” after the first

week of practice, does he really hate soccer or is he in an adjustment period and will grow to

like it? The parent has to determine the real message.

Listening Whether in the home or office, managers want to be heard by those they manage and also

listen to them. Parents want their children to listen. According to Sue Shellenbarger (2003),

some of the ways that parents can be more effective in talking with their children include:

• Telling about problems and how they were overcome (not always talking about the wins,

mixing in a discussion of the struggles)

• Finding good guys (heroes) and bad guys in stories

• Picking situations that both parents and children really care about

• Including dialogue and details about human nature

Conversely, children want their parents to listen to them. In schools, teachers want their

students to listen and learn, retain, and use information. Students want to understand what

their teachers are saying. To encourage more listening, the sender should make messages

and listening attractive. There are several ways to do this. Sometimes humor works, which is

why many speeches begin with a joke or humorous anecdote.

One way advertisers deliver effective messages is to appeal to potential customers’

senses. Think of the senses involved in this appeal from General Foods: “Turn a stormy night

into a quiet evening with the after-dinner-mint taste of chocolaty Irish Mocha Mint.” Listeners

as well as senders have a job to do. This is one of the reasons listening is considered active

rather than passive.

To be effective, listeners use certain gestures or mannerisms to communicate interest:

• Leaning forward rather than back

• Nodding occasionally to show comprehension

Communication 201

• Smiling

• Looking directly at the speaker and maintaining eye contact

• Making comments such as “I see,” “Go on,” “Oh,” or “Mmm”

• Taking notes or recording, if appropriate.

A good listener summarizes conversations when they end and lets the sender know his or her

message was heard by nodding or smiling, or by making some other gesture or response.

CritiCal listening Besides the general everyday listening everyone does, there are specific types of listening.

One of these is critical listening, in which the listener evaluates or challenges what is heard.

Listening to a political candidate or a spokesperson for a new product requires critical listening.

Can the message be believed? Before voting, or making a contribution, or buying something

new, the listener may

• Question the communicator’s motives or credentials. What does he or she want?

• Question the origin and validity of the communicator’s ideas.

• Separate fact from fiction.

• Judge the message and the sender. Are they accurate and reliable?

Critical listening takes time. Not all messages require critical listening, however. A sign that it

may be necessary is that the message or the messenger makes the listener feel uncomfort-

able or suspicious.

refleCtive or empathetiC listening Another type of listening is reflective listening. Reflective listening or empathetic listening

involves listening for feelings. Empathy is the ability to recognize and identify another’s feel-

ings by putting oneself in that person’s place. Reflective or empathetic listening is so common

that individuals don’t examine their skills in this area closely enough. As a reflective listener the

listener’s job is to set aside her or his own feelings and enter into the feelings of the person

talking. The listener can do this by

• Identifying the speaker’s emotion. Is the person afraid, excited, happy, or frustrated?

• Listening for the details of the story. What is included, and what is left out?

• Paraphrasing or mirroring the speaker’s comments to see whether the message is being

heard accurately.

• Letting the other person work through the problem. Talking out feelings is a way to find

solutions.

informational and pleasurable listening Listening does not have to be painful, difficult, or critical, nor does it have to involve the use

of counseling skills. Much listening is for information or for fun. Informational listening is done

to acquire knowledge or instruction. A news program or a college lecture is not only informa-

tional, but also invokes critical listening.

Pleasurable listening provides enjoyment, relaxation, satisfaction, diversion, amusement,

or delight. Tuning the radio to a favorite station provides pleasurable listening. Watching

a situation comedy show on television provides escape, amusement, and laughter. Other

202 chapter 7

sources of pleasurable listening are available besides the media. Imagine the happiness of

a father hearing his child’s first word, a high school student learning she has won a college

scholarship, or a person overseas receiving a phone call from home. Often the most pleasur-

able listening comes from unexpected sources or at an unanticipated time.

Messages The message is the total communication that is sent, listened to, and received. Commu-

nication is made up of symbols. Symbols are things that suggest something else through

association. For example, an engagement ring is a symbol of love and the intention to marry.

It communicates a past, present, and future.

Symbols, such as a tattoo or an engagement ring, that can be seen are called visible

symbols. An abstract symbol stands for ideas rather than objects. Poor communication

often springs from misunderstandings of abstract symbols. For example, Matt tells Suzanne

he has an “awesome” apartment. By “awesome” he means that it is close to campus

and inexpensive, but Suzanne, hearing the word “awesome,” envisions a new, beautifully

decorated, spacious apartment. Imagine her surprise when Matt takes her to a crumbling

50-year-old building.

Lasting friendships are built on shared abstract symbols—commonalities of interests or

appreciation of each other’s differences. In the future, Suzanne will suspect Matt’s use of the

word “awesome.”

Messages can be wanted or unwanted. Consider what happens when stock market falls

deeply and companies go bankrupt or are bought out by other companies.

In a stock market that never seems to run out of reasons to go down, you no longer

feel like a bull. But that does not necessarily make you a bear. You may, in fact, have

become an ostrich. Chances are you didn’t leap for the letter opener the last time your

investment account statement came in the mail. Nor have you been looking up the

value of your portfolio online anywhere near as frequently as you did in the glory days

of the summer of 2007 . . . If history is any guide, your inclination to act like an ostrich is

a strong indication that the market is about to turn into a phoenix. (Zweig, 2008, p. B1)

The Ostrich effect refers to burying one’s head in the sand, not wanting to know what was

in the letter or any other form of communication. Behavioral economist George Loewenstein

of Carnegie Mellon coined the phrase “ostrich effect” to refer to economic behavior but it can

refer to any kind of avoidance of information, hoping it will go away.

verbal and nonverbal symbols Verbal symbols are words. A nonverbal symbol is anything other than words used in

communication. Examples of nonverbal symbols include works of art, train whistles, sirens,

tone and volume of voice, clothing, eye contact, personal appearance, demeanor, gestures,

facial expressions, posture, and yawns. For example, yawns may communicate tiredness or

boredom, whereas sirens communicate danger or caution. Conventional scientific wisdom

said that the role of gestures was to convey meaning. There is an emerging consensus that

gestures serve another function—to help people retrieve elusive words from memory.

People who gesture a lot may think in spatial terms. “Not everyone talks with their hands.

Some people gesture 40 times more than others” (Begley, 1998, p. 69). Communication

Communication 203

experts estimate that over 90 percent of the messages sent and received are made up of

nonverbal symbols—hence the expression, “It is not what you say, but how you say it.”

According to Joseph DeVito (2009) there are 10 aspects of nonverbal communication

including artifacts, proxemics, body language, facial expressions, taste, and even smell. The

10 aspects are listed in Table 7.1. Artifacts are the type, placement, or rearrangement of

An ostrich is a 200-pound bird with a 2-ounce brain. The Ostrich Effect refers to avoiding potentially

negative information.

Source: Dorling Kindersley Media Library.

Ten Aspects of Nonverbal Communication: Channels Through Which the Messages Pass

1. body: movements such as gestures, movements of the face and hands, nodding,

general attractiveness

2. Face: happiness, surprise, sadness, disgust, and other emotions exhibited in expres-

sions, worry lines, smiles

3. eye: eye contact intense or diverted, rolling one’s eyes, direction of glance, visual

dominance

4. Space: proxemics refers to distances or spatial differences, territory/boundary markers

such as armrests in movies and in airplanes, yours and theirs.

5. Artifacts: color, clothing, hair style, jewelry, piercings, adornment, decoration, arrange-

ment of objects, space decoration such as your home and office

6. Touch: can communicate positive feelings and intentions, control, helping someone,

touch avoidance

7. Paralanguage: how you say something—pitch (high or low), speed, volume (loudness)

8. Silence: allowing time for someone else to speak; time to think; can be a weapon of

control or respectful, maybe there’s nothing to say or avoidance; maintaining silence so

that you don’t incriminate yourself.

9. Time: past, present, future; cultural time differences; what is early? what is late?

10. Smell: attraction messages such as use of scent; taste, smell associated with memories

and identification.

Table 7.1

204 chapter 7

objects around a person as well as clothing and adornment. For example, a student who sits

down at a library table and takes 20 minutes to arrange his belongings before settling down

to work communicates something different than a person who takes 20 seconds to set up.

Proxemics is the distance between speakers. Closeness and whispering imply one type of

relationship, whereas distance and shouting imply another. Touching behavior includes both

touching oneself, such as hair twisting or rubbing one’s face, and touching others, such as

shaking hands or hugging. A brief kiss on the cheek, for example, conveys something different

than a kiss on the lips.

i-messages and you-messages Verbal messages can be divided into two types: I-messages and You-messages. I-messages

are statements of fact about how an individual feels or thinks; examples are “I like it when you

send me flowers, thanks” and “I feel stupid when you shout at me.” You-messages are

statements that often ascribe blame or judge others, such as “you had better straighten up” or

“you had better get it right next time.” You-messages can lead to arguments. Family counsel-

ors and therapists promote the use of I-messages over the accusatory tone of You-messages

as a way to encourage more positive communication in couples and in families. Many

You-messages can be rephrased into I-messages as in “I hope things will go better next time”

or “this is what I think.”

message ConstruCtion The structure of a message has a lot to do with its potency. Message construction includes

the appropriate placement of information in a message to have the maximum impact. The

communicator has to decide whether to place the main point of the comment or speech at the

beginning or the end and whether to provide solutions or leave the solutions to the audience.

message Content and Complexity Message content refers to the strategies or information that may be used to communicate

an idea or policy to receivers. Determining content is the first step in creating a message. Then

the communicator must decide on the best way to get the message across to the audience.

An example of this is speaking up for a cause.

Many of us have messages or images in our heads about certain individuals and groups.

Some of these messages or images are questionable.

“When you see a 25-year-old woman, you picture her as single, she has a cool job, a

cute boyfriend, she’s going out at night, has lots of friends, has a college degree. But

having interviewed thousands of women, I can tell you that many [young women] have

children, are working at some half-baked first job, are not feeling fulfilled, are not in love,

might still be living at home, are economically pressed and stressed to the max,” says

Mary Lou Quinlan, CEO of New York city-based Just Ask a Woman, a division of ad

agency BCOM3. (Wellner, 2002, p. 27)

Quinlan’s firm interviewed more than 3,000 women about their lives and their tastes

in magazines to arrive at that conclusion about 25-year-old women, and there were other

surprises. A 20-year-old may read Ladies’ Home Journal and a 50-year-old may read Glamour.

Quinlan says, “Women will find their way to the emotional outlet that most reflects their lives”

(Wellner, 2002, p. 27).

Communication 205

The Zenlike magazine Real Simple offers ageless content on many of the subjects

covered in this book, including time, money, household, lifestyle, and stress management

to its mainly 25- to 54-year-old readers. A constant theme is how to make your life easier or

better. According to the managing editor, Kristin van Ogtrop, “We all need a friend—a very

good one with very good taste—who will come into our house and evaluate everything with

an objective eye, then firmly suggest we get rid of that horrendous appliance/slipcover/light

fixture that we’ve held on to because we’re sentimental or lazy” (Editor’s Note, 2003, p. 37).

To return to the general topic of message content, messages may have humor or even

fear, which seems negative but can be an effective way to point out potential problems in order

to reduce risk or achieve other positive effects. Antidrug public service television spots often

use fear as a means of reducing drug use. Advertisements for property insurance, burglar

alarms, and automobiles often include fear messages.

Channels and Feedback As mentioned earlier, the channel is the method through which the message travels from

sender to receiver. Channels may be direct, as in face-to-face talking, or indirect. In face-

to-face channels of communication, individuals have the advantage of seeing how the other

person is reacting to the message, so there is less chance of miscommunication. This is

particularly important in conversations between parents and children. Age of the child and the

subject of conversation are important, too. In a study of American and Northern Irish children

about communication with their parents about war:

The results provide support for the presence of developmental differences, with age

being a stronger predictor than gender and country in the frequency and content of

parent-child discussions about war. Children ages 7 to 11 are more likely than younger

children to report talking to their parents about war, and they address more topics than

do the younger children in their reports of what their parents said about war. (O’Malley,

Blankemeyer, Walker, & Dellmann-Jenkins, 2007, p. 1638)

Radio, television, magazines, newspapers, and signs are indirect channels of mass

communication. How many newspapers are there in the United States? That is difficult to say

Critical Thinking

A children’s storybook Amelia Bedelia written by Peggy Parish has as a main character Amelia Bedelia. One day Mr. and Mrs. Rogers hire Amelia as a maid and leave her a list of chores. She thinks some are odd like “draw the drapes” and “dress a chicken,” but she sets out to do these chores anyway. She draws a lovely picture on the drapes and makes a cute outfit for the chicken. When Mrs. Rogers returns she is appalled, but Amelia responds, “I did what was asked.” Have you ever felt like Mrs. Rogers? Or, like Amelia? Why do children relate to the character Amelia Bedelia?

206 chapter 7

because smaller ones go in and out of business, and some are hardly bigger than newsletters.

But it is safe to say that ethnic newspapers (online or printed) enjoy a loyal following.

Guess how many newspapers are published in New York City? Three? Five? Even

Manhattanites familiar with all seven of the city’s English language papers may be

unaware of the additional 198 ethnic newspapers published in New York’s other four

boroughs—more than three times the number there were just a decade ago. Ethnic

newspapers—presenting a range of linguistic and cultural perspectives including

Chinese, Hispanic, Arabic, Caribbean, Russian, Korean and more—are proliferating

nationwide. Chicago has more than 80 publications. (Paul, 2001, p. 26)

As large city newspaper subscribership has gone down, smaller ethnic newspapers

and free newspapers such as college newspapers have gone up in readership. More news-

papers are offering free sections or versions and relying on advertising revenue, rather than

on subscribers, to pay for labor and paper. Some newspapers are discussing eliminating

home delivery because of the cost of fuel and labor. Most have built up their Web sites and

are trying to get readers to visit them more often for the latest news and photographs, and

to join in blogs.

Telephones provide a channel for more personal communications than do other types of

media because the tone of voice is heard, but telephone communication is still not as clear

as face-to-face conversation. Channels can also be categorized as social channels and advo-

cate or expert channels. Social channels include friends, neighbors, and family members.

Because of familiarity and proximity, these channels are most likely to involve face-to-face

contacts. Advocate or expert channels (e.g., experts in a field, salespeople, or people with

a cause) are more likely to contact receivers through letters, speeches, or less direct forms of

communication. In systems terminology, feedback refers to the return to the input of a part of

the output in the form of information. An equally appropriate but simpler definition of feedback

is the response process between sender and receiver. Feedback may take a variety of forms.

It closes the loop in the communication’s flow and lets the sender know how the intended

message was decoded and received.

Feedback begins when one hears or observes what is being said, stores or responds to

the information, and listens for the next message. For example, if Joseph gives Alison a com-

pliment and she says “thank you,” her response provides feedback: Joseph’s message was

heard accurately and acknowledged.

Feedback provides a control mechanism for the accuracy of communication. By the

recipient’s response, the sender can tell whether the message was communicated effec-

tively. If Alison bursts into tears, obviously Joseph’s compliment was not phrased correctly

or received correctly. If he values their relationship, he will restate his comment and try to

straighten things out. The advantage of face-to-face conversations is that the feedback is

immediate.

Communication Conflicts Many potential communication conflicts and problems can be avoided by applying the general

principles already presented on noise, setting, feedback, channels, and messages. But, in

addition, certain situations and audiences deserve special attention. This section examines the

potential communication conflicts that can occur within families and across cultures.

Communication 207

In Families In general, the goal of communication is to provide understanding that leads to desired

actions. In some cases, however, communication fails and conflict results. Conflict is a state

of disagreement or disharmony. In poor communication, there is a message struggle or con-

flict between the sender and the receiver. If survival of the relationship is the ultimate goal, this

conflict can pose a definite threat.

Negotiations to remedy the conflict are known as conflict resolution. The sender,

receiver, or another person can initiate conflict resolution. Conflict is particularly common in

families because of the intimate, ongoing nature of the relationships. Family members know

each other so well that they notice nonverbal communications (e.g., a raised eyebrow, a

strained voice) that strangers would be likely to miss. Hence, conflict is more on the surface

and less readily hidden in families. The emotional intensity of family relationships is generally

much greater than that in other small groups, so family communication problems tend to have

more serious and painful implications (Sieburg, 1985).

Although information should flow easily among family members, sometimes it stagnates,

and conflict between family members goes on for years. The number of possible interac-

tions also contributes to communication conflicts in families. Addition of a second child to a

family increases the number of interactions. As the number of interactions increases, family

members may succumb to interaction fatigue. Because the family system is part of the larger

environment, interaction fatigue may also develop at work and affect the family at home or

develop at home and spill over into work. Kanter (1977) observed that employees who experi-

ence interaction fatigue at work may withdraw from personal contact at home.

According to DeVito (2009), several factors will influence your choice of conflict strategies,

including

• Goals: Long- and short-term

• Emotional State: Angry, sorry, wanting to make peace

• Cognitive Assessment of the Situation: Who is the cause of the conflict?

What emotions are they exhibiting?

208 chapter 7

• Personality and Communication: Shy, introverted, extroverted, like to fight actively

• Family History: “influences the strategies you use, the topics you choose to fight

about, and perhaps your tendencies to obsess or forget about interpersonal con-

flicts. People often imitate their parents: if your parents argued about money or gave

each other the silent treatment when conflict arose, you may repeat these patterns

yourself” (p. 260).

Researchers (Liberman, Wheeler, de Visser, Kuehnel, & Kuehnel, 1980, p. 90) identified

several common destructive messages and tactics that characterize ineffective communica-

tion within families:

• Ordering turns the interaction into a power struggle between partners or between parents

and children. “You do this” and “Stop doing that” are examples of ordering.

• Threatening is similar to ordering, but it goes further. It can lead to passivity or despair.

• Moralizing sends a message of guilt or moral inferiority or suggests that the other person

needs guidance or direction. “You should” messages are examples of moralizing.

• Providing solutions occurs when words sound like a question, as in “Why don’t you,” but

really indicate superiority or a kind of parental guidance.

• Lecturing is a more forceful way of providing solutions. You are told what to do or that

you always do things wrong.

• Criticizing can mar relationships and lead to dependency and lower self-esteem in the

criticized person.

• Ridiculing generates resistance and resentment. It involves biting and hurtful phrases,

such as “You’re talking like an idiot” or “You’re such a mess.”

• Analyzing occurs when one person tells another how the latter should think and act.

Analyzers are often amateur psychologists who generate anger by invading others’ pri-

vacy and questioning their motivations with comments like “You think you know what you

are doing, but you don’t.” Often analyzers are wrong, however.

• Interrogating is used to gain information by relentless questioning. “You’re not telling the

truth, are you?” is an example of an interrogating question.

• Withdrawing is a way to end conversations. The person may say she or he is tired and is

going to bed.

Do these messages and tactics sound familiar? They should, because they are very

common. If they are used too frequently, they can impede effective communication and

damage relationships. Being able to recognize these tactics helps the recipient understand

the sender better.

Possibly, the message is not conveying the real problem. The real problem may be with

the sender or with the relationship between the sender and the receiver. For example, Luciano

L’Abate and Tamar Harel suggest that “relationships that cannot become intimate emotionally

may make contact with each other through sporadic and sudden ambushes, uproars, upsets,

and conflicts over performance and/or production” (1993, p. 243).

Conversely, the Marital Communication Inventory (Bievenue, 1978) has identified

behaviors that indicate satisfying marital communication. They include pleasant mealtime con-

versations, avoidance of the silent treatment, discussions of work and interests with each

other, avoiding saying things that irritate each other, and communicating affection and regard.

In general, communication between husband and wife is most satisfying when both partners

feel they are understood and when they agree on essential points.

Communication 209

interpersonal ConfliCts Interpersonal conflicts are actions by one person that interfere in some way with the actions

of another. Destructive conflicts are a specific type of interpersonal conflict involving direct

verbal attacks on another individual. Yelling, screaming, abuse, attacks on self-esteem,

and words leading to breakups are characteristics of destructive conflicts. On the other

hand, constructive conflicts focus on the issue or the problem rather than on the other

person’s deficits.

This type of conflict can open up issues and lead to deeper relationships, clarification,

and better understanding of the other person. Thus, not all conflicts are negative. Sometimes

conflict is necessary to resolve points of difference, clear the air, or relieve tension.

Constructive conflicts can lead to a win–win outcome, which is obviously desirable.

A seller of a house may ask $200,000, the buyer offers $190,000, and they settle at $195,000;

each one wins, each gets what he or she wanted.

gender, families, and CommuniCation In Deborah Tannen’s You’re Wearing That? Understanding Mothers and Daughters in

Conversation, she writes:

The challenge in every relationship, every conversation, is to find ways to be as close as

you want to be (and no closer) without that closeness becoming intrusive or threatening

your freedom and your sense that you are in control of your life. In this, relationships

between daughters and mothers are like all relationships, only more so. They combine,

on one hand, the deepest connection, the most comforting closeness, with, on the

other, the most daunting struggles for control. Each tends to overestimate the other’s

power while underestimating her own. And each yearns to be seen and accepted for

who she is . . . . (2006, p. 4)

By their folded arms and facial expressions what is being communicated?

210 chapter 7

Here is an example from Tannen’s book:

“Are you going to quarter those tomatoes?” Kathryn heard her mother’s voice as she

was preparing a salad. Kathryn stiffened, and her pulse quickened. “Well I was,” she

answered. Her mother responded, “Oh, okay,” but the tone of her voice and the look on

her face prompted Kathryn to ask, “Is that wrong?” “No, no,” her mother replied. “It’s

just that personally, I would slice them.” Kathryn’s response was terse: “Fine.” But as

she cut the tomatoes—in slices—she thought, Can’t I do anything without my mother

letting me know she thinks I should do it some other way? (p. 11)

In an earlier book entitled You Just Don’t Understand: Women and Men in Conversation

Tannen took on the topic of male–female communication. She points out that men talk far

more than women, especially in public. Men speak more at meetings, in classrooms, and in

mixed groups at work. However, in the course of a day, women speak about 25,000 words,

while men speak only 10,000.

Her book I Only Say This Because I Love You explores miscommunication among family

members. She suggests that parents should listen more to their teenage children and criticize

them less. Couples should talk about assumptions and try to bring hidden messages out in

the open. And both sides should learn the art of apology. A win–win solution, where nobody is

wrong and a solution is reached, is ideal.

Women tend to interrogate or question more than men do. Psychiatrist Aaron Beck (1988)

points out that wives tend to believe that their marriage is working as long as they and their

husbands are talking about it. On the other hand, men may think the marriage is not working

if they have to talk about it constantly. Generally, women are more comfortable talking about

personal matters with family and friends than men are. In the United States, men are more

likely than women to use avoidance (walk away) (Oggins, Veroff, & Leber, 1993).

According to Tannen, men and women also differ in the ways they express their troubles

and seek out information. Women resent “men’s tendency to offer solutions to problems,”

and men “complain about women’s refusal to take action to solve the problems they complain

about” (1990, pp. 51–52). Men want to solve problems and move on, whereas women hesi-

tate and seek other people’s opinions to gain as much information as they can before moving

toward a solution. This is one of the reasons why women make up the majority of the audience

for talk shows. They enjoy considering all the angles to a situation or issue. Men sometimes

feel women go to such excess talking over situations that they seem to enjoy wallowing in

a problem. Men move to solutions quickly because they derive pleasure from fixing things.

Fixing things “reinforces their feeling of being in control, self-sufficient, and able to dominate

the world of objects” (1990, p. 70).

Women are more likely than men to ask directions and accept information from others.

The classic example is of men driving around lost rather than stopping and asking directions.

Men are also more likely to try to get the “best” parking space in a shopping center. At the root

of both of these behaviors is concern about status, hierarchy, and connections.

According to Tannen, boys as young as age three are using words in their conversations

with peers that show they want to be a leader, to be first, and to be best, whereas girls of the

same age are more interested in getting along with friends and understanding their feelings

and opinions. For example, girls are more likely to say “let’s” and “we” in their conversations.

Boys’ conversations are filled with orders, such as “Get up” or “Give it to me,” and ridicule,

such as “You’re a dope” (Beck, 1988, p. 82). Boys are more inclined than girls to threaten,

boast, and argue.

Communication 211

Tannen contends that men and women have different but equally valid communication

styles. Problems arise when men and women talk to each other and expect a certain kind of

response. Because of gender differences in conversation, a woman will not always get the

response she desires from men and vice versa. Tannen concludes:

The biggest mistake people can make is believing there is one right way to listen, to

talk, to have a conversation—or a relationship. Nothing hurts more than being told your

intentions are bad when you know they are good, or being told you are doing something

wrong when you know you’re doing it your way. (1990, pp. 297–298)

Tannen’s observations have implications for family dynamics and workplace management.

As women move into positions of authority, these gender differences in conversation will

require greater understanding from both men and women. The solution is not to change

styles so that everyone speaks alike, but to understand and appreciate the various forms

of communication. In the family, the realistic approach is to “learn how to interpret each

others’ messages and explain your own in a way your partner can understand and accept”

(1990, p. 297).

Shelly Gable, an assistant professor of psychology at University of California, Los Angeles

(UCLA), researches the positive psychology of love and marriage. She encourages messages

that amplify the pleasure of a good situation, contributing to an upward spiral of positive emo-

tion. An example would be a partner reacting enthusiastically to a mate’s good fortune or a

partner getting even more excited and happy about what is happening to his or her mate than

the mate does. An enthusiastic partner asks a lot of questions and shows genuine interest. All

these responses or reactions are called active/constructive and promote love, commitment,

and satisfaction (Seligman, 2003).

Where do most couples meet? At work or school followed by through friends and family,

according to the Pew Internet & American Life Project. Others say they met at a social gather-

ing, through the Internet, or in a variety of other ways. As you can see from these responses,

proximity, or physical closeness, often plays a role in starting a relationship. The first few

hours and days are crucial to establishing a bond. Opportunities for interaction decrease as

distances increase and as more people become involved. Colleges and universities have ori-

entations, mixers, and library tours at the beginning of the fall semester to increase interactivity

and a sense of ownership of the campus.

Social Exchange Theory claims that individuals seek to develop relationships that

will maximize the benefits or profits and minimize the costs or deficits. Expectations are

communicated in the early stages of relationships and a significant amount of time is spent

in dialogue.

Critical Thinking

Have you spent a long time in conversation face-to-face, over the phone, or on the Internet getting to know another person? Can you recall any movies where this was a theme? What would you consider to be a long time?

212 chapter 7

Cultures and Subcultures Culture affects everything we do including communication. The goal of cross-cultural commu-

nication is to help minimize surface differences and to build common frameworks for people

of different cultures to interact and understand each other. In business and in education,

cross-cultural communication is critical to share ideas, for team building, and negotiations.

Knowing the characteristics of our own culture is useful and how distinct we are. For example,

Americans are known for being direct in their conversation, so direct that people in other

nations sometimes wonder whether Americans aren’t a bit naïve or childlike. The author of this

book was told by a professor from Finland that people in her country notice that Americans

smile a lot and seem so happy but they wonder if this can be true inside. She asked, Can

anyone be that happy so much of the time?

The American heritage of being hardy, hardworking, and plain-spoken influences the

ways they converse. They also want to get to a point fast; long-winding stories or explanations

are turn-offs. Indirectness or hidden agendas make Americans uneasy. As these comments

show, cultures have unique ways of communicating, and conflict can arise between cultures

with different styles. Misunderstandings may stem from the failure to understand values, deci-

sion patterns, symbols, and spoken and nonverbal languages of other cultures. For example,

as companies have expanded internationally, many glaring errors have occurred in product

names and packaging.

What is appropriate in one country may not be in another. For example,

The car slogan “body by Fisher” becomes “corpse by Fisher” in Flemish. “Come alive

with Pepsi” comes out “Pepsi brings your ancestors back from the grave” in Chinese

and “Come alive out of the grave” in German. The Ford Pinto did not sell in Brazil

because Brazilians did not want to be in a car meaning tiny male genitals.

These examples illustrate problems in translating words. Nonverbal differences between

cultures are more subtle. A friendly gesture in one culture may be insulting in another. Manners

and etiquette vary around the world. Here are some examples of behavior perceived as rude

in other cultures:

• Pointing at people, in Japan

• Eating with your left hand, in some Arab countries

• Sitting where people can see the soles of your shoes, in certain cultures

• The “ok” hand gesture in the United States is considered obscene in Germany and Brazil.

Anthropologist Edward T. Hall has studied how people vary across cultures in communi-

cating trust, warmth, and respect. In his book The Silent Language he pointed out that “what

people do is frequently more important than what they say” (1959, p. 24).

Even the amount of time spent socializing with friends and family varies by culture. The

typical American spends 16.3 hours each week socializing compared to 7.5 hours for the typi-

cal Japanese (Blinder, 1991).

Also varying is the underlying message. For example, it has been observed that

Americans are deal-oriented, impatient, and competitive. But, an advertiser wishing to appeal

to a Japanese audience would avoid saying

• “Be the first in your neighborhood to own such and such.” Japanese do not like to be out

of step with their neighbors.

• “New, free . . . no strings attached.” The average Japanese honors stability rather than

“newness” and would be suspicious of something that is given away for free.

Communication 213

Within the United States a slogan such as “Challenge Everything” used by computer game

manufacturer EA Sports was found to offend certain religious and traditional groups who

valued harmony and respect versus competition. They did not believe everything should be

challenged.

The correct social space between people also varies across cultures and by relation-

ships within cultures. Figure 7.3 shows the four distance zones common in the United States.

Intimate distance in the United States is less than 18 inches; typically, few people enter this

space. Personal space is between 1½ and 4 feet. Americans like to have this much of per-

sonal space around their bodies; culture dictates that this space should not be invaded by

strangers. But in some countries, hugs, slaps on the back, and even spitting on the ground

near the feet are meant to convey trust and connection (Adams, 1998). In the United States,

business tends to be conducted within the social zone of 4–12 feet. To visualize this distance,

think about the distance between salesclerks and their customers (remember that salesclerks

often stand behind counters). In Latin America and in the Middle East, people tend to get

closer. People in Middle Eastern cultures stand closer together when speaking, may kiss each

other on the cheek, and men may grasp hands. A businessperson from the United States

confronted with this behavior abroad may back away, giving the impression of being cold and

unfriendly. According to Hall (1959, p. 209), Latin Americans cannot talk comfortably with one

another unless they are at a very close distance that evokes either sexual or hostile feelings

in a North American. The public zone in North America is 12–15 feet. In Korea, in a business

setting, they may bow first and then shake hands.

Besides language and gestures, symbols are interpreted differently across cultures.

Colors, flower arrangements, clothing, and numbers all communicate in different ways across

cultures. In certain countries, purple is associated with royalty or death and yellow-green, with

spring and fertility. However, in Malaysia, green symbolizes the danger and death in the jungle.

When a water recreation company in Malaysia used a green corporate symbol, its promotional

campaign failed. Red is considered lucky in China and black is considered unlucky in Japan.

Flowers can represent death, infidelity, loyalty, or love depending on the type of flower, the

occasion, the color, and the country. The number 13 is considered unlucky in the United

Intimate 0–1½ feet

Personal 1½–4 feet Social

4–12 feet Public

12–25 feet

Figure 7.3 The four distance zones.

214 chapter 7

States and in the United Kingdom—many people will not fly on Friday the 13th, and most

hotels do not have a floor numbered 13. In Europe, 13th floors are common. In Japan, the

airplanes do not have seat numbers 4 or 9.

Critical Thinking

An international toy manufacturer based in the Southern Europe has to make sure they ship the right toys to the right countries. Figures of women or girl children in bikinis would cause outrage in the Middle East but would be perfectly acceptable in Europe. What have you observed about differences in the way people dress and what is acceptable?

Dress Communicates

Getting the message across in a multicultural business setting.

As the United States and Canada become more involved in exports, international busi-

ness, and worldwide communications, and as Europe becomes more unified, an awareness

of cultural differences and similarities will become more important. Also, the new focus on the

dynamics of family diversity and multiculturalism worldwide have renewed interest in cross-

cultural and cross-group communication. Within countries, there are many

subcultures as well, and some groups are being underestimated in terms of their

influence and buying power. For example, an article in American Demographics

says that “Black women run their homes, heavily consume media and influence

more than $260 billion in spending a year. Still marketers continue to ignore

them” (Yin, 2003, September, p. 22).

Here is an example:

Cynthia Morris is a family woman who has an MBA degree and an exec-

utive-level job. By day, she raises funds for national parks programs.

By night, the 50-year-old, married African American mother of two

writes checks for such things as the tuition for one of her sons’ college

education and the renovations on the family’s 3,500-square-foot house

in Potomac, Md. Still, as the chief decision maker in her upper-middle-

class household, Morris believes that, to marketers, she is out of sight

and out of mind. “It’s like a blind spot,” she says. “People just don’t see

us as this influential segment that can make a difference in their market

share.” (Yin, 2003, September, p. 22)

Statistics reveal that “Black women are more likely to be the primary deci-

sion maker in their household than white women. Sixty-one percent of African

American women make the decisions about major purchases, such as buy-

ing a home, compared with just 43 percent of Caucasian women” (Yin, 2003,

September, p. 23).

College students are another subgroup of potential interest to marketers

because of their earning potential. Marketers would like to lock in their brands

with college students before they launch into the world of lucrative full-time

employment. College students are also trendsetters and early adopters of

Communication 215

certain products, such as clothes and cars. But they are a challenge because “Students doubt

corporate intentions, they want to be catered to and they don’t think companies know what

they want. And they are poor: Their idea of a good buy is a bargain” (Yin, 2003, May, p. 20).

Free samples work well with this age group because they not only like a bargain but also like

to try new things. Does this last statement fit you?

Communication in Small Groups All groups have in common a shared goal or purpose or a reason for being. Families are a

type of small group joined together by ties of affection and kinship. But there are many other

kinds of small groups. People get together to solve school, community, work, or environmen-

tal problems; for fellowship or support; and for individual and family growth. Once a group

has decided on its main goals or purposes, it is ready to proceed. “Small groups,” other than

families, usually refers to 5–10 people. Communication can

1. Serve to cement relationships (like church potluck dinners or community picnics)

2. Be used for tasks, like a committee charged with problem solving, or for idea generation

such as creating a new project in the workplace or at school

3. Be part of personal growth or information sharing groups such as weight loss groups or

political groups or for improving public-speaking groups.

Larger groups may divide into smaller task force groups or committees to solve problems

or to take charge of an issue or a fund-raising drive. Groups are too large when some

people do not have an opportunity to participate or speak. If this continues to happen,

smaller groups are needed. Conversely, groups can become too small or stagnant. When

nothing new is contributed time after time, then perhaps a new group should be formed or

members added.

Group Discussions and Cohesion When a group becomes stagnant or cannot find a project that members consider interesting,

then it should try brainstorming. In brainstorming, all group members suggest ideas—no

matter how seemingly ridiculous or strange. Afterward, the group examines each idea

separately to see whether it has merit. Brainstorming is a good way to get the creative juices

flowing and introduce some energy into the group. Once a project has been agreed upon, the

group should seek out information. Group members should find out how others have initiated

similar ideas or programs. Many times a project or program is phrased as a question; for

example, how can a group help homeless families in the community? How can a fourth-grade

class participate in Earth Day?

After the questions have been discussed, the next stage is to move toward solutions. Groups

will discuss and discard many unworkable or unaffordable solutions before they arrive at one

or two that group members can agree upon. Next, a plan will be initiated. When necessary, an

unworkable plan will be thrown out and a new plan developed. Eventually, the group will have to

determine which plans are working and whether the group should move on to other projects.

Several factors contribute to group cohesion: the size of the group, the goal-achievement

orientation, the status and resources of the group, the degree to which members depend on

216 chapter 7

the group for need satisfaction, and the demands or pressures under which the members

operate. Too large a group will decrease group cohesion. Successfully achieving a goal will

spur the group on to new challenges. For example, a successful fund-raising drive for a new

town library may lead to another community fund-raising effort.

In summary, communication is the key to whether groups will function smoothly or not.

Families and other types of small groups cannot be successfully managed without some

degree of open communication. What needs to be done and by whom should be clearly com-

municated and negotiated. Closed or poor communication will undermine the family’s or the

group’s cohesiveness and future progress.

information and Communications technology Much of the previous discussion has focused on group dynamics and communication

problems. But, people do not always interact with each other directly; often they interact

through machines such as computers, televisions, telephones, and radio. How attentive an

individual is to these forms of communication depends on the message, the messenger,

and the channel. In addition, different types of media affect different senses.

Print media, such as newspapers and magazines, usually affect vision only.

The inclusion of perfume samples in magazines affects our sense of smell.

Television is multisensory in that it affects both vision and hearing.

Social Networks and Social Network Sites One of the greatest technological changes of the 19th and the 20th centuries

was the switch from face-to-face conversations to less personal forms of

communication. This transformation began in 1876 with the first telephone

(patented by a voice teacher, Alexander Graham Bell) and continues today with

email and the Internet. Social Networks is a broad term used to describe

communication connections among individuals and groups. Many disciplines

explore social networks, but Family Relations, Sociology, Computer or

Computational Sciences, and Communications are leaders. Social network

sites (SNSs) such as LinkedIn (for professionals/careers), MySpace, Facebook,

Cyworld, and Bebo attract millions of users. These users may be referred to as

colleagues, friends, contacts, or fans. MySpace became popular with teenag-

ers in 2004 since the site allowed minors. Facebook was originally designed for

Harvard University only in early 2004 and spread from there to other campuses

and beyond. As web-based services they allow individuals to:

1. Construct a public or semi-public profile within a bounded system,

2. Articulate a list of other users with whom they share a connection, and

3. View and transverse their list of connections and those made by others

within the system (Boyd & Ellison, 2007).Social networks can be in-person as well as online.

Communication 217

In some cases relationships are formed between strangers but research indicates

that many people use social networks to enhance or extend existing relationships such

as a college connection like a sorority or fraternity or shared living in a college dormitory.

High school reunions have been much easier to pull together since the advent of social

networking sites. Researchers Ellison, Steinfeld, and Lampe (2007) found that Facebook

was used mostly to maintain exiting offline relationships or solidify offline connections

versus meeting new people. Some people have used social networking sites to build

acquaintances in a new location or to help with a new set of circumstances such as the

Becka case study shows.

Case Study Becka The benefits of social networking sites were experienced by Becka in her late 20s. She lived in a small town and joined a social network with other pregnant women and really enjoyed talking with them about the progress of the pregnancies. The real excitement came when friends on the network started giving birth and she says many of them still “talk” now that their children are school age. Becka says this network “saved her life” by helping

her get through the pregnancy because she didn’t know anyone in the town she was living in and everyone at work was older and not interested in having children plus she felt free to be herself online and discuss the aches and pains and morning sickness. What she said was really helpful was to talk with women in the same month of pregnancy and to know that what she was feeling was normal.

Critical Thinking

Social network sites not only let strangers connect but also allow them to view social networks by showing ties and personal descriptions beyond the original connec- tion. The sites are built on visible profiles that come about usually by answering questions or providing descriptors such as age, location, education, interests, photos, and places of employment. Privacy issues abound especially when it comes to post- ing photographs, ages, and addresses. To avoid some of these problems permission can be denied so there is limited access or a person can choose to “opt out.” Have you experienced any problems using social networks? Or, do you know someone who has?

Social networks

SNSs may offer communication tools like mobile connectivity, blogging, and photo/

video-sharing. They allow connections to be made by strangers who otherwise would never

have met.

218 chapter 7

Information Overload and Habitual Decision Making As consumers, individuals are constantly bombarded with information. Some of this informa-

tion is passively acquired, such as through billboards on the highway and loudspeakers

at K-marts, meaning that the consumer does not seek out the information. Other informa-

tion is actively acquired, meaning that the consumer actively looks for it or engages in it

such as a social network site or by viewing advertisements in magazines or by reading signs

at local stores.

Case Study ardith Technologies can help older age groups stay more connected and feel secure, too. For example, Ardith Hammond, 70 years old, living alone in her St. Louis home after having her hip and knee replaced, often worried that she would fall and be unable to get up.

“No one would know for days,” she says. She didn’t want to ask her son or his wife to call every day. So she worked out a routine with a neighbor in which they would turn off their porch lights at the same time nightly as a signal that they were OK, but the neighbor lost interest.

Then Ms. Hammond discovered a source of reassurance: technology. She subscribes for $1 a day to a computer telephone service, TelAsure, that dials her twice daily, greets her by name with a recording and asks her to confirm, by pushing buttons on her phone. If she doesn’t answer as scheduled, the service alerts family or friends. Does getting called by a computer seem cold? “No,” Ms. Hammond says, “where else can you get love and reassurance for $1 a day?” (Shellenbarger, 1999, p. B1)

Case Study 50 Plus “Christine McCleary is tired of peering at small print when she shops. ‘Companies need to redesign things because so much of the population is older,’ says the 59-year-old Incline Village, Nevada, resident, after her recent struggles at a local store. And corporate America, believe it or not, is starting to agree: With

boomers now turning 65 in huge waves—about 7,000 will turn 65 every day this year—and shoppers 50-plus owning the vast majority of U.S. wealth, retailers are making changes to accommodate their needs. Updates are especially visible in drugstores . . . ”

Source: Ianzito, C. (2011, September). Retail redo. AARP The Magazine, p. 14.

The degree of effort expended on the information search and the amount of exposure

to information vary by person, product, and issue. For example, consumers often react to

information (e.g., store displays, advertisements) with low involvement, meaning that they

Communication 219

tend not to think much about it and may find their attention wandering. In habitual decision

making, choices are made out of habit without any additional information search. Decisions

are made with little conscious effort. This allows the consumer to devote real effort and thought

to important decisions requiring more careful scrutiny.

Information overload refers to that uncomfortable state when individuals are exposed

to too much information in too short a time—so much that they cannot process the

information. Rather than ignore information as one does in low involvement, the person feels

overwhelmed by it. The growth of email has gone from about 36 million users in 1994 to over

125 million users in the United States. Nine out of ten college students watch TV and listen to

the radio every week, and they learn about products and services mostly by word of mouth or

advertising on television (Yin, 2003, May). Other typical media behaviors of students include

reading magazines occasionally and reading the campus newspaper or national newspapers,

although the reading of them may be online. Students and other adults increasingly go online

to get the news.

An offshoot of information overload is information anxiety, which is the gap between

what individuals think they understand and what they actually do understand. Thus, informa-

tion anxiety refers to the space between data and knowledge. Richard Wurman, author of

Information Anxiety, observes that people used to have to make a conscious decision to seek

information, but now technology permits information to be transmitted without the desire—or

often the permission—of the receiver. Adding to the information explosion is the proliferation

of communications technology. To deal with information overload, Wurman advises people to

accept that they don’t have to know everything about everything. He recommends that they

focus on what matters most.

The Internet and the Human Capacity to Process Information Information that was once stored in people’s heads and in books and file cabinets is now

being put into digital form on computers. Once this information is stored in a computer’s

memory, it can be manipulated and accessed over phone lines, transmitted by satellite, and

accessed by many different users.

Case Study a Wired mom “It starts while I’m putting groceries away. My daughter, Ava, 12, tells me I forgot ‘her’ shampoo while my 14-year-old son, Cole, picks through the bags in search of deodorant I didn’t buy because he never asked me to. Then Dan, my husband, asks, ‘Did you get chili powder? I want to make chili on Sunday.’ (Great, but

this is the first I’ve heard of his plans.) If these requests were to pile up all week, by Friday I’d have a list of errands as long as my arm. So instead, I rely on my laptop, smartphone and Web connection to take care of appeals as they pop up—preserving weekends for sleeping in, gardening and enjoying my family.”

Source: Tynan-Wood, C. (2011, June). Errand-free weekends. Family Circle, p. 22.

220 chapter 7

Borrowing computer terminology, the amount of information the human central nervous

system can process has been compared to the amount of information a computer can pro-

cess. It has been estimated that individuals can manage at most seven bits of information

(e.g., differentiated sounds, visual stimuli, or recognizable nuances of emotion or thought) at

any one time and that the shortest time it takes to discriminate between one set of bits and

another is about 1/18 of a second (Csikszentmihalyi, 1990). On the basis of these figures,

humans can process at most 126 bits of information per second or 7,560 per minute. In

practical terms, this means that an individual cannot process what three people are saying to

him or her simultaneously and absorb all the nonverbal cues. These are all estimates, as the

exact limit of humans’ conscious ability to process information is unknown. Nevertheless, it

is known that an individual’s interest in the message and the message giver influences how

much is processed and retained.

According to University of Chicago researcher Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi, “The mark of

a person who is in control of consciousness is the ability to focus attention at will, to be

oblivious to distractions, to concentrate for as long as it takes to achieve a goal, and not

longer. And the person who can do this usually enjoys the normal course of everyday life”

(1990, p. 31).

The Role of the Home and the Individual As the preceding quotation illustrates, individuals make choices about what to

concentrate on and what to ignore. In part, these are conscious decisions by an individual

or family about which technologies they will adopt. In the future, more technology-

assisted activities will take place in the home, including shopping, investing, banking,

and  working. Computers have already made it possible for many people to work

from home.

Faith Popcorn, a predictor of trends, noted that cocooning (the desire to remain at

home as a place of coziness, control, peace, insulation, and protection) is being facilitated

by such technologies as DVDs, VCRs, laptops, and microwave ovens. In many respects, the

improved home-based technologies should increase family time spent in the home. Children

who miss classes due to illness will be able to tune into their classroom and keep up with

their classmates.

The increase in home-based technologies is a boon for the elderly, disabled individu-

als, and others less mobile than the general population as illustrated by the story of Ardith

Hammond, quoted in a previous section.

Along with these benefits, the innovations in communications technology have some

drawbacks. Cost is an obvious problem. New technologies are expensive and may increase

the gap between the haves and have-nots in society.

Families should be supportive, expressive, and empathetic to their members and friends.

Conversations should take turns. Words should be consistent with gestures, expressions, and

other nonverbal messages. Families are interdependent and intense, meaning that the actions

and words of any one family member may have more impact than reactions or comments

by outsiders.

Communication 221

Privacy is another issue. As more information is recorded and exchanged, more is known

about an individual’s buying habits and personal communications. More legislation will be

needed to establish ground rules on who will have access to data and under what conditions.

Families will have to make decisions as well about access to data and use of technology.

Parents will have to decide what technology to adopt and what technology to let children

access. Certainly, this is a concern with the Internet. Individuals and families will also have to

make decisions about managing information. Theodore Leavitt argues that discrimination is

necessary in the use of information and data. Unfortunately, he says, as information becomes

more abundant, it seems to yield less meaning. He draws an analogy: “The greater the variety

of good food consumed at a meal, the less you appreciate each dish. The louder the noise,

the less clear the message” (1991, p. 6).

Critical Thinking

Jealousy among siblings is not unheard of. A sister may win an award and lots of praise and a younger sister may think “she seems to get everything.” How does she deal with these feelings of annoyance and say the right thing? Dislikes among siblings can last a lifetime. An employee planning a retirement party for Ms. X was told by Ms. X, “Do not invite my sister under any circumstances.” What might you assume from this comment?

summarysummary Social networks have opened many new channels of communi- cation and many issues as well such as how to handle privacy and security of information. Effective managers are careful communicators. It is impossible to lead or to manage without communicating. Communication serves as a linkage between the various steps in the management process. Dialogues and mono- logues are opposites.

Communication can be verbal or nonverbal. Ten aspects of nonverbal communication were given in this chapter. Communication skills can be improved through study and application.

Listening is an important management skill. Hearing other people’s needs and being able to express one’s own is the basis of human communication.

Communication is satisfying when individuals feel that they are understood and that they understand others.

Five main components make up the total communication environment: message, channels, noise, feedback, and setting. Communication conflicts can arise from any of these components or from a combination of them. Family communication differs from other types in its emotional intensity and ongoing nature. Because of these characteristics, communication conflicts in families can be particularly painful and harmful. Destructive messages and tactics such as ridiculing, ordering, or threatening can be harmful to family relationships.

According to Deborah Tannen and other researchers, men and women have different but equally valid conversational styles. Couples need to learn the art of apologizing as well as about the different ways to get the message across.

Communication and communications technology are never stagnant. The modes, the messages, and the means are always changing. Information overload is increasingly a problem.

222 chapter 7

termskey terms abstract symbols 202 actively acquired information 218 advocate or expert channels 206 artifacts 203 brainstorming 215 channel 197 cocooning 220 communication 195 conflict 207 conflict resolution 207 constructive conflicts 209 critical listening 201 decoding 200 destination 200 destructive conflicts 209 dialogue 194 empathetic listening 201 empathy 201

encoding 200 external noise 198 habitual decision making 219 I-messages 204 indirect channels 205 information anxiety 219 information overload 219 interference 196 internal noise 198 interpersonal conflicts 209 low involvement 218 listening 200 message 202 message construction 204 message content 204 monologue 194 noise 198 nonverbal symbols 202

ostrich effect 202 pace 196 passively acquired information 218 proxemics 204 receiving 200 reflective listening 201 responses 200 sending 199 setting 199 social channels 206 Social Exchange Theory 211 social networks 216 social network sites 216 source 200 symbols 202 verbal symbols 202 visible symbols 202 You-messages 204

questions 1. Social network sites have revolutionized communication.

Some support existing social networks (family and close friends) and others help strangers connect with shared life experiences or interests. Do you belong to any social networks? How have they affected your life and time use?

2. Writer Anne Morrow Lindbergh said, “Good communication is as stimulating as black coffee, and just as hard to sleep after.” Do you think that is true? Explain a time when you couldn’t get to sleep because of a conversation.

3. Change the following You-messages into I-messages: “You never clean the apartment.” “You never put gasoline in the car.” “You always leave everything to the last minute. Why don’t you do something on time for a change?”

4. List the destructive communication styles or tactics used in families. Which do you think is the biggest problem? Why?

5. Do you agree with Theodore Leavitt’s statement that the more information you are exposed to, the less meaning it seems to have? Explain.

review questions

Individuals are constantly being bombarded by messages, some of which are sought (actively acquired information), while others are unanticipated or unwelcome (passively acquired information). There is a limit to how much information humans can consciously process. Future research will provide more insight into the ability to process information and the ways computers can assist further in

accessing and storing information. Already computers and other forms of technology and the speed of information have altered the traditional functioning of the home.

As every advance in communications technology has its pluses and minuses, individuals and families must weigh the costs and the benefits before adopting new technology.

Communication 223

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225

Our most basic link is that we all inhabit this planet. We all breathe the same air. We all cherish our children’s future.

—President John F. Kennedy 8

Managing

Main Topics

Changes in Population Population terms and trends Population Age and Composition households and Families

The Nature of Change Mobility Managing Change

Meeting Individual, Family, and Societal Needs two-earner Families

Child Care Caregiving for older Persons and the elderly Adjusting to retirement the homeless individuals with disabilities single-Parent, remarriage, and stepfamilies

or Blended Families Poverty and Low-income Families

DiD you know that . . .?

. . . Forty percent of the food consumed in the United States is prepared outside the home.

. . . Twelve percent of the U.S. population has a severe mental or physical handicap.

HuMan needs

226 chapter 8

P eople don’t live within narrow categories. Saying someone is an architect is only describing one aspect of his or her life. Understanding this fullness of life and caring for others are the subjects in this chapter. Who is caring for others has become more complicated for a variety of reasons, the struggling economy is one along with “High

rates of divorce, remarriage, and nonmarital childbearing over the past few decades have

contributed to complex family arrangements including increasing rates of single parenting,

stepparenting, and nonresident parenting . . . Over two million children were living with their

single biological fathers in 2001 and almost another million were living with their fathers and

a stepmother” (King, 2007, p. 1178). As most of the divorced men remarry, their children

from the previous marriage will experience a stepmother at some point. Marriage is not only

about the integration of people but also about the integration of resources. So, marriage,

single-parent families, and blended families will be the topics in this chapter; so also will be

adjusting to retirement.

Nancy Davis, a 59-year-old senior marketing manager for a law firm in San Diego, had

hoped to ease into retirement after her son finishes college in two years. But “I may be

70 before I retire at this point,” she said Friday, after watching the markets take their

toll on her 401(k). “It’s very unnerving” . . . With nest eggs shrinking, housing prices still

falling and anxieties about their financial future growing, the oldest members of the

baby-boom generation are putting the brakes on plans to leave the office. (Greene,

2008, p. A4)

The United States is a nation of caregivers. The writer and humorist Mark Twain said,

“Always do right. This will gratify some people, and astonish the rest.” Caregiving is very much

about doing the right thing.

This chapter explores much more than what is conventionally thought of as caregiving

and goes beyond the United States to look at the human resource challenges around the

world. It tackles some difficult topics such as the management problems of the homeless

and the poor.

Changes in Population In order to discuss managing human needs let us first look at changes in population. In

1900, 1.5 billion people inhabited the earth and most of them lived in large cities in Western

Europe. Now, the world population is over 6.7 billion, and the greatest concentration of

people is in Asia. China is the most populous country, followed by India, the United States,

Indonesia, and Brazil. It is estimated that by 2050, India will surpass China as the most

populous country.

Half of the world’s population is concentrated in cities, and the trend is toward

increasing urbanization so that by 2050, as noted in Chapter 1, 75 percent of the world’s

population will live in cities. This clustering of people will stress natural resources and

support systems. Many of the world’s cities are called gateway cities because they are

located on borders (between countries) or on coastlines. Immigrants often arrive in gate-

way cities, establish families and businesses, and do not venture further into the interior

of countries.

Managing Human Needs 227

Managing human needs in a finite environment is the focus of this chapter. Resources

are used to satisfy needs. As Chapter 4 explained, resources can be classified as human

and material. Human resources include all the capabilities (skills, talents, and abilities) that

contribute to achieving goals and responding to demands. Health, vitality, and intelligence are

examples of human resources. Human resources can be divided into three main categories:

1. Cognitive: knowledge, intelligence, and reasoning

2. Affective: emotions and feelings

3. Psychomotor: muscular activity associated with mental processes and the ability to do

physical work

Many tasks require skills from two or more of these categories. For example, typing requires

cognitive and psychomotor skills. Parenting requires all three types of human resources.

Human capital is the sum total of an individual’s human resources. Education, training,

and practice enhance human resources. Developing human capital in oneself and in others

is one of the most important management processes covered in this book. Ultimately, the

strength of a nation depends on its stock of human resources—the collective ability of its citi-

zens to solve problems creatively and to meet society’s demands.

Today, people find themselves immersed in a tangle of worldwide changes in the econ-

omy, society, institutions, education, labor market, and individual lifestyles. Individual concerns

must now be viewed in the context of the entire world. The family, as the basic unit of society,

has weathered many storms, but many challenges lie ahead.

This chapter goes beyond the theoretical into the realm of population statistics and the

practical management problems of certain groups. One important population change in the

United States is the rapid increase in the percentage of minority and immigrant groups. About

12 percent of the population of the United States is foreign-born. Most of them come from

poorer countries or situations hoping for a better life for their families or sometimes they come

for education or work and end up staying. We are becoming a more diverse nation and the

same trend applies for many other countries as well.

Another significant trend worldwide is the maturation or aging of society. In the United

States, the baby boom generation—children born between 1946 and 1964—has grown up

and established family and community roots, cared for teenage children and elderly parents,

moved into management positions at work, and bought homes—in fact, probably several

homes—over the years. An important aspect of the maturation trend is the growth of the over-

65 age group, the “graying of America,” although it should be pointed out that the whole world

is aging, the trend being most pronounced in developed countries such as Japan. Elderly

people today are healthier, more active, and more affluent than those of previous generations.

Critical Thinking

How do you feel about urban vs. small town/suburban vs. rural living? What is your preference and why?

228 chapter 8

Eventually, however, there may be caregiving needs, and these will be addressed in this

chapter along with adjusting to retirement.

The 21st century has started out being more responsible about the environment and

more respectful of individuals’ age and cultural differences than the previous century. To

express this concept of respect for cultural diversity, Alvin Toffler, author of Future Shock,

coined the word “demassification,” which means breaking away from mass society where

everyone must be the same. He says we’re moving to a “mosaic society” where diversity is

recognized and fostered.

This chapter begins Part 3, the management applications section, of the book. It starts

by examining population trends relevant to the study of individuals and families, includ-

ing an exploration of how these changes take place. Although management concepts are

relevant to all individuals and families, the remainder of this chapter focuses on the particular

management needs and concerns of the following populations: two-income families, children,

older persons and the elderly, early retirees, the homeless, individuals with disabilities, single

parents, stepfamilies or blended families, and poor and low-income families.

Certain human resources, such as trust, love, and care, are difficult to measure, but

numbers of people and population shifts can be quantified. The primary source of U.S.

population data is the national census, which is taken every 10 years by the Bureau of the

Census. The census attempts to count every person living in this country and to collect

vital information about family size, and community and housing conditions. Based on this

information, the government can determine population shifts and formulate policy.

The first census was taken in 1790 when George Washington was the

president. At that time, 3.9 million people were counted. Currently there are

over 312 million. All statistics in this chapter come from the U.S. Bureau of

the Census and the United Nations Population Division unless otherwise noted.

Population Terms and Trends Demography is the study of the characteristics of human populations—that

is, their size, growth, distribution, density, movement, and other vital statistics.

Demographics are data used to describe populations or subgroups. The

study of family demography was founded by Paul Glick who wrote the first

overview of the field for the Journal of Marriage and Family in 1988. Myers

(2010) and others have updated this founding work and extended it to include

geographic mobility and birth intentions.

Population figures are affected by three main factors: births, deaths, and

immigration. The birthrate is technically termed “fertility.” The fertility rate is the

yearly number of births per 1,000 women of childbearing age. Countries expe-

riencing a dramatic drop in the average number of children born per woman

from the early 1980s to early 2000s include Brazil, China, India, Indonesia,

Mexico, Russia, Thailand, Tunisia, and Turkey. During this same time period,

the average number of children born per woman increased slightly in the United

States, where about two per woman is average. In India three children per

woman is average and in Russia it is one per woman. The technical term for

death is mortality. Immigration refers to the number of people who enter

and settle in a country where they are not native. Without a decided increase in

immigration and birthrate, populations can stagnate or decrease.Population growth stimulates the need for more products.

Managing Human Needs 229

From 2000 to 2010 in the United States the most rapid regional growth was in the South

and West (14.3 and 13.8 percent, respectively) compared to 3.9 percent in the Midwest and

3.2 percent in the Northeast. The most populous states are:

1. California, 37.2 million

2. Texas, 25.1 million

3. New York, 19.3 million

4. Florida, 18.8 million

5. Illinois, 12.8 million

6. Pennsylvania, 12.7 million

7. Ohio, 11.5 million

8. Michigan, 9.8 million

9. Georgia, 9.6 million

10. North Carolina, 9.5 million

Another way to look at population is by density which is the average number of residents per

square mile in each state, D.C. (the city of Washington area), and Puerto Rico. Here are the

top ten by population density according the U.S. Census in 2010.

1. District of Columbia (DC), 9856.6

2. New Jersey, 1195.5

3. Puerto Rico, 1088.2

4. Rhode Island, 1018.1

5. Massachusetts, 839.4

6. Connecticut, 738.1

7. Maryland, 594.8

8. Delaware, 460.8

9. New York, 411.2

10. Florida, 350.6

The least densely populated state is Alaska at 1.2.

Even though the population is growing worldwide, in general, fertility rates are plummet-

ing. Today women on average have just half the number of children they had in 1972. In

61 countries, fertility rates are now at or below replacement levels. This does not mean that

the worldwide population will fall in the immediate future, however, because people are living

longer. Globally, the average life span has jumped from 49.5 years in 1972 to 63 years. In

addition, as mentioned earlier, the low fertility rate of industrialized nations is offset to some

degree by less developed countries, which often have high fertility rates—although this is

changing as economies change and birth control methods become more widespread.

Over the years, high unemployment and poor economies have been shown to have direct

impact on fertility rates in industrialized countries. For example, during the Great Depression of

the 1930s, the United States had a low fertility rate. Prior to that, especially from 1880 to 1900,

the U.S. population growth rose owing to the influx of immigrants from Europe.

The U.S. birthrate rose sharply again after World War II. Unlike earlier population increases,

which were caused largely by immigration, this growth was primarily due to the birth of millions

of children. This “baby boom,” which ended in 1964, was followed by a period of slow growth

that did not pick up again until the late 1980s and early 1990s. In 1988, 3.9 million babies

were born—the highest number since 1964. Termed the “baby boomlet,” these babies were

the children of the “baby boomers.” A distinct trend has been the rise in the number of women

230 chapter 8

between the ages of 30 and 40 who have given birth for the first time. One-third of the nation’s

births now are attributed to women over 30. A documented trend is a decrease in teen preg-

nancies. Since 1990, the teen childbearing rate in the United States has dropped by almost

10 percent.

In families, the birth of a baby brings about many changes in time management and

consumption patterns. Parents suddenly find themselves the prime targets of advertisers offering

a wide array of baby products. Their grocery carts are filled with products they never purchased

before: diapers, infant formula, baby food, toys, and baby shampoo. The home environment also

changes as baby care equipment is added: strollers, cribs, swings, high chairs, and playpens.

In response to demographic changes, the marketplace transforms as it tries to keep up

with consumer demand. As noted earlier, the baby boomers have reached middle age and

the older ones are entering retirement. The number of married-couple households without

children is rising owing to empty-nest baby boom households and delayed childbearing.

Population Age and Composition The United States is growing older. Currently, the nation’s population is the oldest it has ever

been. The median age is 37 in the year 2010, up from approximately 32.3 years in 1990.

The number of college students continues to grow. There are 16 million college students in

the United States and 74.6 million students from Pre-K to the 12th grade. Overall there are more

females than males, but the ratio varies by age groups. In the younger years, there are more

males than females. For example, between 1994 and 2000 there were more males than females

in their 20s. But, among those over age 75, women outnumbered men by nearly two to one.

Race/ethnicity “People in mixed families will be continually crossing all racial and ethnic lines in the United

States, and their numbers will steadily increase” (Hildago & Bankson, 2011). Related to this

is that minority groups are the fastest-growing segment of the U.S. population. As noted in

Chapter 1, the skyrocketing growth of Latinos or Hispanics in the United States once driven by

immigration is now fueled by high fertility rates especially for Mexicans and Mexican Americans.

Non-Hispanic white women between ages 40 and 44 have 1.8 children compared to two

children for black women and 2.5 children for Mexican immigrant women. It is estimated by

Texas state demographer Lloyd Potter that these numbers will change as the Mexican women

are more assimilated into the general population.

Case study diana “The parents of Diana Velasquez, a 22-year-old college student in Chicago, are part of the great contemporary Hispanic migration. They settled in the U.S. in the 1980s and had four children, all

first-generation Mexican-Americans. She grew up in an area dominated by large immigrant families but says she doesn’t plan to have as many children herself.”

Source: Jordan, M. (2011, July 25). Births fuel Hispanic growth. The Wall Street Journal, p. 13.

Managing Human Needs 231

On average, minority populations are younger than other Americans and therefore

have higher birthrates, and their numbers are also increasing owing to immigration. The

six race categories on the 2010 census included white (77.1 percent of the total popula-

tion reported as white either alone or in combination with one or more races); Latino/

Hispanic (13 percent); black or African American (12 percent); American Indians and

Alaskan natives; Asians and Native Hawaiian and other Pacific Islanders; and some other

races. People picking more than one category drive the percentages over 100 but the

point is to notice  the general trends. More precise information is gained in the Census

when respondents are asked whether they are Spanish/Hispanic/Latino and then they

can choose a nationality group of Mexican/Mexican American/Chicano, Puerto Rican,

Cuban, or other.

As another example, there are 505 federally recognized Native American tribes in

the United States, including 197 Alaska native village groups. Native Americans number

2.5–4.1 million if you include multiracials—more than 4 in 10 Native Americans consider

themselves multiracial. Native Americans are the nation’s second wealthiest minority after

Asian Americans.

About 17 percent of Native American firms are in the service sector, including casinos. The

bulk of their income comes from other businesses such as construction and retail. More than

6 in 10 Native Americans live off the reservation. Language, religion, culture, and economic

conditions differ significantly among the various tribes and subgroups.

The term “minority” is sometimes a misnomer because a group defined by the Census

Bureau as a minority may actually be a majority group in some parts of the country. For

example, in Honolulu the majority of the residents are of Asian descent; and in San Antonio,

Texas, 52 percent of the residents are Hispanic/Latino. Hispanics/Latinos are the fastest-

growing minority group in the United States. The majority of Hispanics live in Arizona, New

Mexico, Florida, Texas, and California. They are most likely to think of family as an extended

family (including more relatives than in the nuclear/close family of typical European Americans),

and they highly value family (Radina, 2003).

One-third of blacks or African Americans live in one of the following five states:

Georgia, Florida, Texas, California, and New York. The average African American family has

3.5 members. According to a Census Bureau report, 57 percent of black children are living

with single parent—who has never married—compared with 21 percent of white children and

32 percent of Hispanic children.

African Americans typically define family as extended family and kinship groups and place

a high value on community (Radina, 2003). Nonrelated friends may very well be considered

members of the family. Mutual support and loyalty are strong values for them.

Asian Americans constitute 3–4 percent of the nation’s population. They are overwhelm-

ingly urban and most likely of all the minority groups to marry outside of race/ethnicity. The

Census Bureau’s category of Asian and Pacific Islanders covers 17 countries. Most of the

Asians entering the United States come from Indochina: Vietnam, Laos, and Kampuchea

(formerly Cambodia). There are also sizable groups with Japanese, Korean, Chinese,

Taiwanese, and Filipino heritage. They place an emphasis on parent–child relationships and

practice filial piety, which means respect for elders and having a moral duty to obey, honor,

and assist parents (Radina, 2003). Of the three largest minority groups, Asian Americans are

the most highly educated. Full-time college participation rates among young adults are rising

for all groups, especially blacks (Crispell, 1997).

232 chapter 8

Households and Families The number of households is increasing in the United States, but the number of persons per

household is decreasing. Household change parallels population change. Household growth

in the 1990s was fastest in Nevada, especially for 25–34-year-olds. Four other fast-growing

states also saw gains in householders ages 25–35: Arizona, Georgia, Utah, and Delaware.

Nearly three in five households have no children, and this trend toward smaller families is

expected to continue. One reason for the decline in household size is lower fertility. Another

reason is the increase in the number of elderly persons.

Male-headed households are the fastest-growing type of household. “Children benefit

from positive, engaged and involved fathers . . . Declines in the number of children born to

parents, shifts in the timing and temp of child bearing, increases in nonmarital childbearing,

and high rates of divorce have substantially altered the practice, meaning, and significance of

fatherhood in men’s life course” (Eggebeen, 2002, p. 127). Nonfamily households, consisting

of two or more unrelated persons living together, are also on the rise.

MaRital StatuS Young people are waiting longer to get married, and the marriage rate itself is decreasing.

According to the Census Bureau, men and women are delaying marriage, resulting in the

median age of first marriages rising. Historically, 90 percent of Americans married at some

time in their lives, but that rate is declining. The highest divorce rate is for couples in their 20s,

and divorced people are waiting longer to remarry. At a second marriage, the median age of

brides is 32 and the median age of grooms is 34.

the nature of Change In Redefining Diversity, Roosevelt Thomas Jr. provides an interesting perspective on change

within American society. He says that, increasingly, we see America’s strength in its diversity—

a mixture of colors and creeds bringing their different backgrounds to a common endeavor.

Yet, he says, diversity is not confined to race and gender; rather, it applies to intangibles such

as ideas, outlooks, and procedures.

Change means to cause to be different, to alter, or to transform. Changes can be

categorized into two general types: internal and external. Internal change originates within

the family. Births, marriages, divorces, and deaths are all examples of internal changes. In

contrast, external change is fostered by society or the outer environment. Tornadoes and

recessions are examples of external changes. An individual or a family may experience internal

and external changes at the same time.

The ability to cope with change is called adaptability. Adaptability is an example of a

human resource that everyone has but in different quantities. People’s temperaments and

usual ways of reacting (rapid vs. slow) to new situations affect their response to change. The

actual circumstances, such as whether an event is expected or unexpected, will also influence

the response.

Because of these personality, behavioral, and situational factors, each person approaches

change differently. Consider the following quotation by Winston Churchill, prime minister of

England during World War II: “Never, never, never give up.” Most changes occur gradually

Managing Human Needs 233

over a period of time. This transition period can be helpful because it allows individuals to take

stock of the situation and consider possible alternatives. Effective managers take advantage

of transition time to think through a situation and make plans to deal with it. Changing one’s

job or residence involves transition time. This is discussed in the next section, which explores

“moving” as an example of change.

Mobility About one out of six adults changes addresses every year and those in childbearing ages

once in every three years. Nearly all individuals and families have to cope with the prob-

lems and decisions associated with moving. The technical term for changing residences is

mobility. Statistics on mobility trends are surprising. According to a survey conducted by

the U.S. Census Bureau, the typical householder moves every five or six years. The average

distance moved is six miles, and renters move more than homeowners do.

Mobility has several major effects on indi-

vidual and family behavior. It affects finances.

“Research over the past 25 years finds that

having a child is one of the most consis-

tent predictors of moving as families adjust

to fertility-driven changes in their housing and

neighborhood preferences” (Myers, 2010,

p.  1623). When people move, they spend

money on household furnishings, moving services, and utility deposits; they

may also use the services of realtors and mortgage companies. Second,

moving is usually a stressor. Many household services must be changed and

rescheduled when relocating—electricity, water, and mail service, to name

just a few. Children may have to change schools. Parents may change jobs.

Third, moving affects individual or family morale. Moves may be disruptive or

may present opportunities. They may mark the end of valued relationships or

signify a fresh beginning or do both. In short, moving causes disruption and

stimulates adaptation.

As has been previously stated, the general trend has been movement from

rural areas to suburbs and cities. This is evident in China as well as the United

States. New York City and Los Angeles are the largest cities in the United

States, followed by Chicago and Houston. Certain states have more mobile

populations than others. Nevada has the fewest natives, followed by Florida. At

the other end of the spectrum is Pennsylvania, where 80 percent of residents

were born in the state.

Managing Change As shown in the last section, family migration is a complex process. It is only

one example of how managing change is inherently messy:

It is always complicated. It invariably involves a massive array of sharply

conflicting demands. Despite the best-laid plans, things never happen

in exactly the right order—and in fact, few things rarely turn out exactly

Suggested Activity Give one example of a time when you or someone you know didn’t give up. What were the circumstances and the outcome?

Mother and daughter are organizing their recycling.

234 chapter 8

right the first time around. . . . Change means new patterns of power, influence,

and control . . . and that’s why it’s so hard. Change is far too important, pervasive,

and complicated a phenomenon to be taken for granted. Every manager may be

aware of it; that doesn’t mean he or she knows how to handle it. (Nadler, 1998,

pp. 3, 5, 11)

Each family and each organization is a complex social system. There are several components

that need coordinating (Nadler, 1998), including

• The work or the task

• The people

• The formal organization—the structure, the processes, the systems, and the

identity, and

• The informal organization—the collective values, attitudes, beliefs, communication and

lines of influence, and accepted standards of behavior.

The challenge is to sustain momentum, to move forward. Sustaining any profound change

process requires a fundamental shift in thinking. Participants need to understand the nature

of growth processes (forces that aid efforts) and how to catalyze them. But, they also need to

understand the forces and challenges that impede progress and to develop workable strate-

gies for dealing with these challenges (Senge, 1999, p. 10). In an article in Marriage and Family

Review, Kathryn Rettig observed:

Management is a thoughtful adaptation to the opportunities and demands of life. It

involves problem-solving and decision-making, as well as carrying out actions to imple-

ment decisions. The consciousness of the deliberations that occur prior to decisions

about how to use resources and the controlled implementation of decisions in order

to reach valued-goals will distinguish management from other adaptive responses.

The need for conscious problem-solving and decision-making is created because of

changes that are wanted by individuals and families (proactive management) or because

internal and/or environmental changes occur that require different responses (reactive

management). (1993, p. 191)

The management problems and decisions inherent in change must be addressed because

households and families are living in an increasingly complex web of internal and external

changes. Many functions that were once the domain of households and families, such as child

rearing and meal preparation, are now purchased elsewhere. For example, 40 percent of the

food consumed in the United States is prepared outside the home.

Before the 1950s, the study of management emphasized internal household processes.

Today, management encompasses the interaction of the inside and outside activities and

the lives of individuals and families within the greater environment. An employed parent

may purchase a precooked dinner at the store and add a salad or a dessert at home.

Although this combined effort might seem to involve fewer resource management skills,

in actuality these skills are more necessary now than ever before because coordinating

inside and outside activities takes time, effort, and planning. As more people, services,

and environments become involved and time becomes tighter, more complex problem

solving  and decision implementation are necessary. The need for coordination within

families grows.

Managing Human Needs 235

Meeting individual, Family, and Societal needs Along with all the external changes that are occurring, the family itself has become a more

diverse institution. Collectively, single-person households, single-parent families, and two-

income families outnumber the traditional one-income families with both parents sharing a

residence. Even though the family is taking on diverse forms, it still remains an important

stabilizing force in the rapidly changing, often-chaotic outside world. The word “family” implies

a safe harbor, a place to come home to, and people who care.

The remainder of this chapter explores the special management needs of certain popula-

tions. This information is based on aggregate data, so specific individuals and families may not

fit the generalizations given.

Two-Earner Families Part of managing changes is managing changing relationships, at home and at the workplace.

Perhaps no phenomenon has had a greater effect on the fabric of society worldwide than the

increasing number of women in the labor force. The influx of women into the workplace has

altered the way families live, the products they buy, and the way they spend their time.

In the United States in 1990 there were approximately 33 million dual-income or

dual-earner households, where both spouses had income-producing jobs, up from 26 million

in 1980 (Spain & Nock, 1984). That number continues to rise, although many women are

choosing to be stay-at-home moms for part of their lives. In the course of a lifetime, on average

U.S. women are employed 12 years fewer than the number of years men are employed. As may

be expected, those who work longer have more retirement savings than those who don’t.

Two-earner households on average have more money than single-earner households;

but a book entitled The Two-Income Trap says that the money is not stretching as far as it

should and that many two-income families are having a hard time. It begins:

This book is dedicated to all parents who wake up with hearts thudding over the

possibility that buying school shoes and Girl Scout uniforms will mean that there won’t

be enough left over to pay the mortgage. These people are our neighbors, our brothers

and sisters, our friends and coworkers. They travel anonymously among us, but we

know them. They went to college, had kids, bought a home, played by the rules—and

lost. It is time to rewrite the rules so that these families are winners again. (Warren &

Tyagi, 2003, preface)

What has transpired over the last few decades is that many two-earner families now need

both the incomes to maintain a minimum standard of living. Elizabeth Warren and Amelia

Tyagi, a mother-and-daughter team of writers, question how this came about: How have we

come to the point where two incomes are needed to provide what one income used to? Two

areas since their book was written that have risen rapidly in cost are gasoline/transportation

and health care.

The authors say that mom has to work to help pay for the housing that puts the family

in a good school zone—that the pursuit of safety and education have led to increased debt

load of the average middle-class family. A study in Fresno, California, revealed that the single

236 chapter 8

most important determinant of neighborhood housing prices was school quality (Warren &

Tyagi, 2003).

The term “dual income” needs to be distinguished from “dual career.” In dual-career

families, not only do both spouses work outside the home, but in addition both have made a

long-term commitment to a planned series of jobs leading toward an ultimate career goal. Not

everyone who is working thinks of himself or herself as a career person.

Dual-earner families usually report that they are happy and satisfied (Runyon & Stewart,

1987). Family resources, such as spousal or partner support and sensitivity, play a key

role in the satisfaction levels of dual-earner families (Gilbert, 1993). Tahira Hira (1987)

found that satisfied dual-earner families (versus dissatisfied dual-earner families) have more

money in their savings accounts, save larger proportions of their annual income, and have

smaller monthly debt payments. Such families are also less likely to have an auto loan or

outstanding balances on their credit cards. Having two incomes also reduces the fear

of unemployment, as the family will have one income to fall back on in case of a recession

or company downsizing.

Dual-earner families are also better educated, more mobile, better spenders, and more

likely to own their own home than single-earner families (Rubin & Riney, 1994). The lifestyle is

not perfect, however. Dual-earner families also report that they have less leisure time and less

time for children and friends. Their pace of life is quicker. Jobs requiring extensive travel and

numerous transfers increase stress for dual-income families, especially those with children.

Spouses may enter into long-distance commuting relations, live halfway between two cities,

or relocate for short periods of time to take advantage of a career opportunity (Gilbert, 1993).

Dual-earner couples try to adjust their work or vacation schedules to maximize their time

together.

Two-income couples may face various management problems, including difficulty in

setting priorities and saying “no,” budgeting, and making joint financial decisions. Dividing

household tasks equitably so that everyone is content may also be a problem. Open commu-

nication and dealing with changes before events become overwhelming will help dual-income

families keep ahead of their workloads.

The overriding management problem that dual-income families face is how to handle

both their jobs and their family responsibilities. Lucia Gilbert advises young adults who want

to marry and work to plan ahead, which “means thinking about expectations for yourself and

a future spouse and communicating these early on in serious relationships” (1993, p. 75). The

next three chapters on managing time, work and family, and stress and fatigue will provide

additional insight into the management problems of dual-earner families.

Child Care Caregivers are devoted to improving the quality of life for another. They may be providing

assistance to the disabled, children, or elders. The help can be on a daily basis or sporadic,

temporary, or long-range. This section addresses child care as a broad issue with numerous

ramifications for families and for society in general. Providing financial support for children

is a form of child care. So is providing physical and emotional care. For example, a study of

childhood obesity found that parents’ practices related to weight management had a signifi-

cant impact. In other words the family context (stress, parenting style, and emotional climate)

cannot be ignored when it comes to helping overweight children who are at risk (Kitzmann,

Dalton, & Buscemi, 2008).

Managing Human Needs 237

What is child care?

Policy researchers define child care as the full-time care and education of children

under age six, care before and after school and during school vacations for older

children, and overnight care when employed parents must travel. Child care may

be paid or unpaid and provided by relatives or others, including one of the parents.

(Lamanna & Riedmann, 2009, p. 316)

As both parents increasingly are working outside the home, child care is becoming a more

critical issue for many families. Families manage child care in several ways: One parent may

stay home, or neighbors, relatives, and friends may provide care. Family day care homes and

child care centers in the community or at the parents’ work sites are other options. If children

are school age, parents may enroll them in before-school and after-school programs and

summer camps. Parents often combine several of these methods.

Young families with children often have more management problems than do other

types of families. For example, studies repeatedly show that families with young children

have the maximum time management problems because young children require so many

hours of physical and nurturant care. These problems may be exacerbated in young families

where parents may be completing their own education or launching their careers at the

same time that they are having children. Employers, realizing that working parents need

support, offer a wide range of child care options, including resource-and-referral services

and on-site child care.

In the 1990s, women age 30 or older accounted for 33 percent of the total births. Older

mothers tend to be highly educated and have established careers. Their careers would be

well under way before they have their first child. Furthermore, in such families many financial

arrangements and assignments of household tasks would have been settled before children

come along. When the children arrive, the division of labor will have to be renegotiated, but at

least initial patterns would have been established.

One controversial aspect of child care and human capital development is the smaller

amount of time American children spend in school compared to children in other countries

such as Japan and South Korea. The issue is controversial because some parents and educa-

tors believe our schools should continue to be closed in the summer, a tradition that originally

was intended to allow children time off to help on the family farm. Less than two percent of

American families live on farms now, however, and educators and parents think it is time for a

Critical Thinking

How were you cared for as a young child? At home, at a child care center or preschool, at a relative’s or neighbor’s house, or another place? Do you have any photos or memories of it? If and when you have children, what will your preference be for child care?

238 chapter 8

change. The relatively low number of days spent in school may have implications for societal

well-being, if U.S. children are receiving less formal education than children in other industrial-

ized nations. U.S. school districts are experimenting with longer school days and fewer vaca-

tion days or split schedules.

From the perspective of time management and family relations, the fact that children’s

school days and vacations often do not coincide with parents’ work schedules makes it diffi-

cult for families to spend time together or to offer secure home-based child care. Any changes

that are made in the timing and length of children’s school days should focus first on what

is best for the children and their education given today’s global society and future workforce

demands.

The trend, reported earlier in the book, of more women with young children choos-

ing to be stay-at-home moms is an indicator of a reconsideration of the extent of

parent–child interaction. Parents, whether employed or not, are interested not only in the

quantity but also in the quality of time they spend with their children. Enjoying each stage

of development, being present for school and sport/music activities, and encouraging

children toward  independent and fulfilling lives are common parental goals. Former First

Lady Barbara Bush spoke at the Wellesley College commencement in 1990 and told the

graduates:

For several years, you’ve had impressed upon you the importance to your career of

dedication and hard work. This is true, but as important as your obligations as a doctor,

lawyer or business leader will be, you are a human being first and those human connec-

tions—with spouses, with children, with friends—are the most important investments

you will ever make. At the end of your life, you will never regret not having passed one

Are the needs of this child being met?

Managing Human Needs 239

more test, not winning one more verdict or not closing one more deal. You will regret

time not spent with a husband, a friend, a child or a parent. . . . Fathers and mothers, if

you have children . . . they must come first. You must read to your children, you must hug

your children, you must love your children. Your success as a family . . . our success as

a society . . . depends not on what happens at the White House, but on what happens

inside your house.

Although parenting and family life are rewarding, no matter how hard parents try they often

experience problems with children, particularly during the teen years. Drugs, alcohol, child

neglect, and abuse are examples of adolescent

problems. Child abuse is not limited to young

children. Although parental stress is associated

with child abuse, it is important to note that

most parents do not abuse their children even

when experiencing stress. However, stress

can lead to other problems such as work or

marital problems besides strained parent–child

relationship. More on this topic is coming up

in the chapter titled “Managing Stress and

Fatigue.”

Developing better management skills can help parents deal with stress. Well-developed

management skills bring a sense of mastery and a feeling of being in control. A parent who

has developed these skills will find it easier to form strategies, solve problems, and adjust

to change.

An interesting trend related to child care is the growing number of grown-up children

who are staying home with their parents or moving back home after college. Even 30 year

olds are moving back to their parents’ home after a divorce or when they are between jobs.

Active parenting starts at birth, but it is becoming less clear when active parenting ends. More

young adults are living with their parents now than at any time since the Great Depression of

the 1930s (Riche, 1990). Through an analysis of the Census Bureau’s Survey of Income and

Program Participation, demographers found that most people age 20 or 21 remained in their

parents’ home, while most people ages 22 to 24 had left.

Women leave home earlier than men do (Riche, 1990). Demographers also found that

many young adults move in and out of their parents’ homes and that men are more likely to

return after age 25. The main reasons why adult children return to their parents’ home are

economic difficulties, marital failure, prolonged education, and job market insecurity. Riche

(1990) has called the return of adult children to their parents’ homes boomeranging; it is

regarded as a rational response to changes in the society and economy.

Caregiving for Older Persons and the Elderly Caregivers often have a dilemma when it comes to balancing work and the care of

an older relative or friend. It is estimated that 61.6 million Americans care for older rela-

tives or friends. We often think that caregiving is about elderly parents but it can be for a

spouse as well.

Suggested Activity Discuss in class what would be the optimum school schedule considering children’s education needs and parental desires. As part of the discussion, include comments and observations about the students’ own previous school experiences—were they part of a system with different hours, vacation scheduling, and so on than the norm? What were the pros and the cons? Also, discuss the trend toward reducing high school to three years in accelerated programs versus the more traditional four. Pros and cons?

240 chapter 8

Although the need for child care has been widely discussed, the need for elder care is

less well acknowledged. The number of available caregivers is dwindling because many adult

women are in the workforce and the number of children in families has decreased. “Three

out of four caregivers to the disabled elderly (excluding husbands and wives) are daughters,

daughters-in-law, or other female relatives and friends (such as nieces or granddaughters)”

(Warren & Tyagi, 2003, p. 62).

“When faced with changes in physical health, cognition, and daily functioning, older

adults most frequently rely on family members for instrumental support and more intense care

activities” (Roberto & Jarrott, 2008, p. 100).

One in four U.S. households is involved in the daily care of an elder. This may involve

physical care necessitated owing to a chronic illness or frailty or simply email messages to

check up on things. As many as 40 percent of Americans who care for their parents also have

dependent children. See Figure 8.1 for some statistics on caregivers. Middle-aged Americans

who care for both their children and their elderly parents are called the “sandwich generation.”

The caregiver role can bring with it a mixture of joy, guilt, service demands, and emotional

Exercise energizes and provides perspective.

Case study Husband with alzheimer’s “Even though Roxanne Aune’s boss is aware that her 59-year-old husband has early onset Alzheimer’s, he’ll never know how much it impacts her work. ‘I feel I can’t say I’m a caregiver because a red flag will go up and my boss will think, ‘Oh, there’s something wrong with her husband again,’ says Aune, 57, of Minneapolis.

‘I can’t afford to be absent, or start over again, so I don’t dis- cuss this part of my life.’ Aune, an auditor at a health insurance company, believes she has suffered professionally since her husband’s diagnosis last year. ‘I feel I get overlooked for projects,’” she says.

Source: Abrahms, S. (2011, September). The caregiver’s dilemma. AARP Bulletin, p. 10.

Managing Human Needs 241

and financial burdens. The difficulty of the role depends on many factors: the health of the

elderly dependent person, the personalities of the elderly person and caregiver, their mutual

resources, and the social support they receive from relatives and community groups.

Elder husbands and wives often care for a spouse in need. Most typically this is the wife

caring for the husband but it can be vice versa. “More than 9 out of 10 frail care recipients

who are married obtain help from their spouses,” themselves often in poor health (Johnson &

Wiener, 2006).

Caregiving can take place gradually over several years and may require only a few phone

calls or visits, or it can be a 20-year daily commitment to the physical and emotional care of

another. From a management viewpoint, the need for caregiving may develop slowly, allowing

a family to adjust and plan for it, or it can arise from a sudden crisis that completely depletes

the family’s emotional and financial reserves. A midnight phone call from 1,000 miles away

about a stroke or an accident is a crisis that requires an immediate response.

From a management perspective, caregiving for dependent elderly can precipitate a

number of resource allocation problems. Time, energy, and money may all be strained in care-

giving situations. For example, here is a morning schedule for Bruce Shaw, age 60, who cares

full-time for his father, Roger, who is 89.

6–8 a.m.

water/juice

salutations/small talk

check physical signs

physical therapy, twice weekly

rotation in bed

9–11 a.m.

water/juice

snack, banana

check catheter and output

check vital signs

breathing treatment

pills

talk

prepare house for the day

Most caregivers (89%) are helping relatives.

The typical caregiver is a 46-year-old female caring for her mother who lives nearby.

Recently, more males are becoming caregivers for elderly parents.

The most common health problems of the persons cared for are diabetes, cancer, and heart disease.

The average length of time of caregiving is 4.3 years.

Most caregivers fulfill multiple roles; they are married or living with a partner, and most work full- or part-time outside the home.

The main problems caregivers have are finding time for themselves (35%), managing emotional and physical stress (29%), and balancing work and family responsibilities (29%).

Figure 8.1 Caregiver statistics. Source: Compiled from the National Family Caregivers Association and the National Alliance for Caregiving, www.familycaregiving101.org.

242 chapter 8

Roger was left paralyzed after receiving the swine flu vaccine 27 years ago. Eight years ago,

he lost his sight to glaucoma and lives with Bruce and his wife, Judy. Bruce quit his job as a

business consultant, and their home has become a public setting with nurses and health aides

passing in and out. Bruce says everybody in the family has had hard days; but caring for his

father, he says, “has brought all of us closer together. We share this responsibility” (Ruffenach,

2003, p. D4).

Caregivers have to maintain a sense of humor and be sensitive to the elderly person’s

desire for independence and dignity. Compounding these needs is the difficulty elderly

parents have at letting a child take charge. The adult child may also feel awkward manag-

ing her or his parents’ affairs and avoid this task until the health or safety of the parent

requires it.

Understanding the aging process and the needs of the elderly can help caregivers

perform their role more effectively. The aging process has three aspects: physical or biologi-

cal, social, and psychological. To date, most gerontological research (gerontology is the

scientific study of the aging process) has focused on the physical aspects, but the others

are important as well. Most elderly people are self-reliant and require little or no caregiv-

ing. Many maintain active, independent lives well into their nineties. Health, wealth, and

attitude have a lot to do with the degree of independence they can maintain. Many more

myths about aging will be exposed as scientists learn more about the aging process. Even

what constitutes old age is being questioned as researchers learn more about the elderly.

Commonly, old age is defined as beginning at age 65, but this is an arbitrary boundary

because chronological age is a poor indicator of a person’s social, economic, physical, or

mental condition.

Ways to Help Caregivers Caregivers can easily experience burnout and stress. often they neglect their own physical

conditions or disabilities when taking care of another person’s more urgent needs. Caregivers

of older loved ones may feel that family and community members are taking for granted their

daily responsibilities. here are some management ideas for how others can help caregivers

feel supported.

1. Give the gift of connecting with other caregivers. Many organizations, hospitals, and

churches provide a trained leader to facilitate group discussions. Phone calls and

informal discussions can help, too. toll-free elder hotlines provide information about

caregiver support.

2. Give the gift of useful information. Learning about Alzheimer’s disease, strokes, etc.,

and what can be expected is enormously helpful. information about home care

agencies, medical equipment suppliers, adult day care services, insurance, and

government programs can help. AArP’s tax-Aide program (a free service) assists senior

citizens with their irs returns; however, the scope of help is limited to typical elder

concerns, issues of retirees, and lower-income people. Complex returns will require

paid professionals.

3. Give the gift of filling in: give the caregiver time off to shop, run errands, or do other

forms of self-care. Breaks re-energize and provide perspective.

4. install equipment in the home that helps with the care, such as special lights for an elder

with macular degeneration (a vision problem), and also provide with communication

facilities, such as internet access and cell phone. this is the kind of thing that grown-up

grandchildren can help with. When all generations are involved benefits accrue.

Table 8.1

Managing Human Needs 243

Adjusting to Retirement The average age of retirement in the United States is 63. Less than one-quarter of workers

(23 percent) ages 55 and older have savings and investments worth $250,000 or more. By

far the largest portion (28 percent) have saved less than $10,000. Even retirees who have

been prudent savers and spenders are having a hard time so finances are at the forefront

and central to their concerns; but there are others as well, such as health—both physical and

emotional—and maintaining independence.

“We weren’t extravagant people. We didn’t go on cruises. We didn’t buy a Cadillac. And

here we are, we thought we could retire, but our savings are just going too fast for us,”

says Noreen Hilinski, a 67-year-old retiree in Madison, Conn. . . . “There’s a lot of people

who are going to go back to work in my age bracket,” Ms. Hilinski says. “More and

more of my friends are talking about going back to work.” (Greene, 2008, p. A4)

One of the most important life changes people make is adjusting to retirement. Regardless

of how much workers plan and anticipate this change in role, it can still be difficult because

jobs give people a routine, companionship, and a sense of accomplishment. Retired people

can feel aimless and useless. They may find that endless rounds of golf or volunteer work at

the hospital gift shop are not fulfilling. Without roles, people feel a sense of loss and a lack of

direction, and the loss of work routine can be disconcerting. Declining health exacerbates the

problem. To counteract this feeling of loss and provide extra income, many “retirees” take on

part-time or seasonal work. If they are self-employed or have a skill like bookkeeping, they

may never retire.

In many companies, human resource departments assist older employees in the transi-

tion period to retirement and help middle-aged workers find home health care for their aged

parents. According to an article in American Demographics,

Home health care is an important concern of middle-aged workers. Most providers

help elderly relatives preserve their independence. Helpers are usually women, but

men are likely to shop and pay the bills. Out-of-pocket spending accounts for one-third

of this $21 billion industry, and caregivers also face a time crunch. As the population

ages, employers will offer eldercare benefits to attract and keep good workers. (Braus,

1994, p. 38)

In addition, some companies offer retirement planning programs; others allow employees to

work part-time to ease into retirement. Many retirees choose to do volunteer work or take on

a second career. Others travel or go back to school to finish degrees or to take continuing-

education courses. As with all age groups, older adults have varying lifestyles and, therefore,

differing management needs. Too much time may be as much a problem as too little time.

Other resources that may be affected in the later years include the emotional, health, and

financial resources and human energy of both the elders and their caregivers.

As mentioned earlier, making money stretch is a particular problem for many older

persons because income may not keep pace with inflation and increases in health care

costs. The elderly most likely to be poor are those who rely solely on Social Security for

their sustenance.

Those contemplating early retirement should

• Check on their insurance, pension, and other employer-sponsored retirement plans.

• Contact Social Security.

244 chapter 8

• Calculate the effects of inflation. If you figure on 3 percent a year, $50,000 today to live

on will be worth only $27,189 in 20 years, and it is unlikely that expenses will be cut in

half in that time.

• Analyze the condition of your house and car; does anything need fixing or replacing?

• Pay off debt, especially the most expensive such as credit cards and car loans.

• Have an emergency fund; emergencies don’t stop at retirement.

• Consider lifestyle and interests (as mentioned earlier). Most opt for part-time work in a

whole new field to maintain contacts and collect extra spending money.

Increasingly, aging is considered within the context of total well-being, which requires a

careful balance between emotional, spiritual, and physical health. This balance becomes more

precarious as we age. Besides re-examining the changing perceptions of aging, people need

to enhance their mental and physical vitality by focusing on active strategies that can extend

life and improve the quality of life. These management strategies may include

• Deciding what is essential and what is controllable

• Identifying strategies to help prevent health problems or poor quality of life

• Adopting a proactive approach about diet, attitude, and activity levels

• Using practical techniques to incorporate improved lifestyle changes in everyday life.

In addition to valuing independence, older adults value comfort, security, convenience, and a

sense of purpose. They want to eliminate problems, receive personal service, and feel good

about themselves. Airline and car advertisers appealing to the elder market may emphasize

comfort over speed and appearance. As more of our population falls into the elderly category,

businesses and service providers will have to adjust their approaches to better meet the needs

of older adults.

The Homeless About 3.6 million Americans including over 1 million children are experiencing homelessness

each year. They are not easy to count because of their mobility and also because their home-

lessness may be temporary rather than chronic. The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban

Development has data collection instruments and conducts intensive street counts integrating

data from shelters, other service providers, and other sources in order to generate a census of

homeless persons and their needs.

A home is the single most expensive purchase for most families—more than food, more

than cars, more than clothes, more than child care—so when people are homeless, it is a

sign of their not being able to support themselves in the most visible way through renting or

buying a house or finding someone to live with. Although media coverage might imply that

homelessness is a new societal problem, it is not. There have been homeless people in the

United States since colonial times. What is new is that they are more numerous now than ever

before and more visible, and counts have become more accurate. Veterans make up one in

four homeless people in the United States, although they represent only 11 percent of the

general adult population according to the Veterans Affairs Department (November 7, 2007,

www.huffingtonpost.com, pulled March 15, 2008). They can be young veterans from Iraq or

Afghanistan service looking for help finding a job or seeking treatment or food.

The majority of the homeless are single males, although the number of homeless women

and children is growing.

Managing Human Needs 245

Officials estimate that, on average, single men comprise 51 percent of the homeless

population, families with children 30 percent, single women 17 percent and unac-

companied youth 2 percent. The homeless population is estimated to be 42 percent

African-American, 39 percent white, 13 percent Hispanic, 4 percent Native American

and 2 percent Asian. An average of 16 percent of homeless people is considered

mentally ill; 26 percent are substance abusers. Thirteen percent are employed. Requests

for assisted housing by low-income families and individuals increased in 86 percent of

the cities during the last year. (NCH Fact Sheet #2, August 2007)

Often what homeless males and families do is get on a bus and travel to where they think

work is or to a city. When they arrive, work is not so readily found and in a few days or weeks

their money runs out or if they have a car, it breaks down and they run out of gas money.

Chronic homelessness is linked to poverty. However, it is important to distinguish between the

homeless and the poor. According to Baum and Burnes (1993),

Homelessness is more than being poor and without a home; homelessness is a condition

of disengagement from ordinary society—from family, friends, neighborhood, church,

community. Perhaps most importantly, it is a loss of self. A homeless man we know told

us, “The first time, I felt like this is not me. I felt less than a man.” Homelessness means

being disconnected from all of the support systems that usually provide help in times of

crisis; it means being without structure; it means being alone. (p. 23)

The rise in the number of homeless people is not limited to the United States—it is a

worldwide problem. In 1999, thousands of people were displaced from their homes in Kosovo.

In 2008, many people were displaced in Georgia, a country bordered on the north by Russia.

In 2011, many families were displaced in Libya, a country in North Africa. These are only

three examples of large numbers of people being displaced by internal and border conflicts.

They are mentioned here to illustrate that homelessness can affect individuals or families on

a wide scale.

One study of the educational plight of homeless children in England found that changing

schools constantly threatened educational stability, hindered educational progress, caused

emotional insecurity, and promoted educational disadvantage (Lines, 1992). The study

recommended that liaisons be formed between schools and homeless families so that the

transition to each new setting is easier.

The growing rate of poverty, the declining supply of low-income housing, and a rise in drug

addiction and alcoholism have all contributed to the rise in homelessness (Rubin, Wright, &

Devine, 1992). An estimated 65–85 percent of all homeless adults in the United States suffer

from one or more of the disabling conditions of alcoholism, drug addiction, and mental illness,

complicated by serious medical problems (Baum & Burnes, 1993). Other factors affecting

the rise in the number of homeless in the United States include cutbacks in public housing,

and mental health and social programs. Families become homeless for numerous reasons,

including fire, eviction because of failure to pay rent, eviction because of unfit housing, cuts

in assistance programs, scarcity of low-income housing, unemployment, and internal strife

in countries.

Homelessness can be devastating for children who are suffering a loss of education

and security. Naturally, the length of time spent in a homeless condition will affect the sever-

ity of these effects. The response to the growing number of homeless has been sporadic.

Recommended measures that could aid the homeless include day care for children, setting

246 chapter 8

goals and providing support with job training, low or no-cost mental health and medical clinics,

public policy changes, transitional housing for those leaving shelters, better coordination of

social services, and innovative programs to provide low-income housing. The 1992 report of

the Federal Task Force on Homelessness and Severe Mental Illness suggested the following

services: needs assessment, diagnosis and treatment planning, counseling and supportive

therapy, hospitalization and medication management, 24-hour crisis response services, habili-

tation and social skills training, and improved hospital discharge procedures. As has been

pointed out, the homelessness problem cannot be separated from other problems, including

poverty, unemployment, and mental illness. Each of these problems needs to be tackled if the

number of homeless is to be reduced.

A study reported in the American Journal of Psychiatry found that a high level of mental

distress is common in all homeless persons and suggests that the focus of treatment should

be on empowerment, consumerism, entitlement, community level interventions, and closer

alliances with other advocates for the homeless (Cohen & Thompson, 1992). According to

another study, the major cause of family homelessness is the relative inability of heads of

homeless families to function independently (Ellickson, 1990).

Efforts are being made to help homeless families. For example, in the United States, the

Stewart B. McKinney Homeless Assistance Act guarantees homeless children the right of

access to education (Eddowes & Hranitz, 1989). Besides the government enacting legislation,

communities, hospitals, and substance abuse treatment centers are working together to find

successful ways to help the homeless. As not all homeless persons have the same prob-

lems, an effort is being made to tailor programs and alternatives to the needs of the individual

and the family.

Individuals with Disabilities According to the latest U.S. Census, 12 percent of the population has a severe mental or

physical disability. A large range of issues are associated with care for the disabled and some

of the issues are similar to what was covered earlier about caring for older persons and

the elderly.

Definitions of disability and handicap differ by governments in various countries, by

agencies, by administrations such as the U.S. Social Security Administration, and by leg-

islation such as the United Kingdom’s Disability Discrimination Act. Most legislation say

that businesses and employers must make reasonable accommodations to avoid direct

or indirect discrimination. A classic definition is that a disability is a long-term or chronic

condition medically defined as a physiological, anatomical, mental, or emotional impairment

resulting from disease or illness, inherited or congenital defect, trauma, or other insult (includ-

ing environmental) to mind or body (Wright, 1980). Often the word “disability” is used as a

synonym for “handicap,” but the terms are different. A handicap is a disadvantage, inter-

ference, or barrier to performance, opportunity, or fulfillment in any desired role in life (e.g.,

social, educational, vocational, familial) imposed upon the individual by limitation in function or

by other problems associated with disability and/or personal characteristics in the context of

the individual’s environment or role (Wright, 1980). Thus, a handicap can occur as a result of

disability, but a disability does not always necessitate a handicap. For example, a deaf person

Managing Human Needs 247

has a hearing disability, but she or he is not handicapped when it comes to sewing because

deafness does not affect one’s ability to sew.

It is important to understand that disabled individuals may have certain limitations, but

they can function wholly and well in many ways. The shift is toward independent living and

accessibility. Individuals with disabilities prefer to be recognized as a person first and only

subsequently as a person with a partially disabling condition. Community prejudice and

resistance may reduce the opportunities for disabled persons. People with disabilities have

been fighting for years to overcome prejudice so that they can have equal access to jobs,

schools, and services.

An important aspect of home management is the ability to perform routine tasks. Persons

with disabilities may face problems associated with the home, including the loss of mobility,

decreased strength, decreased reach, coordination impairment, one-handed use, lack

of hand muscles, and visual impairment (Pickett, Arnold, & Ketterer, 1990). The hindrance

or negative effect in the performance of household tasks or activities is referred to as a

functional limitation. Wright (1980) offers five examples of functional limitations that may

affect task performance:

1. Activity restrictions due to the danger of unexpected unconsciousness

2. Inability to follow rapid or frequent changes in instruction due to slow learning

3. Restrictions in mobility due to neuromuscular impairment

4. Difficulty in interpersonal relationships associated with peculiar behavior

5. Necessity of avoiding respiratory infection or dusty conditions due to hypersensitivity

reactions.

As this list suggests, there is a wide range of disabilities. A disability in a family raises several

critical questions: Is the disability temporary, such as a broken arm, or long-term? Are family

resources adequate to handle the disability? For example, is there enough insurance to cover

medical and rehabilitation costs? After an assessment has been made of the severity of the

disability and the level of support and resources, a management plan needs to be formulated.

A long-term financial plan may include leaving enough assets through a trust fund for disabled

heirs. There are lawyers who specialize in working with families with children with disabilities.

Case study special needs “Paul Harvey, the father of an adult son with a developmental disability in Orange County, Calif., is brainstorming solutions with a group of other parents. One possibility: a ‘qualified personal resi- dence trust,’ or QPRT, which lets homeowners stay in a house for years before transferring ownership to an heir at a discount to the

current market value. That way, the families can give their homes to a charity or to another family member to manage for the child’s lifetime use, Mr. Harvey says. Another option: a ‘special needs’ trust—a vehicle in which parents can put assets for the child’s benefit without endangering government benefits.”

Source: Greene, K. (2011, September 3–4). Taking care of disabled heirs. The Wall Street Journal, p. B8.

248 chapter 8

In the case of permanent handicapping conditions, critical changes in the family support

system and the home environment may need to be made. Ramps, lower sinks, Braille mark-

ings on appliances, easier access to bathrooms and kitchens, and levers instead of doorknobs

are examples of possible changes. Specific alterations depend on the needs and desires of

the disabled individual.

The nature and timing of the handicapping condition are also important. Was the

disabling condition a shock, or did the individual and family have time to make gradual

accommodations to the condition? Are adequate social, health, and public services available

in the community?

As more baby boomers cross the middle-age threshold and become more at risk for

heart disease and other impairments, the ranks of the disabled will grow rapidly (Waldrop,

1990). In addition, medical advances have kept many more people with disabilities alive longer

than in the past. Fortunately, the public today is much more aware of disabilities, including

those that are not physically apparent, such as learning problems, and is prepared to adjust to

and accommodate the needs of disabled individuals. Every person, disabled or not, needs a

safe, functioning environment in which to live and work.

Single-Parent, Remarriage, and Stepfamilies or Blended Families As has been noted throughout this text, the composition of the typical American family and

household is changing. Nearly half of all brides and grooms walking down the aisle have

been married before. These unions start with high hopes; but because about 65 percent

of the time children from previous marriages are involved, the new marriages often come

with unique management challenges. The divorce rate peaked in the 1980s and now is

at its  lowest level since the 1970s. Second marriages and single-parent households have

become commonplace.

Case study second Marriages “Every morning, Jacquelyn Beauregard Dillman, stands on her front steps and waves to her husband of 29 years, Bob, as he drives off to work. Every afternoon, the couple has what they call their ‘lovey-chat,’ just to check in. Neither ever leaves the house without a kiss goodbye. Both of them were married before. ‘I love this man with all my heart and being,’ Ms. Dillman, 72, a retired

oncology research nurse in Newport Beach, Calif., says of her husband, a 64-year-old medical oncologist. Is marriage better the second time around? Overall, second marriages are shorter, with a median length of 14.5 years versus 20.8 years for first marriages, the Census Bureau says.”

Source: Bernstein, E. (2011, September 20). Secrets of a second marriage: Beat the 9-year itch. The Wall Street Journal, p. D1.

Managing Human Needs 249

Single-parent families as well as stepfamilies and remarriages have unique management

needs. Raising children is a difficult task in itself, but raising children all by oneself can be

even more challenging. The single parent finds no relief and has no one to share ideas with

or turn to for help with discipline. Insufficient income is another problem most single mothers

must face, in part because many fathers fail to make child support payments (Kissman &

Allen, 1993). Economic resources and economic well-being usually are higher for married two-

biological parent families than for single-parent or stepparent families (Sweeney, 2010). Only

about one-third of single mothers receive child support (Goodrich, Rampage, & Ellman, 1989).

Family income in general drops sharply at the end of a marriage because of the splitting up of

resources, maintenance of two households, legal fees, and so forth.

Stepfamilies or Blended families are new families that include children from previ-

ous relationships. Diversity and complexity of stepfamily structures, consequences of multiple

partnerships, and the location turnover for children all have impacts. “Contemporary marriages

are less likely to end with death of a spouse than was true half a century ago and are now

considerably more likely to end through a decision to divorce. Marriage itself has become

increasingly optional as a context for intimate partnerships and parenthood” (Sweeney, 2010,

p. 667). Educated and wealthy parents are less likely to divorce than low-income parents.

A new twist in the location of children following a divorce is for them to stay in the house they

were brought up in and the parents move to other housing and switch back and forth living in

the original house so that their children are not uprooted.

Newsweek magazine recognized the phenomenon of blended families when it devoted

a special issue to the family of the 21st century. An article in the issue on stepfamilies began

as follows:

The original plot goes like this: first comes love. Then comes marriage. Then comes

Mary with a baby carriage. But now there’s a sequel: John and Mary break up. John

moves in with Sally and her two boys. Mary takes the baby Paul. A year later Mary

Case study Latchkey Parents “When John Marden and Ana Elizabeth decided to split in 2005 after 13 years of marriage, they both moved out of the house they shared in the woods near Santa Cruz, Calif. Their three children, however, stayed put. When it was Elizabeth’s turn to look after the kids, she stayed with them. When it was their father’s turn, she left and he took over. This arrangement, sometimes known as nesting, has emerged over the past decade as an offshoot

of the equal-custody, or co-parenting, trend. It requires what would seem to many splitting couples to be a mind-bogglingly amicable relationship and, usually, a robust pot of marital funds, since the number of homes expands from one to three: his, hers, and the children’s.” When asked about it, Elizabeth, 53, said “I didn’t think my kids could deal with the stress of two different houses.”

Source: Luscombe, B. (2011, September 26). Latchkey parents. Time, p. 50.

250 chapter 8

meets Jack, who is divorced with three children. They get married. Paul, barely 2 years

old, now has a mother, a father, a stepmother, a stepfather and five stepbrothers and

stepsisters—as well as four sets of grandparents (biological and step) and countless

aunts and uncles. And guess what? Mary’s pregnant again. This may sound like an

unusually complicated family tree. It’s not. Some demographers predict that as many

as a third of all children born in the 1980s may live with a stepparent before they are 18.

(Kantrowitz & Wingert, 1990, p. 24)

In blended families, stepparents are more likely than biological parents to perceive

strains on the marriage from the parenting experience. Studies show that marital satisfac-

tion is significantly lower when both spouses bring children into the marriage (Lauer & Lauer,

1991). About 60 percent of second unions end in divorce, compared with 50 percent for first

marriages. Generally, there is more stress, less cohesion, and less adaptability in blended

families (Lauer & Lauer, 1991). In a study by Valarie King (2007) about adolescents who

live with a biological father and have both a resident stepmother and nonresident biological

mother she found that:

Adolescents vary in their likelihood of having close relationships to resident fathers, resi-

dent stepmothers, and non-resident biological mothers, but when they can do so, they

appear to benefit. Close relationships with resident fathers and nonresident mothers are

associated with fewer adolescent internalizing and externalizing problems. Closeness to

resident stepmothers, however, is unrelated to these two outcomes. Results suggest

that fathers play a particularly important role in these families. (p. 1178)

The new stepfamily is also complicated by in-laws with long relationships with and con-

comitant loyalties to the previous spouse, which make it difficult to welcome a new adult

in their children’s and grandchildren’s lives. Furthermore, children in stepfamilies experi-

ence biological parents and stepparents very differently. For children the stepparent

may be not another nurturing adult but an intruder who threatens to disrupt their close

single-parent-child relationship, thereby influencing yet another loss. Stepparents also

place children in a loyalty bind: If I care about mom’s new husband, am I betraying my

father? Children in first-time families almost always want their original parents to stay

together. (Papernow, 1993, pp. 49–50)

Single-parent and blended families also exhibit special strengths. Blended families

succeed if they have a clear understanding of each family member’s feelings and needs and

if they engage in open communication. Before remarriage, it is suggested that the adults

forming a combined family realize that their commitment to one another will be the base

upon which their new family will be built (Kaufman, 1993). During marriage, couples need

to nurture their own relationship by supporting each other’s interests as well as caring for

the children.

In single-parent households, the child may find that having one person make all parenting

decisions leads to consistency and stability. If the original marriage involved spousal, sub-

stance, or child abuse, being a single parent could be a relief. As circumstances vary widely,

each family must be looked at individually to determine its resource management needs.

There are many types of single parents, ranging from unwed teenagers to middle-aged men

whose wives have left them. Single parenthood can arise from never having married; from

being abandoned, widowed, or divorced; or from a single person opting for adoption.

Managing Human Needs 251

In addition, both single-parent families and blended families must contend with various

legal, social, personal, economic, and psychological issues. These family types have to con-

tend with all sorts of small and large indignities because they live in a society built around

two-parent first-marriage families. For example, a graduating senior may be allotted only two

high school graduation tickets but be from a blended family with two biological parents and

two stepparents and eight grandparents. Who receives the tickets in this case? In a mother-

headed household, whom does the son invite to a father–son picnic?

Schools and community organizations are becoming more sensitive to these issues

so that fewer children and families are put in awkward positions. Laws and legislation are

making it easier for new family forms to function and are providing better protection for

family members.

Poverty and Low-Income Families The number of poor is growing in the United States with the Census Bureau reporting

46.2 million Americans living in poverty. Over 15.1 percent of all Americans were living in

poverty compared to 11.3 percent in 2000. Poverty is the state of being poor and the inabil-

ity to provide for basic needs on a consistent basis. Poverty is not one of those problems that

can be solved overnight.

Some family problems may not have a complete solution. For example, a family in

poverty may have many problems associated with not having enough resources to

meet basic family needs. Or a parent may acquire a serious disability that prevents them

from fulfilling their roles as spouse and parent. In such circumstances family members

may have to accept that some of their goals can not be attained. . . . Problem solving

can still be used to find ways of making the best of the situation . . . Once a solution is

chosen, a detailed implementation plan is needed to specify exactly who will do what

and when they will do it. Following through with a solution may be difficult. (http:family.

jrank.org/pages/1337, 2008, March 15)

Overall, the United States has not only a high average income relative to the rest of the world,

but also a high percentage of what the United Nations Development Program calls human

poverty, taking into account many factors, including illiteracy and affordable health care,

among industrialized countries (Vo, 1998).

For families, poverty is defined as a family income less than half the national median. In

the United States, often the poverty stricken family has a mother with children. Government

services, early nutrition, health services, reliable transportation, child care, employment train-

ing, and educational programs are positive first steps toward moving a family out of poverty.

The families in the worst financial trouble do not always fit the usual stereotypes:

They are not the very young, tempted by the freedom of their first credit cards. They are

not the elderly, trapped by failing bodies and declining savings accounts. And they are

not a random assortment of Americans who lack the self-control to keep their spend-

ing in check. Rather, the people who consistently rank in the worst financial trouble are

united by one surprising characteristic. They are parents with children at home. Having

a child is now the single best predictor that a woman will end up in financial collapse.

(Warren & Tyagi, 2003, p. 6)

252 chapter 8

Poverty, like homelessness, is not necessarily a permanent state. There are gradations in

income, and income may be low temporarily as a result of sudden unemployment. Low-income

families may also experience seasonal variations in income. A family in financial distress may

have come into that state because the main breadwinner became injured or ill, was laid off, or

a family-owned business failed.

In the United States, from 2008 to 2011 a weak economy was evidenced in such

measures as high foreclosure and unemployment rates. This weakening followed on the

heels of a strong housing market up to the year 2006 when home prices rose quickly and

some people were making money buying and selling houses for a profit. Then, the housing

bubble burst leaving many families in houses they could ill afford. Prior to this there was a

strong national economy in the 1990s which meant that more of the poor were moving out of

poverty; they were working and consuming at a higher rate. It should be kept in mind that “low

income” is a relative term and that the lifestyles of many of the poor in the United States would

be considered middle-class or even high-income in other countries.

The federal government helps low-income families through a variety of programs. One

way is through transfer payments such as food stamps, Aid to Families with Dependent

Children, and Supplementary Security Income, all of which help the aged, blind, and/or

disabled. Transfer payments are monies or services given for which the recipient does not

directly pay. To receive these benefits, household income or assets must fall below a speci-

fied level. The welfare-to-work laws in the United States have changed many of the traditional

ways of supporting the poor. More people are encouraged to work and be less dependent on

the government.

The terms “poverty” and “low income” are defined not only by the government, but also

by the families themselves based on previous income levels and lifestyles. The strains that

result from the lack of money or assets can have negative effects on family life regardless of

the source, which might be unemployment or generally poor economic conditions. Because of

the gender gap in earnings, women in particular have a difficult time with the negative impacts

of economic hardship on the quality of family life.

Planning for long-term goals can seem like a luxury. Returning to Maslow’s hierarchy of

needs in Chapter 1, the emphasis in helping low-income families should be placed on provid-

ing for the most basic needs first, in particular such physiological needs as food, water, and

shelter. Low-income families often spend over half of their income on housing. Therefore,

securing safe, affordable housing is a particular concern for low-income families and explains

why a nonprofit housing organization, such as Habitat for Humanity, is so much needed.

Because of the lack of adequate, affordable housing and other daily-living problems, over

time many low-income families become pessimistic about the future. They may feel their lives

are out of control, and they give up. They may

adopt a perspective called fatalism, an attitude

that all events are thought to be shaped by fate.

A belief in fatalism can lead to low expecta-

tions and a sense of hopelessness. Recognizing

the possible existence and influence of this

phenomenon is helpful in designing appropriate

and effective aid for low-income families.

Suggested Activity Discuss in groups the types of service activities students have engaged in, such as helping build a house with Habitat for Humanity. What were the activities? What were the feelings or other outcomes associated with being involved in service activities?

Managing Human Needs 253

summarysummary This chapter has examined issues regarding the management of special human needs. Population growth, changes in family struc- ture, mobility, remarriage and stepfamilies, and caregiving were discussed. Through understanding the nature of change, families (and those who help families) may be able to react to it more effec- tively. As one example, a way of managing post-divorce life may involve the children staying in the home and their parents estab- lishing an elaborate set of rules about what or who is allowed in the shared home, trading off living there to care for the children.

China is the world’s most populous country followed by India and the United States. The world population is becoming more urban putting strains on natural resources. The U.S. population is becoming older and more diverse. If the population stays on the

predicted course, there will be a larger percentage of minorities, single-parent families, stepfamilies, and the elderly in the future. The fastest-growing minority group is Latino/Hispanic, with one in six people in the United States being of Latino/Hispanic origin. In summary, the population of the United States and of the world is growing, and consequently, there are more human resource prob- lems to address.

Striving for a certain quality of life is not just a theoretical con- struct, but a very real day-to-day concern for people. Effectively managing human resources and increasing human capital are a fundamental part of the overall study of resource management. The next chapter explores the particular problems associated with managing time.

termskey terms adaptability 232 boomeranging 239 change 232 child care 237 demographics 228 demography 228 disability 246 dual career 236

dual-income or dual-earner households 235

external change 232 family demography 228 fatalism 252 fertility rate 228 functional limitation 247 gerontology 242

handicap 246 immigration 228 internal change 232 mobility 233 mortality 228 poverty 251 stepfamilies (or blended families) 249 transfer payments 252

questions 1. In Redefining Diversity, Roosevelt Thomas says that for a

nation diversity is a strength and it means more than race or gender; it is about diversity in ideas, outlooks, and proce- dures. Do you agree or disagree? Can you give an example of how diversity can be a strength?

2. How has the world population changed since 1900? Where do most people live today, in cities, small towns, or villages? In the United States, what are five largest popula- tion states?

3. According to the chapter, managing change is inherently messy. Why is that?

4. What do you think are the benefits and deficits of the 180-day school year for children? Where do you stand on this issue?

5. Choose one of the groups discussed in the section “Meeting Individual, Family, and Societal Needs” and discuss their resource management needs (explain what they have or do not have and what they need).

review questions

254 chapter 8

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257

In the long run the pessimist may be proved to be right, but the optimist has a better time on the trip.

—Daniel l. ReaRDon 9

Managing

Main Topics

Time as a Resource Discretionary Versus nondiscretionary Time Children, adolescents, and Time adults and Time Modern Tools of Time Management The aBC Method of Time Control and Goals

Time Perceptions Perceptions of Time across Cultures Biological Time Patterns

Quantitative and Qualitative Time Measures Demands, Sequencing, and Standards

DiD you know that . . .?

. . . Tuesday is the most productive day of the week.

. . . In most professions, 80 percent of workers spend more than 30 percent of their time writing.

TiMe

258 chapter 9

A fter-work is an especially stressful time for couples as they transition and get ready for the evening. What are solutions to the MacKenzies’ after-work communication problem? One way is to give each other some space to decompress. Another way is to talk about the day but not dump, not go into every detail. More solutions will be discussed

throughout the chapter. A first step is often awareness that the transition from a stressful work-

day to home may often cause friction. This discussion also plays into circadian rhythms, our

usual biological patterns, covered in this chapter. A Cornell University study found that on the

social media site Twitter the most positive responses were in the morning and became more

negative in mid- to late-afternoon, gradually becoming positive again in the evening (Bernstein,

2011). A child care center worker described four to five o’clock as the crying hour. She said

children can be happy and playing all day and suddenly fall apart right when their parents

come to get them and she has to explain “the crying hour” phenomenon.

Our employment-centered, high-tech world is putting pressure on people to be more

involved and active but what is emerging in most developed nations is increasingly sedentary

societies. According to the BBC News, in a survey of the activities of children in 10 nations,

British children spent on average 9.4 hours a week playing computer games or watching

TV and less than one hour a day being active. Australian children also spent considerable

amounts of time playing computer games and watching TV but were more active.

Time management, defined as the values and systems that guide the conscious

decisions made about activities and time use, is the subject of this chapter. Time is

managed to fulfill needs, purpose, and goals. For example, a student spending three hours

at a university-sponsored job fair hopes to line up internship and job interviews and, more

generally, to investigate a variety of employment possibilities. He or she might have gone

in with the idea of working for one employer, but may be drawn more heavily to another.

Exploring options takes time, but in this case well worth the investment.

Government agencies, organizations, and companies track how people spend their time

because it affects economies, policies, products, services, and sales. The U.S. Bureau of

Labor Statistics (BLS) American Time Use Survey provides a list of who spends the maximum

time on the following daily activities:

• Eating and drinking: Men 65 years or older (1.65 hours)

• Household activities: Women 65 or older (3.06 hours)

Case Study The MacKenzies “Rod MacKenzie was excited to be home from work before his wife. He fed the dog, popped open a Diet Pepsi and settled onto the couch to watch his favorite TV show. Then the phone rang. It was his wife, calling from the car on her commute home. She started telling him how her boss had changed the focus of the project she’d stayed up late to finish. Mr. MacKenzie, 36, kept watching TV, every few minutes murmuring, ‘uh huh’—and failing

to hear her when she asked if he was listening. When he failed to answer, she hung up. Michelle MacKenzie wasn’t too happy by the time she walked in the door. Spotting his empty soda can in the kitchen, she asked him, ‘What have you been doing since you got home?’ ‘You’re looking at it.’ ‘Have you thought about dinner?’ ‘Why is dinner always my responsibility?’”

Source: Bernstein, E. (2011, October 4). Putting the Honey Back in Honey, I’m Home. The Wall Street Journal, p. D4.

Managing Time 259

• Shopping: Women (0.96 hours)

• Caring for family members: Women 25–34 years (1.64 hours)

• Caring for non-family members: Women 55–64 years (0.52 hours)

Do you see yourself or anyone you know in these high time spending categories? The BLS

also reports that socializing clocks in at 0.78 hours.

Sleeping takes up 8 hours and 40 minutes a day on average across all age groups

according to the BLS (see Figure 9.1). The age group 20–24 years sleeps slightly more than

this with 8.7 hours for men and 9.1 for women. And, then it goes down for ages 25–34 to

8.4 hours for men and 8.8 hours for women, and then further down for age groups 35–44 and

45–54, the heavy-working, asset-building, and child-rearing ages. After age 55 the sleeping

time may go down for women to less than 8 hours.

Men spend almost an extra hour at work than women do on a regular day, but women

are juggling more responsibilities: household activities and caring for household members

which is where that extra hour goes. Well-educated employees are more likely to bring work

home with them. Thirty-three percent of college educated workers take work home versus

13 percent of those with a high school degree or less.

National or international averages are one thing, but more importantly, how do you feel

about time?

• Do you hate waiting in lines?

• Do you multitask every chance you get?

• Is the Internet connection just too darn slow?

• Do you want everything to happen now?

How We Spend a Day

2007

1:14

2009

1:48

0:47 0:46

1:50

1:13

0:46

0:13 0:32

2:26

0:320:12

0:47

0:11 0:12

Telephone calls, mail and email

Eating and drinking

0:20 0:21

Organizational, civic and religious activities

0:28 0:26

Education

Each square represents one minute in the average day

Household activities

0:14 0:12

Other activities

3:32 3:49

Work and work-related activities

Personal care

8:34 8:40 Sleeping

Purchasing goods and services

Caring for nonhousehold members

Caring for household members

Leisure and sports (excluding TV watching)

2:49

Watching television

2:37

2:30

Figure 9.1 How we spend a day. Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics.

260 chapter 9

It used to be that when active single adults entered their house after work or a vacation, if

there were no messages on their answering machine they would feel left out. People, today,

may feel lonely if there are no email or text messages coming in regularly or, on the other hand,

they may feel relieved not to have to answer hundreds of messages.

Critical Thinking

Do you feel overwhelmed with work including schoolwork? Are there too many papers, reports, tests, and classes/meetings? Alexandra, a 22-year-old graduate student, said she was totally overwhelmed and one more thing due would put her over the top. She felt stretched to the limit. Do you ever feel that way and if so, what do you do about it? Do you ever exhaust yourself with nothing to show, no accomplishment toward your goals?

Time Management

Is this man trying to do too much at the same time?

Communication multitasking, sending and receiving many messages in a short span

of time, is something we accept. Advertisers have to decide where to advertise—radio,

television, Internet, print media or maybe all four or maybe none of these. A retail store like

Abercrombie & Fitch prides itself on not advertising, but relying on word of mouth, their

established image, and the photos/signage in their stores. An example of communication

multitasking is a study that revealed that 100 million U.S. adult Internet users watched TV

while they were online—this represents more than two-thirds of the total adult Internet user

population (Welcome to the 36-hour day, March 7, 2008). Are television viewing and online

surfing time wasters? Do they take you away from concentration and focus? Or, are they

much needed stress relievers?

Managing Time 261

Not keeping up with messages is a form of procrastination. James, a 31-year-old editor,

says that before he left for a two-week vacation to Paris, he spent a whole day cleaning out

and answering his email. He has a tendency to procrastinate and needs a crisis or deadline to

spur him on to organize it.

Critical Thinking

Wanda, a 35-year-old, says this about her email: “I’m quick to open it, read it, and then put it in a folder, but then I never bother to open the folder. So, to put it in the folder means it is essentially gone but I don’t want to delete either.” Can you relate to Wanda or James? Do you procrastinate? How do you handle message volume?

Why give so much space in this chapter introduction to email management? Organizing

email clutter is an activity tied to the more general topic of time management. Psychologist

Dave Greenfield, founder of the Center for Internet Behavior, says there are hoarders and

deleters, savers and spenders. Essentially,

Because “inboxes are metaphors for our lives,” Dr. Greenfield says, there’s no cureall

solution to inbox management. We’re all too different. But he believes an awareness

of our inbox behavior can help us better understand other areas of our lives. “If you

have 1,000 emails in your inbox, it may mean you don’t want to miss an opportunity,

but there are things you can’t pull the trigger on,” Dr. Greenfield says. “If you have only

10 emails in your inbox, you may be pulling the trigger too fast and missing the richness

of life.” (Zaslow, 2006, p. D1)

When cross sections of Americans are asked what the main problem they are dealing

with is, the majority will say they don’t have nearly enough time. Futurists and management

specialists foresee time poverty as ever-increasing. After all, is life going to become less

complicated?

Only 43 percent of families eat together daily and we are talking about one meal or more

a day. Parents and children are working and playing harder now than ever before, usually at

different times and places. The computer, 24-hour television, extended stock market hours,

and 24-hour toll-free lines have aided in creating this hurry-up, around-the-clock environment.

Disc jockeys, factory workers, and nurses are used to 24-hour culture, but now the rest of

us are catching up. Want to order something from a catalog? No problem with the Internet

and toll-free lines open 24 hours a day. Time-poor consumers, such as working parents or

individuals juggling three jobs, are willing to pay for convenience. Playing into this fast-paced

world, an advertisement for CBS MarketWatch.com says it has the “tool to fuel your obses-

sion” by “bringing you the hottest financial stories, market data in real time, and expert analysis

you need to stay ahead of the market.” The message is that if you wait, you will be left behind.

What implications does this high-paced time have for individuals and families, and how are

they dealing with it?

262 chapter 9

An analysis of time begins with awareness. Waking to the shrill clattering of an alarm

clock, checking clocks and watches throughout the day, and going to bed at 11 o’clock are

all examples of how our lives are synchronized around time. The hours of the day, weekends,

holidays, and seasons provide a rhythm and a framework for people’s lives.

One of the recurring themes of this book is how individuals and families make choices.

The management of time, a resource that everyone has in equal amount (24 hours a day),

affects life choices. Time management at work has been closely examined. When we look at

a typical profession’s (e.g., management, accounting, engineering) day, about 80 percent of

workers spend more than 30 percent of their time writing (Gerson & Gerson, 2012). According

to Luciano L’Abate and Tamar Harel,

To understand how we allocate time and energies from one setting to another we need

to invoke the concept of priorities. These priorities stem from definite choices we make

about what is important in our lives. How important is a person, an object, or an activity

to us? (1993, p. 252)

Time is a measured or measurable period. A central management concept is time

displacement, which is concerned with how time spent in one activity takes away from

time spent in another activity (Mutz, Roberts, & Van Vuuren, 1993). For example, choosing to

watch television rather than studying will affect the goal of academic achievement. Thus time,

as a resource, is related to the fulfillment of wants, needs, and goals. Awareness of time is an

important part of human consciousness.

The feeling of losing time or someone wasting your time is undesirable. Activities such as

clearing one’s credit record after being a victim of identity theft is unpleasant. According to

the Federal Trade Commission (FTC), it takes on average 30 hours per person to resolve the

problem; and nearly 5 percent of Americans experience identity theft a year. One way to avoid

identity theft is to shred all receipts and anything else that contains personal information before

discarding them. Another way is to pay cash and guard credit cards closely. In the 2003

Fair Credit Reporting Act revision, more consumer protection was put in place. If consumers

suspect their identity has been stolen, they can put a 90-day fraud alert on their credit file by

calling one of the three credit reporting bureaus:

• Trans Union 800 680 7289

• Experian 888 397 3742

• Equifax 800 525 6285

The one you call will call the other bureaus. If the problem is not resolved in 90 days, the fraud

alert can be extended up to seven years.

Identity theft is an example of a time-waster, and it also has a lot to do with the loss of

individual control. As mentioned in the introduction, time management is the conscious control

of time and activities leading to fulfillment of needs and goals. The way time is allocated is

based on an individual’s values, what is important to that person. If a family values a shared

dinner hour with a multicourse meal, then family members will set aside time for meal prepa-

ration and eating together. If the family values school, work, and community activities more,

then those activities will become their time focus, and they will eat meals in shifts. In today’s

time-pressured societies with so many scheduling and demand conflicts, sit-down family-style

dinners are becoming increasingly rare, at least in families with older children. According to

Leonard Berry, a retailing expert,

Managing Time 263

The Norman Rockwell image of a family seated around a dinner table eating a roast beef

lovingly prepared at home no longer accurately reflects America’s eating habits. More

likely, people are grabbing a quick restaurant meal, buying takeout food, and using the

microwave oven. Restaurants now capture more than 40 cents of every dollar spent on

food in the United States, up from less than 20 cents in the 1960s. Americans spend

about 15 percent of their food dollar on ready-to-eat food prepared for off-premise

consumption, according to FIND/SVP of New York City. And Americans are spending in

the neighborhood of $1 billion a year on foods for the microwave. (1990, p. 32)

Note that the Berry quote is from the 1990s but it is given here to provide a sense of the

passage of time and to say that now more of the American food dollar is spent on food pre-

pared outside the home. Time is a resource that can be measured in units (e.g., minutes,

hours, days), but comprehending it can be difficult because individuals’ perceptions and use

of time affect the way they think about it.

Time has been the subject of philosophical debate (e.g., “If no one measures time, does

it still exist?” and “Has time a beginning or an end?”) and also the subject of psychological,

mathematical, and economic inquiry. In the 5th century C.E., Saint Augustine said, “What

then, is time? If no one asks me, I know what it is. If I wish to explain it to him who asks me,

I do not know.” The best way to measure time remains a subject of debate, with choices

ranging from the use of simple time diaries and complex psychographic inventories to con-

sumer focus groups and actual drawings of time (Kaufman & Lane, 1993). Time is thus the

most familiar of concepts, yet at the same time the most elusive.

time as a Resource In economic theory, time is considered a resource because it is a scarce commodity. It is

saved, spent, and allocated to get something desired. Products and methods that save time

are in demand.

As an example, during World War II a way to make juice concentrate was discovered so

that the troops could get orange juice in remote locations. Later the frozen juice concentrate

was introduced to the American household, and it was estimated that this saved 14,000 hours

of drudgery per year (Mintz, 2000). In this day and age, few households buy juice concentrate;

more buy it in a carton or plastic container with no mixing, simply pour. Another example of

food-related time efficiency is the popularity of prepackaged salad mixes versus buying a head

of lettuce.

Not everyone wants to be time-efficient. Back-to-basics enthusiasts enjoy growing their

own lettuce, green-cleaning their homes, cutting wood for fireplaces, making scrapbooks,

building furniture, and making food from scratch. Some cultures and subcultures challenge

the notion of thinking of time in terms of the discrete beats of mechanical linear “clock time.” In

The Dance of Change, Peter Senge states that

It is important to remember that the mechanical clock was only invented five hundred

years ago, in the fourteenth century. Before that, human beings did not think of time

in constant, fixed increments that keep adding in a steady linear progression. Today,

you can almost hear the machine’s wheels grinding relentlessly: sixty minutes to each

hour, then another sixty minutes make another hour, then another sixty minutes makes

another hour, then another, then another. . . . Nature’s time is different. (1999, p. 57)

264 chapter 9

A resourceful person uses time effectively or imaginatively, especially in difficult situations.

President Franklin D. Roosevelt, who dealt with the Depression and World War II, said, “Never

before have we had so little time in which to do so much.” Notice that unlike money, time is

a nonrenewable resource and thus might be considered a more valuable resource. Queen

Elizabeth I’s last words were, “All my possessions for a moment of time.” Money is often

traded for time, as when a busy person hires someone to clean the house or take care of the

yard or swimming pool.

Companies, organizations, schools, and governments seek to control time when they

set opening and closing hours, deadlines, and policies. A prime example of international time

management set by governments is daylight saving time, which exists in some version in

70 countries. Germany adopted it in 1915. In the United States, part of the reason it passed

into law was that people could stay out later on summer evenings and thus have more leisure

time, buy more products, and feel more cheerful.

Farmers and their lobbies opposed it:

To farmers, clock time was irrelevant any time of year. When the sun was overhead,

it was noon. . . . Increasingly, however, farmers depended on the railroad for their liveli-

hood. If city folks were buying their milk, the milk had to make the morning train. . . . The

farmers lost the battle, and on March 31, 1918, America turned its clocks ahead one

hour. (Crossen, 2003, p. B1)

In 1996, the European Union (EU) standardized an EU-wide summertime period that runs from

the last Sunday in March to the last Sunday in October. Attitudes affect how one feels about

time. For example, an article in American Demographics reported that

Feeling rushed may have more to do with one’s attitudes than with one’s activities.

People who get more than 15 minutes of exercise a day are only half as likely as

others to feel rushed, 22 percent versus 44 percent. . . . People are more likely to feel

rushed if they also say they are dissatisfied with themselves, unable to do things as well

as others, feel useless, or don’t have much to be proud of. (Godbey & Graefe, 1993,

pp. 26–27)

Discretionary Versus Nondiscretionary Time Time can be categorized as discretionary or nondiscretionary. Discretionary time is the

free time an individual can use any way she or he wants. How do people spend their free

time? The top preferred leisure pursuit of Americans ages 24–64 years is time with family and

friends followed by reading, television, traveling, gardening, movies, shopping, and exercising

(Taylor, 2003). If you look at it by age group, differences emerge so that the preferred leisure

activity for individuals ages 65 and over, employed or unemployed, is watching TV followed

by reading, according to Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) time studies. Americans spend

2 hours 31 minutes on average watching television on weekdays and this is up 5.4 minutes

since 2007.

Nondiscretionary time is the time that an individual cannot control totally by himself or

herself. For example, class times are nondiscretionary because they are set by the school or

college. Opening and closing times of banks, restaurants, post offices, and stores are also

nondiscretionary.

Managing Time 265

In the course of the day, nearly all people have some discretionary time when they can

take breaks, use the bathroom, eat meals, and come and go between activities. Evenings and

weekends offer the maximum amount of discretionary time. According to the BLS studies, as

people age past 55, their average time spent working decreases and leisure and sleep time

increase. Of course, specific individuals might not fit this pattern. These trends are based on

millions of people.

Children, Adolescents, and Time Children’s time use has been measured, and there are some definite differences between

countries. What is held in common is that children usually have more discretionary time (e.g.,

free time, play time, sports and recreation time) than adults do, but this situation may be

changing. In The Hurried Child, David Elkind makes the point that children today are over-

committed and are growing up too fast and too soon. He argues that they have too little free,

unstructured, discretionary time. This lack of free time leads to stress. According to Elkind,

Today’s child has become the unwilling, unintended victim of overwhelming stress—the

stress borne of rapid, bewildering social change and constantly rising expectations. The

contemporary parent dwells in a pressure-cooker of competing demands, transitions,

role changes, personal and professional uncertainties, over which he or she exerts slight

direction. (1988, p. 3)

When the average teen is not in school or doing homework, he or she is most likely to be

talking (online or in-person), then, in descending order, viewing TV, performing paid labor or

sports, helping with household chores, or participating in clubs or the arts. Jason, a teenager,

explains that he feels like he has control over what he does with limits. He says “Usually I just

decide like, oh I really wanna go to this instead, and Mom’ll give me the ‘oh, oh well if you

want to’ and then I’ll feel bad if I do . . .” (Ashbourne & Daly, 2010, p. 1429). Family time runs

the gamut from the mundane like driving to and from school to special occasions like birthday

celebrations and weddings. Some events are obligatory, some open to negotiation.

Adolescents engaging in more than 20 hours a week of paid work are linked to delin-

quency, drug use, and school misconduct, says Reed Larson, a professor at the University of

Illinois (Shellenbarger, 2002). So, more than 20 hours a week of paid work during the school

year is to be discouraged.

Is there a formula, one exhausted parent asks, for the right mix of clubs, sports, home-

work and free time? No, but some new guidelines are emerging. For instance, kids

who participate in a variety of voluntary sports and clubs tend to work harder in school,

studies show. However, too much of any one thing may yield diminishing returns. Part-

time jobs carry some risks, researchers say, and family time is an important vaccine

against such trouble signs as drug and alcohol use. (Shellenbarger, 2002, p. D1)

Adults and Time Adults question their busy lives. Time is a moving target and reacts to anxiety and external

events such as a decline in the economy. For a number of reasons, baby boomers are delay-

ing retirement, reversing the usual behavior of the generations before them.

266 chapter 9

Jack Wolfe, a 64-year-old retiree from a natural-gas-pipeline company, moved to a lake

between Houston and Dallas last year. Now he’s trying to go back to work, “and the

closest we are to anything is 60 or 70 miles,” he says. “I’m probably going to have to go

to work for a few months at a time. What I’d really like to do is inspection work on new

pipelines.” After nearly a decade in retirement, “I’m trying to go back to work and let our

portfolio build back up,” he explained. “We’ve lost such a big amount of money lately,

we’re going to get to the point where we can’t recover.” (Greene, 2008, p. A4)

Research shows that, regardless of age or phase of the life cycle, adult men and women

experience time differently. According to a study by Mattingly and Bianchi (2003), men have

more free time; marriage and children exacerbate the gender gap, and market work hours

erode men’s and women’s free time in different ways. As may be expected, the presence of

preschool children, employment outside the home, and being married cuts down on women’s

free time. Within marriage, fathers are spending more time with their children than they did in

the past (Bianchi, 2000).

A case can be made that employed adults, male and female, have less discretionary time

than before because of the Internet, global business, and availability issues:

The 24-hour business day started with the Internet, and with international companies

kept awake by the fact that every minute, somebody, somewhere is doing business.

The whiz kids in the computer world brought their dorm-room hours to work with them,

and soon even managers were grinding out work at night. “It starts with technology

available to do work all the time. Then as there is more work to do, business speeds up,

the market keeps expanding, and there is more of an emphasis on output,” says John

Challenger, chief executive of the outplacement firm Challenger, Gray & Christmas in

Chicago. “Then it becomes doing business all the time, even in the service sector we’re

seeing formalized first, second, and third shifts.” . . . “I don’t think we’ll get away from

24/7,” Challenger says, “but I do think people will continue to make inroads reclaiming

their personal time.” (Boss, 2000, p. 16)

Discretionary time allows the individual to make choices about whom to be with and what to

do. These choices are not made in a vacuum, however—an individual’s time use and needs

must be weighed against what others want and need. Learning time management skills can

Case Study grand Central Station “Late one evening I sat on a bench in Grand Central Station in the early ’90s trying to figure out whether I had the energy or desire to jump on a Metro North Train for the ride home. I reflected on whether I should have ever moved our family from the Rocky Mountains to New York to take on a job that felt bigger than any capabilities I imagined I had. I fretted about whether it was

possible to make the changes that my boss wanted and the organization needed . . . . When I looked at my watch I realized that it was 10:00 p.m. and that I had been sitting on the bench for two hours. I knew something had to give. After I managed to lift myself off the bench, board the train and head home, I began thinking about anxieties . . .”

(DeLong, 2011, Preface).

Managing Time 267

help individuals maximize their time and use it optimally. The following suggestions can help in

managing both discretionary and nondiscretionary time:

• Make a daily “things to do list” or keep a calendar.

• Say “no” to requests for time that keep one from finishing projects already under way.

• Make use of the telephone and the computer whenever possible.

• Delegate.

• Keep a flexible schedule that allows for unexpected events.

• Ask, “Is this the best possible use of my time at this moment?”

• Lessen interruptions, such as unnecessary meetings, visitors, and telephone calls.

For example, regarding lessening interruptions, a family may have a rule that outsiders are

discouraged from calling after 9 o’clock at night. In offices, because they are public settings,

interruptions are more difficult to manage.

In the 1990s, the average U.S. office worker sent or received 201 messages each day.

The majority of the messages were by telephone (50), email (35), or voice mail (22). Other

messages were received by postal mail, interoffice mail, pagers, cell phones, express mail,

post-it notes, telephone message slips, and couriers or messengers (Clark, 1999). In 2009,

the proportion of telephone calls to emails changed so much that some offices took out land-

line telephones (desktop telephones) to save money saying that workers could use mobile

devices to conduct business. Some employees balked at this cost-cutting move insisting that

their desk telephones were still useful.

Regardless of device or source, the problem with so many messages is that workers

spend nearly all their time responding to and receiving messages and have little time left to

think and plan. Nearly half of office workers surveyed said they had difficulty keeping up with

their work and were feeling overwhelmed. The director of the study’s research team said,

“We found that it was very much an interrupt-driven style of work that was emerging. . . . For

too many people, information is proving to be more of a burden than a resource” (Clark,

1999, p. R4). Also, a little privacy can boost productivity. According to an advertisement for

Steelcase (a manufacturer of desks and office systems),

While open workplaces invite valuable interaction between people, it’s privacy that helps

knowledge workers reach their peak state of performance. During the 15 minutes of

immersion time needed to reach this state of “flow,” people are particularly sensitive to

interruptions. Once disrupted, most of us require an additional 15 minutes to reach it again.

Which is the most productive day of the week? The answer is Tuesday according to several

studies.

Mondays get us down. Wednesday is hump day. Thursday is the traditional happy hour

day for those still close enough to their youth to remember such things, and Friday,

well, Friday speaks for itself. Is it any wonder people aren’t getting as much done those

days? . . . many managers schedule meetings and conferences for Monday to give

employees an idea of what work needs to be done for the week. Tuesday is really the

first day workers have to get moving on that plan. (Goforth, 2002, p. 5E)

Which are the happiest days of the week? According to Gallup organization, which

conducts nationwide polls, the answer is Saturdays and Sundays (about 58 percent of

Americans reporting a lot of happiness and enjoyment) with a decided drop on Mondays. Bad

news, of course, can change these attitudes toward day of the week quickly.

268 chapter 9

How is time spent during the retirement years? Everyone’s experience is different, and so

much depends on health and circumstances. The first years of retirement are unique, as this

case study illustrates:

Patricia Breakstone, age 63, remembers her first year of retirement from her 38-year

career as a state-government analyst in San Diego as a “terrible transition period.”

Shortly after leaving her job last spring, she started a long-awaited kitchen renovation,

which turned her condo upside-down right when she was starting to spend her days at

home for the first time in her adult life. Then her dog was struck by kidney disease, and

Ms. Breakstone wound up spending $7,000 in veterinary bills over two months as she

tried in vain to nurse her pet back to health. As the months wore on, “I didn’t want to get

up in the morning,” she says. Finally a friend goaded her into applying for a part-time job

at a bakery near her home, which helped her regain some structure in her days—along

with providing a social outlet. “Retirement,” she says now, “is a real balancing act.”

(Greene, 2003, p. R1)

Some people clearly enjoy leaving work behind, while others are disoriented. Many discover

drift time, which refers to enjoying unscheduled time (e.g., the opportunity to have a second

cup of coffee and read the whole newspaper in the morning). As the first year of retirement

winds down, many find the right pace, a post-work life, that suits them.

“There doesn’t seem to be the big hole that I expected after all those years working,” says

Steve Hold, age 63, who retired from General Electric Co. in Seattle in late 2001, and moved

to Tucson, Arizona, the following May. “I was surprised that it was so easy to find things

to do and become involved” (Greene, 2003,

p. R1). A question that arises is, “What about

marital relationships in the first years of retire-

ment?” Ken Schumann, after retiring, came

up with several rules, and he says negotiating

personal space with your partner is one of the

biggest hurdles in the first year. He and a few

Suggested Activity To find your most productive day of the week, keep a time log for two weeks listing activities. You will become aware of things that are nonproductive time wasters.

Mornings are often hectic in households.

Managing Time 269

fellow retirees serving on a panel came up with these recommendations: shell out money for

separate phone lines, computers, and email addresses; stake out a space in your home that

is yours alone; and negotiate time together and apart (Greene, 2003).

Here is another retirement story. Jim Matheson was always bothered by litter along the

side of the road in his town, so when he retired at age 55 he went to the police station to

explain his plan to pick up trash. While there, the chief told him they needed help setting up

roadside radar signs (the kind that say “Slow Down, Your Speed is . . .”) and Jim said,

“Wait a minute. You’re telling me I get to drive the cruiser, right?” . . . The first time he

drove the vehicle on a major highway, “traffic backed up for miles behind me,” he says,

“What a feeling of power.” (Greene, 2003, p. R4)

Modern Tools of Time Management One hesitates to introduce this topic because next week the tools will change. We love our

devices if we think they will save time and enrich our lives. Combined shipments of smart-

phones and tablets (of various names and manufacturers) have overtaken those of personal

computers (PCs).

Over the last few decades how we track and record time, schedules, and things to do

have changed considerably ranging from

• Relying mostly on watches and clocks, then

• Calendars and schedule books including thick, complicated paper planners to

• Personal organizers that are on computers, cell phones, or other handheld devices

A graduate student visiting a professor says, “Wait a minute,” then pulls out a cell phone

or similar personal organizer and enters in the date and time for the next appointment. Her

calendar is online, and the idea is that she checks it often to see where she needs to be. But,

what if she doesn’t check often enough? None of these devices, from watches to handhelds,

has utility unless the person actually uses them.

Case Study Louise Louise, an 85-year-old great-grandmother, had 90 messages on her cell phone because she never checked them and did not intend to, so her son-in-law erased all of them with her permission. The son-in-law was alerted to the situation because another rela- tive said Louise never responded to messages he left. Louise said she only answered the phone if it rang and she was there to get

it and that she never had gotten used to the idea of an answer- ing machine. She said she couldn’t be bothered with cell phone messages and if it was important they would call back. The rela- tives have been told about the situation and updated on the hours when she is most likely to answer and given instructions about what to do in an emergency in regard to contacting her.

Around the world, Internet usage is up and so are cell phones, and other handheld devices.

Computers are both savers and wasters of time. Colleen, a 55-year-old college instructor who

is married with a teenage daughter, has a rule that she doesn’t open up work email on nights

and weekends while other instructors use it 24/7 and don’t distinguish between work email

270 chapter 9

and personal email. Many people experience withdrawal symptoms when kept away from

their electronic devices; others welcome the chance to get away. The average worker spends

more than two hours a day reading, responding to, or disposing of email (Alsop, 2003). Newer

studies put the rate at over four hours a day including texting but it varies so much by age

group and access. In the case study, Louise spends no time on email, texting, or phone

messages. If you did not do any of these how different would your day be?

In the past, introduction of printing and telephones necessitated adjustments as well,

and the computer is no different in this regard. In the 20th century, some people did not get

a telephone for many years because they did not like the intrusion or they did not like the

cost, so they used the neighbor’s phone or went without one. Today, people in a variety of

occupations feel overwhelmed by computers, but so did the monks 500 years ago when

the Gutenberg printing press brought a 20-fold increase in the number of texts they had to

study. As people attempt to fit their lifestyles within the context of the information and tech-

nological explosion, experts and entrepreneurs are looking for solutions—applying the very

tools that caused the data glut in a mission to help alleviate it. For example, email filtering and

message organizing devices are solutions for computers (just as answering machines were for

telephones). “Spam walls” destroy spam before it gets to inboxes; other programs flag or give

warning messages of possible spam.

The ABC Method of Time Control and Goals The pressures of modern society have led to the publication of many books suggesting ways

individuals and families can improve their use of time. One of the best-known classic books is

Alan Lakein’s How to Get Control of Your Time and Your Life, which explains how to set short-

term and long-term goals, establish priorities, organize a daily schedule, and achieve better

self-understanding. He provided an updated version with an emphasis on results-driven time

management in Give Me a Moment and I’ll Change Your Life: Tools for Moment Management.

Lakein encourages the use of the ABC priority method in which the most important activities

are designated “A,” medium-value activities are “B,” and low-value activities are “C.” An individual

using this method writes down all his or her activities for a given day; rates each activity as A, B,

or C; and then tries to accomplish the As first, the Bs next, and the Cs only if there is time.

Figure 9.2 shows how Chris, a 28-year-old doctoral student and teaching assistant, used

the ABC method during one busy Thursday. Other authors have suggested low (L), medium

(M), and high (H) degrees of importance. The underlying principle is the same whether it is

called ABCs or LMHs or apples, oranges, and pears. If you keep a written or mental “to do”

list and prioritize the activities by their degree of importance, how strictly do you stick to your

priorities?

Never Rarely Half the Time Often Always

An important concept in Lakein’s book is that daily time use should be directly related to

goals. Figure 9.3 shows how Chris describes her life goals and lifestyle goals. Are there con-

nections between Chris’s “to do” list for Thursday and her goals? Note also the significance

of the practice of writing down activities and goals. A goal strategist, Gene Donohue, says the

difference between a goal and a dream is the written word. He says that reviewing goals daily

is a crucial part of success and should become part of your routine. How do you do this? The

lists and ABCs are one way. Another way is to cut out a photo or map from a brochure or an

Managing Time 271

List of all activities for Thursday (made Wednesday night)

A Get ready for school (shower, dress, makeup, hair). A Make breakfast/eat breakfast in car. A Check Copy Center for Promotion readings/pick up if done. A See Dr. Akihito about Econ. paper. A Talk to Dr. Parker about Involvement articles. A Read Promotion articles. A Go to Social Psych. class. A Check mail/Promotion class for Friday. A Make copies/turn in Social Psych. homework. A Return articles to Ann. A Buy/eat lunch. A Make/eat dinner. A Set out clothes to wear for teaching on Friday. B Type outlines of Promotion articles. B Call/check on Social Psych. class for fall. C Read ANOVA homework (due Mon.). C Ask Dr. Bailey about Involvement paper. C Do class prep. for Chaps. 9 & 10. C Review CB class exam 1 for typos and take to get printed. C Read Chap. 3 in Social Psych.

Figure 9.2 Chris’s Thursday schedule. This example uses Lakein’s ABC priority method in which A activities are top priority, B activities are less important, and C activities are to be done if there is time.

General Life Goals My general life goals are (1) to complete my doctorate work and earn a Ph.D., (2) to marry the man of my choice, (3) to obtain a professional position at a large state university, (4) to have at least 2 to 5 articles accepted for publication each year, (5) to be published at least twice in a premier journal, (6) to establish myself as one of the leading academicians in my field, (7) to earn the respect of both my colleagues and my sisters, (8) to earn enough money to take care of my parents and my husband’s parents, (9) to truly make a difference in the life of at least one of my students, (10) to establish myself as a consultant, (11) to establish myself as a consumer rights advocate, (12) to get tenure, and (13) to improve my health.

Lifestyle Goals My lifestyle goals are (1) to live in a new house in an upper-class neighborhood in the suburbs, (2) to live near, but not in, a major city with cultural events, great shopping, and other universities, (3) to drive a Saab or an Alfa Romeo, (4) to be able to buy clothes without worrying about the cost, and (5) to be able to fly/drive to getaway weekends to fun places or visit old friends and family.

Figure 9.3 Chris’s general life goals and lifestyle goals.

advertisement of a house, boat, car, vacation destination, or whatever that depicts your goal

and put that photo or map on your refrigerator or mirror so that every day you see it and think

about it; visualize yourself owning the object or being in the place you want to be. When your

goals change or are achieved, remove the visual and replace it with another.

272 chapter 9

Too often people dwell on the past when

their time would more productively be spent

living in the present and planning the future.

Donohue suggests writing down goals in six

areas of life:

1. Family and Home

2. Financial and Career

3. Spiritual and Ethical

4. Physical and Health

5. Social and Cultural

6. Mental and Educational

You could add more categories like Environment or Friends or figure these fit under the

broader categories of Family and Home, Physical and Health, and Social and Cultural. These

six categories serve as an organizing tool that you can use as a springboard to thinking about

your own life. In which of these categories would you like to spend more time?

Time Perceptions Perception refers to the process whereby sensory stimulation is translated into organized

experience. Understanding how time is perceived is necessary because, as noted earlier, time

is more than simply clock time; an individual’s perception and use of time are also important.

Because perception is not observable, researchers have to rely on people’s self-reports of

their perceptions.

Time perception is the awareness of the passage of time. Since 1850, social and behav-

ioral scientists have been trying to determine why people’s sense of the length of a period of

time can differ from the precise measurement. They have found that many factors come into

play in time perception. For example, drug and alcohol consumption alter time perception.

Changes in body temperature and lack of exposure to natural daylight have been shown to

affect a person’s sense of time. Besides these physiological influences, temperament, cul-

ture, environment, and absorption in the task at hand may also affect time perception.

Estimating Duration Without watches, clocks, newspapers, radio, cell phones, or the television to serve as a guide,

people would have to use other means of estimating how much time has passed. Several

factors influence a person’s estimation of time. Being active makes time go faster than being

passive. For example, the driver of a car may think that a trip goes faster than a passenger

thinks it does, because the driver has something to do other than look passively out the

window. An individual who is motivated is able to concentrate longer on a task and enjoy it

more. Time seems to move faster when one is not bored.

Research studies reveal marked differences in individuals’ ability to estimate time. Age

appears to be one factor. Elderly people tend to find time shorter than younger people.

According to Jean Piaget’s theory of concrete cognitive operations, children’s time estimates

become more accurate after the age of seven or eight. This is why younger children irritate their

parents on a family vacation by repeatedly asking when they are going to arrive at the destina-

tion. Children do not mean to be irritating; they simply do not understand time as an adult does.

Suggested Activity Take the six categories and list a goal or several goals under each one. Be sure to be specific. For example, instead of writing “a house” under the category of Family and Home, write down the size, type, location, view, and acreage. Do you envision a garden, trees, a field, a beach, sidewalks, nearby shops, neighbors, mountains? If you want to get really specific, write down what is in the garden. Can you visual- ize it? What does the air smell like? Put the stated goal into a time frame: When is achievement (partial or full) likely? Discuss your answers with others. It can also be the case that you have several houses or life situations in mind; feel free to describe several scenarios. Being specific does not mean being limiting, but it does mean trying to focus on a few desired alternatives.

Managing Time 273

Practical usEs of timE mEasurEmEnt Although perceptions and estimations of time vary from person to person, time itself is one

of the most accurately measured physical quantities. Indeed, the study of time can be a very

practical subject. Time and motion studies are conducted in homes, offices, and factories. The

studies evaluate task performance and analyze the time spent in producing a product such as

a car or in using home appliances.

As discussed in Chapter 2, the early studies of factory efficiency were closely associated

with the work of Frederick Taylor (1911), who is widely considered to be the father of time

and motion studies. Taylor’s studies later led to the discipline of management as it is taught

in business schools today. He introduced the idea of measuring time precisely in order to

examine specific activities with the intent of finding ways to reduce the amount of time they

required. Thus these studies aimed at improving efficiency through saving time and human

energy. Each job on a factory production line would be divided into different operations, and

each operation would then be analyzed in terms of time and energy used. As a result of the

findings, assembly line work in factories became more standardized and efficient.

Many of the principles and methods derived from industrial performance studies, such as

those conducted by Taylor, were applied to household efficiency studies. Chapter 2 examined

some of these studies in the discussion of work simplification. Individuals’ and families’ use

of time and products continues to be studied by manufacturers and marketers of appliances,

food, and household products. They are interested in identifying trends in who does what in

the home and learning how many minutes a day are spent in preparing food, eating, clean-

ing up, and washing clothes so that they can tailor their advertising and their products to fit

current household practices and, hence, increase sales by better meeting consumer needs.

They are also interested in eating behaviors outside the home. Restaurant chains, grocery

stores, and office furniture manufacturers may want to know how workers spend their lunch

hours and what they eat. For example, a fast-food chain might use several methods of inquiry,

including in-restaurant consumer surveys, focus groups (selected groups of people who

are questioned by a discussion leader or moderator about what they think about different

topics, in this case products and services), observations, and self-reports. Companies also

rely heavily on point-of-sale information obtained when bar codes from products are entered

into a cash register.

Time measurement also has practical applications in evaluating skills such as word pro-

cessing (number of words per minute), sales (number of sales per month), and library use

(number of books checked out per week). Mall and store hours are determined by the number

of customers per hour. On Friday and Saturday nights bars and restaurants stay open later

than they do on other nights. During the holiday season, stores remain open longer to meet

increased customer traffic and boost sales.

The amount of Social Security retired people receive is based on the number of years

they were employed and how much they earned. Divorce settlements take into account the

number of years of marriage. On a daily basis, people try to determine whether they will be

on time for work, school, or appointments; whether they will have enough time to eat lunch or

prepare dinner; whether they will be able to read the newspaper or watch the television shows

they want to; and so on. In other words, people are engaged in time management from the

moment they wake up until they go to sleep. Even sleeping is a timed event, ending when one

awakens to the sound of an alarm ringing or a radio playing or a roommate or spouse saying

“It’s time to get up.”

274 chapter 9

Perceptions of Time across Cultures As mentioned earlier in the chapter, individuals perceive time differently owing to many factors.

A widely held concept in anthropology is that time perceptions are strongly influenced by

culture. The person most associated with studying how culture influences the way people

think about time is E. T. Hall, author of The Silent Language. The three anthropological models

of time—linear-separable, circular-traditional, and procedural-traditional—were introduced by

Hall (1959) and further delineated by Robert Graham (1981) and Alma Owen (1991). These

models define time in the context of various activities, life stages, or time of the year. By doing

this, the models illustrate what time means to different cultural groups and also the ways in

which they process and structure time.

linEar-sEParablE moDEl of timE Most of Western European cultures view of time as linear. This is the dominant world-

view of business so timetables, deadlines, and schedules are important. A promotion up

the chain of command is an example of linear thinking. Linear-separable time processing

is related  to economic time. An investment in time today is expected to have a payoff

in the future. Long-term planning is accepted as normal in the linear-separable model.

Most North Americans think long-term planning or goal setting would be for 5–25 years.

For example, a job interviewer may ask a college student, “Where do you see yourself in

five years?”

This model also treats the past, present, and future as distinct entities that are broken

down into units. Thus, in linear-separable time orientations, stories, steps, and procedures are

usually told in chronological order.

Speed of preparation is valued, so time-saving products such as frozen entrees, boxed

macaroni and cheese, and canned soups are accepted. Figure 9.4 gives a list of ways to

save time.

As mentioned earlier, time can be measured in a variety of ways ranging from clocks

to calendars. Appointments are kept on time. Furthermore, it is assumed that the future will

bring better things. The linear-separable model represents an optimistic point of view because

improvements are expected over time.

ProcEDural-traDitional moDEl of timE The procedural-traditional perception is very different from the linear-separable model.

Individuals with a procedural perception consider the actual steps, event, or procedure

to be more important than the time spent in the activity. Being prompt is not as critical

as doing things correctly or when conditions are right. Several tribes of American Indians

and Alaskan Eskimos subscribe to a procedural perception of time. Procedural time

processing is characterized by staying with a task until it is completed no matter how much

time it takes.

Scientists looking for cures and people who quilt or do other arts and crafts may subscribe

to procedural-traditional models of time. They are focused on taking the right steps and finding

a solution or making an end product regardless of how long it takes. Another example of this is

putting together a jigsaw puzzle with 500 or 1000 pieces; the puzzle solvers will happily spend

hours over several days on this activity. There is no deadline or end point other than finishing

the puzzle however long it takes.

Managing Time 275

circular-traDitional moDEl of timE A circular or cyclical perception emphasizes the repetitive nature of time; this model assumes

that today will be much like yesterday, and tomorrow will be more of the same. Time follows a

rhythmic pattern with regular beginnings and ends, but without discrete units of past, present,

and future. In the circular perception, things may move forward or may remain the same. The

circular perception is often associated with poverty because life for the poor, regardless of

country, may change little from day to day. People living in primitive or agricultural-subsistence

cultures may also subscribe to the circular perception, as they may be born, live, raise their

families, and die on the same land as did their grandparents. Time is not saved or spent; it just

is, and life is lived day by day.

somE EffEcts of cultural DiffErEncEs None of these models of time perception is good or bad; they simply illustrate cultural

differences that affect managerial and consumption behavior. It is also important to note that

many countries use a combination of the models or include cultural groups that subscribe

more to one model than another. Sunday may be circular-traditional whereas weekdays

may be linear.

There are hundreds of ways to streamline your day. Here are some.

1. Get help. For example, a stone flew up from the road and hit the windshield of a new car. The owner was dismayed at the dent which was right in his line of vision. The insurance adjuster told him whom to call and a technician came to his house within hours and patched the windshield so that the chip could no longer be seen. This service was free and efficient, and the car owner was amazed.

2. Use your human energy effectively. Study or do difficult reports during your peak energy time, usually 10 or 11 A.M. for most people.

3. Buy gift cards. Shop online.

4. Use in-store or online with purchase wrapping services.

5. Buy prepared food.

6. Send free greeting cards online.

7. Reduce walking and searching by having basics, such as tissues, clocks, scissors, pens, paper, tape, and cleaning supplies, in most rooms. This technique is especially important in two-story or three-story houses.

8. Use automatic bill paying and direct deposit.

9. Buy movie and theater tickets in advance.

10. Start earlier and shop early when stores are not crowded. Home supply stores say their slowest time is Sunday morning. A corollary to this is to ask for the earliest appointment at the dentist or doctor; you are less likely to be bumped by emergencies that occur during the day.

11. Double recipes, eat half, freeze the rest. Share with family and neighbors.

12. Buy multiples of nonperishables like paper products, soap, cleaning supplies, shampoo, toothpaste, and detergent.

Figure 9.4 A dozen ways to give yourself an extra hour.

276 chapter 9

Companies who market products internationally are well aware of these cultural differ-

ences. Take the example of washing clothes. North Americans like large-capacity machines

that wash clothes fast, whereas frequent, small loads that take an hour or more of washing

time are acceptable, even desirable, in other countries. Also because of aesthetics, tradition,

and types of clothing and activities, differences exist in appearance of washing machines, their

placement, and the washing procedures.

Here are a few examples (Jordan & Karp, 2003):

• In China: Aesthetics are important because many families keep washers in living areas

owing to space limitations; color preferences are gray or green, and there needs to be a

grease removal cycle to remove grease stains caused by bicycle-riding.

• In Brazil: Washers are white with transparent lids; they are raised on four legs so

that consumers can wash underneath the machine; soaking is a tradition so there

is a soak cycle as part of the main cycle; small loads and more frequent loads are

the tradition.

• In India: Appliances have wheels for easy moving; washers are not isolated; they have

a position of pride in the home, and there is a sari (delicate) cycle to wash women’s

wraparound fabrics.

• In England: Combined washers and dryers are common, and they are typically placed

in the kitchen near the other appliances and the sink rather than in a separate room or

behind closed doors.

Let us go back to the discussion of time use across cultures. In Western cultures all three

models exist, although the linear-separable model is dominant. Guy Claxton, an English

psychologist specializing in the structure of the human mind and the author of Hare Brain

Tortoise Mind, says that the Western hurry-up methods have their drawbacks because slow

ways of knowing exist and are useful:

The individuals and societies of the West have rather lost touch with the value of

contemplation. Only active thinking is regarded as productive. Sitting gazing absently

at your office wall or out of the classroom window is not of value. Yet many of those

whom our society admires as icons of creativity and wisdom have spent much of

their time doing nothing. Einstein, it is said, would frequently be found in his office

at Princeton staring into space. The Dalai Lama spends hours each day in medita-

tion. Even that paragon of penetrating insight, Sherlock Holmes, is described by his

creator as entering a meditative state “with dreamy vacant expression in his eyes.”

(1997, p. 4)

Latin America provides an example of how perceptions of time can affect consumption

behavior. Latin Americans generally view time as less concrete and less subject to sched-

uling than viewed by North Americans. Consequently, appointments and meetings rarely

start at the scheduled time. Since eating fast in an impersonal setting is not valued in Latin

America, fast-food outlets popular in the United States and Great Britain, such as Kentucky

Fried Chicken, McDonald’s, and Wimpy, had difficulty penetrating Latin American markets

(Penteado, 1981), although this is changing. Convenience foods such as boxed cereals sell

well in North America because quick breakfasts that save time are highly valued. They are less

successful in unhurried cultures where a warm breakfast may be more desired or lingering

over coffee or tea.

Managing Time 277

In the circular perception, the concept of the future is vague. Typically Asians think of

longer time spans than thought of by North Americans. This perception leads to a different

sense of urgency. In Asian countries, businesses are planned for the long run over several

decades rather than for the short term. On the other hand, the Japanese have been very

receptive to many American–European time-saving convenience goods and McDonald’s

fast-food restaurants. The 7-11 convenience store chain is headquartered in Japan.

Research studies have tried to establish the validity and monitor the cultural changes

in the three types of time perceptions. A study of 48 East and Southeast Asian students

(men and women from Thailand, Japan, and Malaysia) attending a large Midwestern university

found that procedural processing was most frequently used by them, followed by circular

processing, and linear processing was rarely used. In contrast, linear processing was appar-

ently the most used by U.S. students, followed by procedural processing, and then by circular

processing (Lindquist, Tacoma, & Lane, 1993). The U.S. students were more likely to view

time as a valuable and limited commodity—something to be scheduled—whereas the Asian

students were more concerned with the task itself rather than time.

Naturally, people with different time perspectives may find it difficult to understand each

other. Often, people from the United States who become restless when made to wait are

viewed as rude by people from non-Western cultures. Conversely, people who are always in a

hurry may think cultures that are slower and less orderly are behind the times. To be effective

in international business and education, one must be sensitive and adjust to the dominant time

orientation.

Biological Time Patterns Cultural perceptions of time use provide insight into how different groups of people perceive

time. Another important aspect of time is how individuals perceive time. Each person

has an internal clock that tells her or him when to wake, go to sleep, and eat. Circadian

rhythms are the daily rhythmic activity cycles, based on 24-hour intervals, that humans

experience. The word “circadian” comes from the Latin words circa (about) and dies (day).

Before birth, babies are exposed to these daily rhythms from their mother’s eating and

sleeping patterns.

Jet lag and the disorientation caused by changing work shifts are examples of how

humans react when their rhythms are disturbed. In the case of jet lag, people experience

psychological dislocation and disruption of bodily rhythms caused by high-speed travel across

several time zones in an airplane. Their sleeping and eating patterns are thrown off. Changing

work shifts have been found to be a stressor for individuals and families.

Quantitative and Qualitative time Measures Perceptions have to do with people’s estimations of time, but time can also be measured in

units. Quantitative time measures refer to the number, kind, and duration (e.g., minutes,

hours, day) of activities that occur at specific points in time (Goldsmith, 1990). A quantitative

time researcher would be interested in how many minutes a day an individual spends in bill

278 chapter 9

paying, food preparation, shopping, eating, driving, grooming, playing, child care, elder care,

and working. Most of the quantitative time-use data are gathered in four ways:

1. In the self-report or diary method, individuals record their own time-use data on a form

provided by the researcher.

2. In the recall method, individuals are asked to think back (recall) and explain in detail a pre-

vious day’s activities to an interviewer in person, or over the telephone, or by self-report

on a form provided by the researcher.

3. In the observation method, a trained researcher observes and records the precise way,

duration, and sequencing of an individual’s activities. This method has been used exten-

sively in anthropology and child development.

4. The self-observational control-signaling method is rarely used for collecting data on

household time use, but is used extensively in business management studies.

In this latter method, subjects are asked to record their time use at a given signal, such as

when a bell sounds, a telephone rings, or a light flashes. Permission would be gained by

management and human subjects or human resources committees. The method incorporates

a self-report, but the reports in the control-signaling method are required at random times and

are less routine and less time-consuming for the subject than are the lengthy ongoing daily

self-reports. Because the signals occur sporadically and the subject responds immediately,

some researchers conclude that the control-signaling method produces more accurate data

than do the other methods.

Using a combination of methods with built-in cross-checks is generally considered to be the

best way to obtain accurate data. Examples of extensive quantitative household time-use stud-

ies are the 1967–1968 Walker–Telling study of 1,296 families in Syracuse, New York, and the

11-state spin-off studies (Walker, 1983; Walker & Woods, 1976). These studies used 24-hour

recalls as told to interviewers and diaries. Among other things, the New York study established

that the presence of young children in the home dramatically increased the amount of house-

hold work. In 1994, in another time-use study, Allen Martin and Margaret Sanik reported that

women spent more time in household work if there was a young child or a teenager in the

household and that men contributed more time to household production as they aged.

In The Second Shift, sociologist Arlie Hochschild (1989) wrote that many employed

women work at a job during the day and go home and work until bedtime at household chores

and child care—in other words, women work two jobs. Through interviews and observations,

she found that in some marriages where the husband earned more, he was justified doing less

housework because he contributed more monetarily; she also found marriages where the wife

earned more, felt guilty, and therefore did more housework. Hochschild concluded that rarely

is housework evenly divided between working parents and that there is a gap between their

ideals and the reality of their busy lives.

In her follow-up book, The Time Bind, Hochschild explored further the alternating between

home and work lives. She says that “the more attached we are to the world of work, the more

its deadlines, its cycles, its pauses and interruptions shape our lives, and the more family time

is forced to accommodate to the pressures of work” (1997, p. 45).

Qualitative time measurement investigates the meaning or significance of time use as

well as how individuals feel about their time use—that is, the satisfaction it generates. It also

takes into account with whom they are spending time. Consider the following comment by the

Duke of Windsor, who abdicated the British throne to marry an American divorcée in 1937.

“You know what my day was today?” asked the former king, “I got up late and then I went with

Managing Time 279

the Duchess and watched her buy a hat” (Menkes, 1987). This quote calls to mind another,

the 1970 movie Alfie with a theme song that asked, “What’s It All About?” Feelings about

everyday time use relate heavily to a search for life purpose.

Thomas J. DeLong in his book Flying Without A Net says we need to change fear into

paths for success and that three central fears and anxieties drive dysfunctional behaviors.

These are:

• Lack of purpose and direction

• Sense of isolation and abandonment, being disconnected

• Feeling of insignificance (e.g., “Do I matter?”) (2011, p.42)

Critical Thinking

When students are walking to and from class they are often on their mobile phones/ devices. To whom are they talking? Conversations may be about where they have been and where they are going and hopefully what they are learning. On a daily or weekly basis who do you communicate with about what you are doing? Are these the same people as a year ago?

Who Cares about Your Time?

The “with whom” part of how time is spent is important because daily life is

not defined solely by what we do, but also by whom we are with or with whom

we are communicating. According to an exhibit on “The Time of Law” at the

Gulbenkian Museum in Lisbon, Portugal, “Awareness of time is a construction

of individual personality and human solidarity.” Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi (1997)

estimates that people spend roughly equal amounts of time in three social

contexts:

1. Among strangers, co-workers, fellow students. This is “public” space

where one’s actions are evaluated by others and where one competes for

resources.

2. Among family and friends. This is a place of kinship, special bonds, and

home.

3. In solitude. Time spent alone.

In technological societies, more time is spent alone than was common

in tribal societies, where being alone was often considered dangerous. Many

people are uncomfortable being alone, but it is important to learn to tolerate

solitude or else the quality of our lives is bound to suffer (Csikszentmihalyi, 1997).

The popularity of chat rooms, blogs, and texting may be partially explained by

this need to connect with others even when one is alone physically.

Prior to the 1970s, nearly all time-use measurement was quantitative.

Since then, several studies have used qualitative measures as well as a combi-

nation of quantitative and qualitative measures. The increased use of qualitative

measures is a response to the growing recognition that simply knowing how

many minutes are spent washing dishes or diapering a baby does not provide Is she alone? Not really.

280 chapter 9

as meaningful time-use data as knowing how persons performing the task feel or how they

interact with others involved in the task. Asking qualitative questions also lets the researcher

know how the individual feels; thus, the burden of interpretation is no longer on the researcher

where obvious bias or perceptual errors could occur.

Demands, Sequencing, and Standards Three concepts introduced earlier in this book—demands, sequencing, and standards—are

an integral part of the discussion of time from a managerial perspective. Since time is a limited

resource, individuals have to make decisions about how to allocate their time. Demands,

sequencing, and standards affect these decisions.

DEmanDs As lives become more complicated, increasing demands are placed on time.

Demands are events or goals that necessitate or motivate action. For example, schools

demand attendance, workplaces demand a certain number of hours of work, parents demand

a safe neighborhood for their children, the children’s coach demands that they spend time

practicing, and citizens demand fair government.

Many of these demands may not be met, but they are goals or ideals worth striving for.

One would assume that saving time is the main reason why people buy and use appliances,

but research shows that conventional appliances do not always reduce time demands. In

the United States, the difference in time spent on cooking between women who use a micro-

wave oven and those who do not is just four minutes (Robinson & Milkie, 1997). Experiments

are always underway to create appliances and computer-aided systems that will more

effectively save time and at the same time serve families as well or better than before.

Demands on time within families and organizations may conflict. One child may want the

parents to attend her school play while a sibling wants them to come to his soccer game. At

work, employees find several tasks competing for their attention. Stretching limited resources,

including time, to meet conflicting demands is a dilemma all people experience. Families with

young children or disabled family members may face even greater demands on their time.

Teenagers and dependent elderly may put high emotional demands on the family, and meet-

ing those demands takes time.

Unfortunately, demands are often the strongest when resources are the weakest, as

in the case of young married couples who are trying to set up a household, have children,

and become established in their careers—all at the same time. Time demands are also high

for families trying to balance more established careers and home responsibilities. According

to John Robinson of the University of Maryland and Geoffrey Godbey of Pennsylvania State

University, Americans have about 40 hours of leisure time a week now versus 35 hours

in 1964.

“It just doesn’t feel like it,” Robinson said. “They perceive that they have less and are

more rushed.” The thief is perception; people are losing time only in their minds, but

the perception feels more real than the reality. Too, that leisure time tends to come in

shreds rather than blocks. (Werland, 2000, p. D6)

Besides demands external to the person, there are internal demands as well. All individuals

have a tempo, meaning a time pattern or pace that they feel comfortable with. One person

Managing Time 281

may be described as “high energy, always on the go, or hyper,” whereas another is described

as “slow, thoughtful, and deliberate.” Successful organizations thrive on having members with

both types of temperament.

Sometimes demand for time is uneven and difficult to manage, and tradition plays a

part. For example, bicycle stores may be empty during weekdays, but crowded on Saturdays

with children and parents. Tennis courts and golf courses are usually overbooked on week-

ends. Thus, demand can range from none at all to excessive and can be irregular as well.

When shopping, consumers try to gauge when demand will be low, lines short, and stores

not crowded. Sara says she and her husband, Karl, always grocery-shop on Sunday morn-

ings because it is so peaceful. As these examples illustrate, the concept of demand can be

applied to time as well as to other constructs and contexts, such as shopping demands and

energy demands. In the United States, Sundays have turned into popular times to browse and

shop in person and online. This transformation started around 1900 when libraries and ball

parks remained open on Sundays. By the mid-1960s most stores and restaurants were open

on Sundays, although a few national fast-food chains continue to be closed on Sundays and

many stores and restaurants offer reduced hours.

sEquEncing Each of us gets to choose our sequence, our pacing, and our path of growth. A sequence is

when one event or step follows another in a series or an arrangement.

Examples of sequences are sharpening a pencil before writing with it, unlocking a door

before entering a house, or making an appointment before going to the dentist. Individuals’

daily lives are filled with many such sequences. Sequencing refers to the order of activities in

time, as in a series of events. Sequencing may be simple or complex. In a simple sequence,

one person performs one task. A complicated sequencing plan involves many people and

many tasks. Obviously, a large family with children at different ages will have more trouble

completing tasks and holding to a set sequence than a person living alone will.

Malcolm Gladwell (2000), author of The Tipping Point, says we are at heart gradualists,

people who like sequences, schedules, and regular routines, but at the same time the routines

and expectations can be shaken up when something new arrives on the scene.

Critical Thinking

In Gladwell’s book he says, “It is that the best way to understand the emergence of fash- ion trends, the ebb and flow of crime waves, or, for that matter, the transformation of unknown books into bestsellers, or the rise of teenage smoking, or the phenomena of word of mouth, or any number of the other mysterious changes that mark everyday life is to think of them as epidemics. Ideas and products and message and behaviors spread just like viruses do” (p. 7). Can you think of an idea, product, message, or behavior that took off rapidly? Why do you think it did?

Fast Change

282 chapter 9

Schedules, which are sets of time-bounded activities, are made up of two mental

processes: sequencing and time-tagging. Time-tagging is a mental estimation of the

sequences that should take place, the approximate amount of time required for each activity

in the sequence, and the starting and ending times for each activity (Avery & Stafford, 1991).

Repeatedly following the same sequences with the same start and end points leads to pro-

cedural routines where the person no longer has to think about the individual steps in the

sequence. Remember learning how to drive a car or use a computer? At first you were slow

and had to think carefully about each step. In time, you became faster and the sequence felt

more natural. Schedules and sequences can be mental or they can be written, as in a sched-

ule of college classes or a program of forthcoming events.

As mentioned earlier, many individuals and families feel overwhelmed by demands on

their time—they are living in a time drought, a barren land with little relief. They feel short of

time because of the phenomenon of multitasking, which is becoming more and more the

norm. As described in Chapter 6, tasks can be divided into three main categories: interdepen-

dent, dovetailed, and overlapped. In interdependent activities, one task must be completed

before the next task can begin. Multitasking is the same as dovetailing.

An example of an interdependent activity is mailing a letter. The letter has to be written

and the envelope stamped and addressed before mailing. Doing two or more activities at

once is called multitasking. A person may, for example, fold laundry and watch television at

the same time. In fact, people are so used to having the radio or the television playing in the

background that they do not consider these as competing activities. Many dull, repetitive

activities lend themselves to dovetailing. The one drawback to multitasking is that if you do

too many activities at one time, the end results may be less satisfactory than desired. A meal

can be burned, a deadline missed, or a message misinterpreted if a person is trying to do too

much at once.

Overlapping involves giving intermittent attention to two or more activities until they are

completed. For example, a parent might put a baby to bed, and then read while partly listening

to check whether the baby is falling asleep. On any given day, people use all three types of

sequencing. Along this same line of thought, Claxton warns that

There is an old Polish saying, “Sleep faster; we need the pillows,” which reminds us that

there are some activities which just will not be rushed. They take the time that they take.

If you are late for a meeting, you can hurry. If the roast potatoes are slow to brown, you

can turn up the oven. But if you try to speed up the baking of meringues, they burn.

If you are impatient with the mayonnaise and add the oil too quickly, it curdles. If you

start tugging with frustration on a tangled fishing line, the knot just becomes tighter.

(1997, p. 1)

Each individual may favor a certain type of sequencing based on his or her style, pace, or

tempo. Most people go through a certain sequence of events when they first awaken in the

morning. They perform routine activities such as putting on a bathrobe, going to the bath-

room, taking a shower or washing their face, combing their hair, watching the morning news

programs or reading the newspaper, dressing, and eating breakfast. As the day progresses,

they move into more complicated sequencing involving dovetailing and overlapping activities.

At bedtime, they revert back to a more habitual sequencing mode, essentially reversing the

morning routine with a snack, brushing teeth, going to the bathroom, undressing, reading or

watching television, and going to sleep.

Managing Time 283

Successful managers have an understanding of their recurring patterns and how they

need to manage their time to be effective. They may have to break their normal sequence if

they want to move ahead. If they are achievers, it means that they want to accomplish things,

but sometimes this is at the expense of having enough personal interaction. If this is a weak

spot, the manager will have to make time to visit with others, stroll around the offices and

factories, and go to the water cooler or break room. As a counterpoint to this, a manager

who is totally people-oriented or news-oriented (wanting to know what is going on) may have

difficulty settling down to tasks and will have to arrange his or her time accordingly to move

projects along.

Another way to discuss the impact of personality on time use is to categorize people as

mainly polychronic or mainly monochronic. Polychronic refers to liking to do several things

at once, whereas monochronic refers to preferring to focus on one activity at a time, such

as reading or watching a football game on television. The monochronic person dislikes being

distracted from the activity at hand, and this has been the subject of many television situa-

tion comedy episodes. For example, on Everybody Loves Raymond, several plot lines revolve

around Raymond or his father or brother being disturbed by Raymond’s wife or mother while

the men are trying to watch sports on television. An example of a polychronic or multitasking

person is someone who pages through a magazine while talking on a cell phone and carrying

on a conversation with the person next to him.

A routine is a habitual way of doing things that saves time and energy for other activities.

Routines and habits provide stability to our lives. Young children thrive on routines at home

and in preschool. Learning logical ways of sequencing activities is part of the socialization pro-

cess. Some of us need more routine than others. The roots of this need probably stem from

childhood socialization patterns, personality, and temperament. Remember that, as was said

earlier, goals should be made part of your everyday routine. Are you moving positively toward

your goal achievement or moving farther away? If more relaxation time is a goal, consider the

words of wife and mother Joann Gardner, 36, of Brooklyn, New York:

“I would feel guilty about doing anything for myself,” says Gardner, a stay-at-home

mother and a former freelance television producer. But last spring she picked up a

novel she’d received for Christmas and liberated herself. Now, at least three times a

week, she snuggles guilt-free under the covers in the middle of the day and savors

a book for an hour while 19-month-old Rainer naps. . . . “I do laundry on weekends

now, when my husband can watch our son,” says Gardner who squeezes in more

chores during Rainer’s nap time on those days she doesn’t read or nap herself. “The

breaks keep me sane,” she says. “I’m not on my last nerve all the time.” (Jackson,

2003, p. 216)

stanDarDs A standard is an acknowledged measure of comparison or a criterion. The notion of standards

incorporates the concept of value. It can be said that people have a certain set of standards,

meaning that they conduct their lives in a particular way. Standards serve as guides or mea-

sures of human behavior. As discussed earlier, a more detailed definition of standards by

DeMerchant (1993) describes them as quantitative and/or qualitative criteria, or measures

of values and goals, that reconcile resources with demands and affect how certain tasks or

activities are completed.

284 chapter 9

Standards are relevant to this chapter on

managing time because in today’s fast-moving

world, individuals and families often do not have

enough time or energy to meet the standards

they aspire to—in keeping their homes clean,

exercising regularly, eating appropriately, meet-

ing family needs, and accomplishing work. An

article about daily time use in rural households

in India reported that women, including preg-

nant women, worked an average of 14–16

hours per day (Singal, Srinivasan, & Jindal, 1993). Their hours were split between a variety of

jobs in the home, and farm and livestock management. Clearly, maintaining standards in all

areas under these conditions is difficult.

Standards have both quantitative and qualitative aspects. Quantity refers to a measurable

amount. Quality refers to a degree or grade of excellence, the essential character or nature of

something. Quantitatively, a teacher may set a standard of grading 50 math papers an hour.

Qualitatively, a person may want food prepared to a certain standard of nutrition, taste, and

attractiveness.

Conflict arises in homes and organizations when people have different standards. For

example, if a teacher expects to grade 50 math papers an hour, an intern assigned to the

teacher who can grade only five papers an hour will fall below expectations. In a restau-

rant, if food is not prepared to the expected standard, a customer may send it back to the

kitchen. In a home, some family members may be perfectly happy living in a mess that

other family members cannot tolerate. One of the virtues of living on a college campus is

the opportunity to experience the many different ways people can live and the different

standards they have.

Standards of quality and quantity form the criteria for action. Demands lead to an altera-

tion of standards. Students cramming for a test will not have time to cook dinner or go to

movies with friends. Preparing for the test demands all their time and attention, so household

work and friends have to wait.

The more complex the lifestyle and the

greater the number of people involved, the

more regular the standards have to be if every-

one involved is going to survive and thrive. The

military is an example: Beds must be made a

certain way, and rooms are inspected. Everyone

wears uniforms. When 1,000 service people

must be fed in one hour, food lines have to

move efficiently. Because of the vast numbers

of people and the complexity and seriousness

of their tasks, there is little room for individual

choices or variations in standards.

Suggested Activity Write a list of your routines. Which ones do you have? This could include morning rituals, bedtime rituals, driving routes, parking spaces, classroom seats, or mealtime preferences, to name only a few. Are your routines similar or dissimilar to the way you were raised?

What differences have you noticed between your routines and those of your roommates or friends? Discuss with others what you have written. What does throw you off your routine?

Suggested Activity If you had a choice between earning more money at your current job and working fewer hours at your cur- rent job, which would you choose? In a survey conducted at the University of Connecticut (“The Tomorrow Trap,” 1999), most workers chose more money, and men were more likely than women to choose “more money.” So, we have a paradox: most American workers say they want more time with their immediate family, but they also want to earn the extra money that comes from longer hours. What do you think about this? Does it have to be time versus money? What are the alternatives? Discuss in groups.

Managing Time 285

summarysummary This chapter focused on time and time management. Time is a limited, elastic, nonrenewable, and scarce resource. It has value. Time has been the subject of much philosophical debate from ancient to modern times such as in Malcolm Gladwell’s The Tipping Point where he speculates on why some changes occur rapidly, why some ideas or products spread like an epidemic while others gradually evolve.

Time perceptions vary from individual to individual and within and between cultures; personality and preference also come into play. The ABC method of time prioritizing is a useful way of man- aging time, as is the concept that daily time use should be related to goals sought.

Both quantitative time measures (i.e., those using units such as seconds, minutes, hours, and days) and qualitative time mea- sures (feelings about time use) provide useful information for

managing households and businesses. Time-use data have many practical applications to the home, the marketplace, and the work world. Studies show that Tuesday is the most productive day of the week.

Happiness is highest on Saturdays and Sundays with over 50 percent of Americans reporting a lot of happiness and enjoy- ment without much of stress or worry. This drops to 46 percent on a typical Monday, according to the Gallup organization. News of imminent troubles can affect these percentages. Perceptions of time vary by a number of factors discussed in this chapter.

Demands, standards, and sequencing lead to application of time management to work and other activities. Too little time and too much responsibility lead to stress, the subject of Chapter 11. The next chapter will examine the complexity arising from trying to balance work and family life.

termskey terms circadian rhythms 277 communication multitasking 260 discretionary time 264 drift time 268 focus groups 273 monochronic 283 nondiscretionary time 264

perception 272 polychronic 283 qualitative time measurement 278 quantitative time measures 277 routine 283 sequence 281 tempo 280

time 262 time displacement 262 time management 258 time perception 272 time-tagging 282

questions 1. Malcolm Gladwell, author of The Tipping Point, says, “We are

all, at heart, gradualists, our expectations set by the steady passage of time. But the world of the Tipping Point is a place where the unexpected becomes expected, where radical change is more than possibility” (pp. 13–14). What does he mean by this in the context of the chapter?

2. What is your reaction to the quotation from Leonard Berry about “Norman Rockwell expectations” and today’s hurried mealtimes?

3. What is the balance in your life between discretionary and nondiscretionary time? Which do you have more of?

Often holidays and summers offer drift time. Is this true in your case? If so, do you enjoy drift time? What do you do differently?

4. What is your opinion of the quotation from David Elkind about today’s hurried child?

5. According to Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi in Finding Flow, people spend roughly equal amounts of daytime in three social contexts (i.e., with strangers or co-workers/students, with family and friends, and alone). Is your time similarly spent? If you could change your time use in any way, what would you change? Explain your answers.

review questions

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DeMerchant, E. (1993). Standards: An analysis of definitions, frameworks and implications. Proceedings of the Eastern Regional Home Management—Family Economics Conference, Blacksburg, VA.

Elkind, D. (1988). The hurried child. Reading, MA: Addison-Wesley.

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We cannot stop having emotions any more than we can stop having thoughts. The challenge is learning to stimulate helpful emotions in those with whom we negotiate—and in ourselves.

—RobeRt FisheR and daniel shapiRo 10

Managing

Main Topics

Introduction to Work and Family Research Overview of Work and Family

Work and Family Conflicts benefits of Work and spillover to Families Resolving Work and Family Conflicts social support and Work and Family Family-supportive Workplace policies

The Meaning of Work and Leisure Feeling overworked

Work ethic Workaholism and Vacations the three ps: procrastination, parkinson’s law,

and pareto’s principle Workforce trends home-based Work and telecommuting Volunteer Work leisure

DiD you know that . . .?

. . . A typical American spends 15% of his or her lifetime working at the office.

. . . U.S. student loan debt is higher than credit card debt. It is on track to exceed $1trillion dollars.

Work and FaMily

290 chapter 10

This chapter explores the domains of work and family life and the spillover between them. We all have concerns about how to manage our school or work life and our personal life. The aim is not only to achieve balance but also to increase fulfillment.

Case Study out of africa Work can be enjoyable and turning it off is not so easy. During a three-week trip to Africa, Steve Swasey of Netflix said he logged in and made work decisions in Africa. He says he doesn’t mind

working while he is traveling because he is away a lot. However, “sometimes my wife is not so sure. I’ve been known to hide away on the balcony of a condo in the early hours, when she’s sleeping.”

Source: Shellenbarger, S. (2011, July 20). Unlimited vacation, but can you take it. The Wall Street Journal, p. D3.

We seek success and the right blend of activities. “Not only is work harder to

measure but it’s also harder to define success,” says Homa Bahrami, a senior lecturer in

Organizational Behavior and Industrial Relations at UC Berkeley’s Haas School of Business.

She says,

“The work is intangible or invisible, and a lot of work gets done in teams so it’s difficult

to pinpoint individual productivity.” She says information-age employees measure their

accomplishment in net worth, company reputation, networks of relationships, and

the products and services they’re associated with—elements that are more perceived

and subjective than that field of corn, which either is or isn’t plowed. (Sandberg,

2008, p. B1)

We don’t want to waste time in unsatisfying activities such as participating in an all-day work

meeting or retreat with no obvious outcomes. Being productive and successful at work has

an enormous impact on a person’s self-esteem. Ryan explains how his performance review

at work went poorly:

I walked into my boss’s office for my performance review. I was nervous. My yearly

bonus rides on a successful review, and my ego cannot handle too much abuse. “Have

a seat,” said my boss. He pointed to the chair on the other side of his desk. I tried to

assess whether my boss was in a good or bad mood. That information would tell me a

lot about whether this meeting would be easy or painful. His face looked somber and

serious. Not good. My boss said, “Obviously, this meeting is to talk about your perfor-

mance evaluation. Generally speaking, your performance over the past twelve months

has been acceptable. There are some aspects that need improvement. . . . ” (Fisher &

Shapiro, 2005, pp. 116–117)

Ryan says that is when his heart started beating rapidly. He barely heard the positive points

because he focused on the criticisms, which included his lack of follow through, not being

available, and spending too much time with his family. His boss suggested that Ryan

Managing Work and Family 291

take his cell phone when going out to pick up his kids. It was a very hard message to hear.

Ryan was angry.

Notice how Ryan’s boss crossed the line between work and family life. There is no ques-

tion that the boundaries between work and personal life are blurring. Robert Reich, former

U.S. Secretary of Labor, says:

In the old days, we might have taken work home in a briefcase and then late at night

maybe gone through it and done whatever needed to be done. Now we turn on the

computer. And everything we do during the day is right in front of us. All the connec-

tions, all the people, all the problems, and all the projects are going 24 hours a day.

It’s not just the computer. It’s the pager, the cell phone, the voicemail and the instant

messaging. (Blumenstein, 2001, p. R15)

introduction to work and Family Research Throughout this chapter there will be many research study results, but here are a few stand-

outs to get us started. Bianchi and Milkie (2010) in a review of work–family research organized

the family perspective into six topics:

1. Gender, time, and the division of labor in the home

2. Paid work

3. Maternal employment and child outcomes

4. Work–family conflict

5. Work and family issues and health

6. Work–family policy

One can add to this paternal employment and child outcomes, the effects of unemployment,

and the many research studies from the perspective of employers, business management,

and the organizational behavior side.

Family research may be specialized to certain groups like Hispanic families or African

American families or military families. For example, even in peacetime family separation is

an issue for military families. Over 2 million citizens serve on active duty or in the U.S. mili-

tary reserve making it the largest government employer. Wal-Mart is the largest civilian

employer.

Critical Thinking

In what ways would long-term separation be a stressor for military families?

292 chapter 10

One of the difficulties in discussing work and family research is the complexity arising from

combining the two major domains of everyday life. A study found that smaller organizations/

employers often created more innovative nurturing environments than did larger employers

(MacDermid, Hertzog, Kensinger, & Zipp, 2001). The reasoning is that smaller employers are

closer to their employees and understand their needs better. They were more likely to be

flexible to allow for personal or family business.

The focus of this chapter is on the resource management problems and solutions

associated with balancing work and family or personal life roles. Since statistics indicate

that most college graduates will marry and work full-time, the problems of combining work

and family are not just societal issues but personal issues of significance for the readers of

this chapter.

To give perspective, if one were to believe media outpourings, one might think that the

“superwoman” and “superman” model of working and loving is a new phenomenon. It is

not. People have been combining several roles for centuries. They have worked split shifts,

served in the military, or in some other way worked a variety of hours or jobs or in more than

one location, at the same time trying to raise a family and have a personal life. Individuals

may be friends, siblings, parents, children, workers, employers, caregivers, neighbors,

students, teachers, and volunteers; indeed they may play many more roles, depending

on choices and circumstances. Perhaps of all these roles, work and family stand out as

the most important ones to an individual’s self-image and are the most demanding of her

or his time.

Critical Thinking

If your parents or grandparents were asked, “How successful are you at balancing your work and family life?” What would their response be?

overview of work and Family We play roles all the time (right now you are being a student) and we want fulfilling ones.

According to the book Beyond Reason, a fulfilling role has the following qualities:

1. It has a clear purpose, whether it is something big like tackling global warming or small like

taking ten minutes to relax or exercise.

2. It is personally meaningful. This could be problem solving or helping children.

3. It is not a pretense. This is not about acting; this is about your life and what you want to do.

The last factor, “not a pretense,” means to keep it real. A fulfilling role is one you choose to

play, whether it is as a mother or father or president of an organization or being on a board of

directors. Roles can be temporary or long-lasting, or conventional, provided by society or the

office, or self-defined.

Managing Work and Family 293

Adults spend most of their time sleeping (one-third of our lives); at home, alone or with

families or friends; or at work. When Sigmund Freud was asked his recipe for happiness, his

short answer was “work and love.”

Work can interfere with family and family can interfere with work. With the rapid influx of

women into the labor force, more awareness of work–family conflicts has ensued; there has

been a shift in the public’s perception of the interchange between work and family.

More and more families are feeling pressured for time and stressed from coping with

conflicting work and family demands. In response, employers wanting the most satisfied and

productive workers possible are re-examining child care and elder care policies and providing

flextime and other schedule changes to accommodate family needs.

There are several facts, figures, and research findings about the work and family inter-

change. For instance,

• Different generations of workers (Generations X and Y, baby boomers, millenials)

appear to react differently to similar working conditions with some groups working

around the clock while others place a heavier emphasis on nesting, family, and com-

munity. They all work hard but in their own way, some requiring more flexibility and say

in their schedule.

• In the United States, women on average earn less than men, but the earnings gap is

closing.

• Most U.S. teenagers have jobs before they graduate from high school.

• Families with two earners, one parent, or young children are likely to experience work–

family conflict and job tension.

• Spousal support has a positive relationship with job commitment.

• The problems of combining work and family are worldwide concerns that will become

increasingly important as more nations become industrialized and crowded causing more

competition for resources.

• Commuter marriages (large distances, two separate households) are more common than

one would think.

For over a decade a married couple has had the situation where she works as a professor

in the South and he is a professor in the Midwest, they met in Ohio but she needed to go

elsewhere for a job. They are older, do not have children from the marriage, and plan to retire

together in one location in a few years. More extreme commuter marriages involve partners

living in different countries for reasons of education, an award such as a Fulbright, corporate

placement, or military service. Shared goals and purpose and constant communication are

essential for making these situations work.

Work and Family Conflicts At the center of the work and family debate is the concern that a person who is heavily involved

in one domain (work or family) may not be psychologically or physically available for the other.

This can be referred to as involvement balance. Related to this are issues of:

1. Stress

2. Turnover or retirement intentions

3. Absenteeism

294 chapter 10

As one way to manage work and family demands, more couples are choosing to have

children later in life. Baby boom women have married late, delayed childbearing, and spaced

their babies farther apart. Although some parents choose not to work outside the home when

their children are young, the general trend is toward increased employment participation for

mothers of infants and young children. In a classic study, Voydanoff (1989) identified several

job demands that are related to work–family conflict:

• Role ambiguity (doubt or uncertainty)

• Role conflict

• Intellectual or physical effort

• Rapid change

• Pressures for quality work

• Pressure to work hard and fast

• Heavy workload

A Families and Work Institute study found that “many U.S. workers may be working too hard,

leading to more mistakes on the job, neglected personal relationships, and higher health-care

costs” (“Study: Many U.S. Employees Feel Overworked,” 2001). Work pressures and constant

travel strain personal and family relations. A top executive at a large retail warehouse chain

said that her first trip to China was exciting but when it became four trips a year it was a strain

given she had a two-year-old daughter and as a single parent she had to make extensive

caregiving arrangements plus she really missed her daughter.

Case Study overload “Overwork went straight to Douglas Heddings’ back. The founder of Heddings Property Group in New York City, Heddings has suffered from chronic stress-related back pain for more than a decade. Even as he recuperated from spine surgery, the pace didn’t let up. His inbox filled at the rate of 50 emails per hour. The back problem ‘has a great deal to do with the fact that I feel

I have to be on call 24/7,’ Heddings says. ‘This is not good for my mental and physical well-being.’ Researchers agree. Frequent long hours can increase stress and touch off a host of health hazards, including insomnia and high blood pressure. Poor decision-making starts to creep in.”

Source: Robinson, J. (2011, March 22). Don’t melt down. Entrepreneur. Retrieved from www.entrepreneur.com/article/printthis/219311.html.

Work and family conflict may arise when a person is torn between work and family

demands, and frustration and dissatisfaction develop. It may also arise when spouses,

co-workers, employers, and children differ over how work and family time should

be divided.

Stress is another factor to consider. Korean researchers Cho, Lee, Lee, Kim, and Kim

(2004) found that dual-earner families in Seoul reported far more time pressure than reported

by households with full-time housewives.

Managing Work and Family 295

In answer to the question of who the most time pressured is, Susan Roxburgh’s research

found that the answer is the affluent, parents, caregivers, and people in high-demand, low-

control jobs (2002). In To Love and Work: A Systemic Interlocking of Family, Workplace, and

Career, David Ulrich and Harry Dunne describe a therapy session with a busy executive who

“glancing at his watch as he sat down for his first and only interview, announced that he could

take one hour to decide whether or not to divorce his wife” (1986, p. 129). These authors also

say that many workers treat the home as a “pit stop,” or a refueling place, for the main pur-

pose in life: getting ahead at work. Spouses and children are virtually ignored in the “pit stop”

approach to home and family life.

Critical Thinking

Have you ever used your apartment, dorm room, or house as a “pit stop” or noticed that your parents did? Are clothes strewn everywhere and dirty dishes piled in the sink and on the counter? What happens when the home is simply for refueling?

Benefits of Work and Spillover to Families Work can allow a person to move toward goals through greater responsibility, learning new

skills, and achieving a higher position. Work can benefit families and be a source of pride.

Friedman and Greenhaus report in Work and Family—Allies or Enemies? (2000) that

• Individuals who earn a high income have healthier children and are more satisfied with

child care.

• They have greater autonomy on the job.

• They engage in networking and have family-supportive employers.

Most employees are in the labor force primarily because they or their family needs the

money and secondarily because they need to use their skills and feel like they are contribut-

ing and progressing. Bonuses, promotions, praise, awards, and raises are the other benefits

of work that can increase self-esteem. In addition, several studies indicate that performing

the multiple roles of worker, spouse, and parent is positively related to women’s physical and

mental health (Voydanoff, 1989).

Benefits are also an important part of employed work that spills over into personal life.

Health insurance is the most expensive and fundamental benefit. Other types include dental

insurance, life insurance, retirement plans, and reimbursement for moving, travel, and train-

ing/educational expenses. The total benefits package can increase your total compensation

30 percent or more, so although employees tend to focus on salary, they should pay close

attention to benefits packages and what they offer. They should also manage the benefits by

updating coverage to suit changing personal or family needs.

Another positive aspect of work is that many people enjoy it, at least certain aspects of it.

For both men and women there is even the possibility of passion (defined as personal intensity)

296 chapter 10

in work expressed in experiences and emotions. According to Richard Chang (2001), a pas-

sion plan at work begins from the heart and then progresses to

1. Discovering core passions

2. Clarifying purpose

3. Defining actions

4. Performing with passion

5. Spreading excitement

6. Staying the course

Chang says that organizations are driven and defined by their collective passions. For example,

a publishing house can be driven by a love of books and literature. If fashion designers don’t

care about customers, how can they design apparel and accessories that excite the customer

enough to want to buy it? If an individual is energized or inspired by work, wouldn’t it make

sense that the emotion would spill over in a positive way to home and family life?

The preponderance of research literature focuses on the negative aspects of balancing

work and family; but it would be irresponsible not to emphasize the benefits as well. Many

people are happiest being busy in both realms. The problems arise when the roles become

overwhelming. Solutions to this from a family management point of view are addressed next.

Resolving Work and Family Conflicts Individuals or families may find the following approaches helpful in reducing work–family conflict:

1. Manage the conflict so that different ideas, opinions, and approaches are brought out for

discussion.

2. Resolve the conflict before it becomes too disruptive.

3. Cultivate a sense of humor and thus create an atmosphere of mutual support.

4. Take some time off—a day, a long weekend or more. Schedule a vacation, having some-

thing to look forward to can take the pressure off of day to daytime stress.

Sharing the excitement of learning.

Managing Work and Family 297

The first option is a preventive strategy, and the second can be used when conflict

already exists and needs to be addressed immediately. The second strategy comes into play

when the conflict interferes with family members’ ability to get their work done and threatens

the security and the functioning of the family as a whole and of individual family members. The

third strategy involves using humor as a coping skill. When family–work conflicts first emerged,

everyone was quite serious about the issue, but as we’ve gotten more used to the conflicts

as a society, some humor has emerged in the form of cartoons, online videos, billboards,

magazine articles, novels, television shows and advertisements, and in-home banter. Much

of the humor comes from taking situations more lightly, realizing you can’t control the national

economy or the universe, and accepting that mistakes happen. Humor can be a form of affec-

tion and a symbol of understanding that heals the conflict or at least smoothes it over. Taking

vacations will be discussed later in this chapter.

It is not unusual for individuals and families to hope that time conflicts will go away (e.g.,

things will be better next week when my report is finished or the accounts are in), but they

seldom do. If the conflict builds to a crisis, the persons involved have to examine the cause of

the frustration and discuss solutions. Conflict usually arises from one or more of the following:

• Disputes over money or about time use.

• Disputes over work involvement.

• Disputes over values, what is important.

An additional stressor on family–work conflict is when there is severe economic hardship.

A national survey analysis of working Americans found that economic hardship was associated

with higher family–work conflict and that this pattern was stronger among men (Schieman &

Young, 2011, p. 46).

From a family management perspective, the way work–family conflicts are resolved

depends on the answers to the following questions:

1. How strong is each individual’s involvement in work? As mentioned earlier, this is called

involvement balance.

2. How flexible is the work situation? The importance of flexibility cannot be underestimated.

Studies show time and again that flexible scheduling is associated with increased family

cohesion, more balance, and less conflict.

3. Are there better ways to meet children’s and spouse’s needs?

Obviously, compromise is one solution to a couple’s or a family’s work–family conflicts.

In compromise each person makes concessions, giving in a little to gain a valued settlement

or outcome (e.g., harmony, an intact functioning family). Accommodation is another solution

wherein the needs of each person are accommodated or adjusted to as best they can be.

As work–family time conflicts can be a lifelong battle and work and family demands

change over time, the people involved should not rush the process. Once they agree on when

to leave for work in the morning, for example, each person should regularly check to see

whether the agreement is still working or whether a new schedule is needed.

Unemployment and the Family As this book went to press, several countries including the United States were either in a

recession or a period of recovery (a slow climb out of a recession), unemployment was high,

and people were worried about finding and keeping their jobs. When economic times are

298 chapter 10

bad, work becomes a scarce commodity and people are more willing to make compro-

mises. In economic theory, an unemployment rate of 5 or less is considered desirable, and

an unemployment rate of 10 percent or more is considered an indicator of a depression.

During the Great Depression of the 1930s, unemployment went over 10 percent and since

then there have been places in the country (e.g., when a plant closes) that have experienced

unemployment rates of over 10 percent. In other nations of the world, 15 percent or more

unemployment is not unusual. Each country has its own way of defining what is normal when

it comes to unemployment.

Although the chapter so far has focused on the problems of combining work and fam-

ily life, there are problems associated with not having enough work, being underemployed,

and being unemployed. What happens to the work and family interchange when a bread-

winner suddenly is out of work? Going from eight hours of work per day to zero requires

an adjustment of time and ego as well as an adjustment by the family to the loss of income

and benefits. Most of the studies on unemployment were done in the Great Depression and

focused on men. Since the  recession of the 1980s, the downsizing of companies in the

1990s, and the recent recession, studies investigate the effects of unemployment on both

men and women.

When people are on social assistance (welfare) and getting ready to re-enter the job

market they experience stress. A Canadian study found that mothers who are re-entering

the workforce experienced time crunch, overload, and work–family conflict (Gazso, 2007).

This study illustrated that low-income workers have even more trouble balancing work and

family concerns than experienced by higher income workers because they have less flexibility

and fewer resources to fall back on. Quality child care and dependable transportation are

particular issues.

Larson, Wilson, and Beley (1994) found that stress stemming from job insecurity is related

to marital and family dysfunction and a host of family problems. Unemployment is a crisis

event affecting all aspects of a person’s and a family’s life including resource management

and social-support systems. In a study of 216 unemployed women in Louisiana, the research-

ers found that the women sought and successfully obtained assistance from relatives and

friends (Retherford, Hildreth, & Goldsmith, 1989). The women’s parents were especially helpful

in providing emotional support. Overall, the way people react to unemployment depends on

the length of the unemployment period, the circumstances surrounding the unemployment,

and the potential for future employment, as well as the strength of the family support systems

and financial status of the unemployed person. Suggestions for helping partners/spouses find

jobs include

• Letting the unemployed spouse guide the pace of the job search. There will be days of

totally unproductive time; resist asking about the search daily.

• Listening to the spouse: Where do they really want to work? What do they want to do?

• Talking about your workplace, keeping the conversation going.

• Doing things (nonwork related) to show that you care.

When unemployment rises nationally, workers cut back on sick days, and as a result absen-

teeism goes down during economic hard times. People worry that if they are not at work they

are more vulnerable to layoffs.

Owing to changes in the U.S. economy, increasing numbers of blue-collar workers in

the steel, automotive, rubber, textile, apparel, and electronic industries have been vulnerable

Managing Work and Family 299

to extended unemployment, permanent job loss, or re-employment at lower wage and

benefits levels (Smith & Price, 1992). A study of women workers who lost their jobs in textile

and apparel plants in Georgia provides insight into how the loss of work affects families.

The researchers found that the stage in the family life cycle and the demands of combin-

ing productive work and family responsibilities contributed to the women’s experience of

unemployment and their labor market participation (Smith & Price, 1992). For example, one

woman in the study observed:

It’s kind of nice, really, being at home with children. I spent 20 years working and my

mother-in-law raised the kids because I had to work. My husband likes it too. He likes

me cooking for him, being at home when he comes home and not running around trying

to clean and cook and take care of the children. (p. 67)

Another participant in the study reacted differently:

After you’ve worked all this time and paid for things, you feel guilty, like you’re not

doing your part. It’s hard to get used to not carrying your own weight. You worry

about emergencies if you’ve only got one insurance carrier, lose a sense of security.

I miss being independent. When we go on vacation I would put my own portion in the

pot. It’s really a change—I’ve learned to be dependent. I guess I’ve learned who was

in charge. Just giving up the independence [from] bringing home a good salary was

something. (p. 69)

Social Support and Work and Family As the previous quotations indicate, the interchange between work and family involves many

issues. Both men and women experience work–family conflict. Frone (2000) asserted that

men and women suffer poor health from work stress effects. Many studies have shown that

marriage usually has a positive effect on the physical and mental health of the couple. Children

of married parents also experience better health than children of single parents. Marriage

seems to improve health for all involved (Koball et al., 2010).

Perrewe and Carlson (2002) found that social support played a greater role for women

than for men in reducing family-interference-with-work conflict.

Social support is at the core of the work-family interchange. We need to know more

about what types of social support (at the workplace and at home) are the most effec-

tive, what works best. Again, it appears that values come into play. What does the

employee value? (Goldsmith, 2007, p. 164)

Generally, far more is known about the effects of work on family than vice versa. Ulrich

and Dunne (1986) observed that many of the ways that people react to work, employers, and

co-workers are based on early childhood experiences, especially relationships with parents

and siblings. The boss may serve as a parent figure, and how the employee responds to that

boss may have a lot to do with how she or he perceives authority. Loyalty to parents and the

family unit may spill over into loyalty to the firm. Relationships between co-workers may be a

reliving of the childhood give and take between brothers and sisters.

Going beyond childhood experiences into the present day, it is acknowledged that marital

satisfaction and family responsibilities affect work performance and a person’s motivation to

300 chapter 10

work. Thus, severe personal or family problems affect work performance. Someone going

through a difficult divorce or having problems with children may talk about his or her prob-

lems at work and be distracted from the tasks at hand. Many employers including colleges

and universities offer Employee Assistance Programs (EAPs) to help workers and families

with emotional, financial, and legal difficulties, and problems such as alcoholism and drug

abuse. For example, more than 70 percent of the nation’s largest companies (AT&T, DuPont,

McDonnell Douglas, and General Motors, to name a few) offer EAPs (Symonds, Ellis, Siler,

Zellner, & Garland, 1991).

Americans generally rate their life satisfaction quite high: 78 percent rate their satisfac-

tion at 4 or 5 on a 5-point scale, but engaged workers (those who identify with their work and

actively promote company objectives) are more likely to say a 5 than a 4 (“Gallup Study Finds,”

2003). The kinds of statements that the Gallup Organization uses to reach these conclu-

sions include “I have gotten the important things I want in my life” and “The conditions of my

life are excellent.” Among the actively disengaged employees, 51 percent reported that they

behaved poorly at home during the past month, whereas only 18 percent of engaged employ-

ees reported this. According to the Gallup study, divorced people are slightly more likely to be

actively disengaged.

Countries around the world have various cultural norms and family-supportive policies.

For example, The Netherlands is a nation “with a strong cultural norm of mothers staying at

home or working limited hours. Although this argument holds for many countries, what sets

The Netherlands apart from other European countries is that this norm is largely realized”

(Mills & Täht, 2010, p. 861). This means that the preference and behavior of Dutch mothers is

to stay home and not work at all or to work part-time.

Family-Supportive Workplace Policies EAPs are one example of the increased commitment of work organizations to provide family-

supportive policies and practices. Other solutions, programs, or changes that support more

family–work balance include:

• A compressed workweek (e.g., working 4 days a week at 10 hours per day vs. 5 days

a week at 8 hours per day). The state of Utah tried this but then went back to a five-day

workweek. Some universities and businesses close at noon on Fridays or have a policy of

being closed on Fridays in the summer.

• Part-time hours or alternative work schedules. Studies show that perceived control (such

as of schedules) increases perceived balance (Tausig & Fenwick, 2001).

• Job sharing.

• Tuition reimbursement.

• Self-employment, which is becoming an increasingly popular option. Men who are self-

employed report greater job satisfaction and more job-to-home spillover when there are

small children in the family.

• Married, self-employed women report less negative spillover from job to home, greater

job satisfaction, and less job burnout (Hundley, 2001).

• Access to outside services. For example, help for workers in finding (and in some cases

paying for) child care and elder care.

• On-site seminars on topics ranging from identity theft to stress prevention to better

writing skills.

Managing Work and Family 301

• Mentoring programs.

• Wellness programs. These might include on-site fitness centers, free on-site health

checkups, exercise classes, low-cost flu shots.

• Flexible hours. Let employees make up their own schedules within a range of acceptable

hours. “Regardless of the source of the flexibility, the need is clear. Everyone concerned

needs to cut families a little slack up front, to avoid tearing the delicate fabric of family life”

(Shellenbarger, 1999, p. B1).

• Telecommuting is a catchall word for working from anywhere, most likely from home. This

is an increasingly popular alternative.

Like a growing number of people, Shannon Bryant long dreamed of working from home. Stuck

in traffic commuting for more than an hour a day, wishing for more personal time, she hated

“feeling like I was in the rat race,” says Ms. Bryant, a healthcare consultant. But she hadn’t a

clue how to ask her boss for a change. She found help in an unexpected place: the Internet.

On a friend’s advice, she searched Web sites on job flexibility and found a template for a

telecommuting proposal to hand to her boss. After some homework and preparation, she pre-

sented the proposal and won approval. She’s now seven weeks into her new work-at-home

setup, and it’s going well (Shellenbarger, 2003, February 13, p. D1). The following are more

ways to enrich work–family balance:

• Achievement awards. These should go beyond plaques and into usable items such as

movie passes, restaurant vouchers, and bonuses.

• Dry-cleaning services, food shops, low-cost cafeterias, after-school care and child care

centers on-site, and free dinner for those working late delivered to the office. As econo-

mies slowed worldwide, many firms cut back on these extras, but as the economy

picks up they will return. Also, certain younger industries such as high-tech ones tend to

offer these perks more than older industries do. Perks (a shortened version of the word

“perquisites”) can misfire if they are unevenly distributed, if popular ones are discontinued,

and if staffers would rather have raises than perks. Perks are social experiments, and the

wise manager keeps abreast of which perks are working and which ones aren’t.

• Drop-in centers. These mini offices (satellite offices) in the suburbs allow employees to

avoid the commute into the city every weekday.

• On-site educational services. Examples are free or subsidized classes such as certificate

programs or Master of Business Administration classes for employees with bachelor’s

degrees who are moving into management positions and aiming to get higher degrees.

How successful are these methods? Companies report that they help lower absentee rates

and improve employee retention, especially in highly mobile fields, such as retail or tech-

nology. Policies, programs, and services that relieve stress such as dress-down or casual

Fridays should diminish absenteeism. Ideally, employees should have input into what options

are offered. Consistency within companies and across companies would also be helpful for

employees who transfer or change jobs.

Family and medical leave act (Fmla) In recognition of the difficulty of combining work and family, many nations and companies have

developed specific policies regarding employee leave for personal, family, or health reasons.

As previously mentioned, policies vary greatly by country and by employer. Many countries

302 chapter 10

In the United States, in 1993 President Bill Clinton signed the Family and Medical Leave

Act (FMLA), which allows workers at companies with more than 50 employees to take up to

12 workweeks of unpaid leave to care for newborns and newly adopted children or to care

for ill family members or themselves. So, if you are an eligible employee, you are entitled to

12 weeks of leave for certain family and medical reasons during a 12-month period. Can an

employee be fired if he or she takes FMLA leave? No, it is unlawful for an employer to interfere

with or restrain or deny the exercise of any right provided under the Act. However, it should

be noted that many U.S. workplaces, such as retail shops, grooming salons, and architecture

and consulting firms, have fewer than five employees; so, many employees are not covered by

FMLA. About 60 percent of the U.S. workforce is eligible for leave under FMLA, but few take

it, mainly because it is unpaid.

Prospective parents who meet the qualifications set out in the Act no longer have to be

concerned about whether they will be allowed to be away from work before, during, and after

the birth of their child (leave) or whether they will have a job to come back to (job security).

Adoption and foster care are covered as well as the illness of a child, spouse, or parent. More

details of the Act are given in Table 10.1.

Many employers had policies in place long before the passage of FMLA. In a 1993 survey

of 524 companies, 7 out of 10 respondents said they already offered leave to employees for

adoption, family illness, or childbirth, and that costs of such policies were insignificant (“Most

Small Businesses Appear Prepared to Cope with New Family-Leave Rules,” 1993). The Wall

Street Journal article that reported the survey quoted one employer’s comments:

As far as we’re concerned, it’s not a problem, says Bill Parsons, president of Palmer

Johnson Inc. The Sturgeon Bay, Wis., boat builder already grants family leave to its

350 employees. “In an era where companies are competing for employees, the enlight-

ened companies have already thought about how to handle and treat employees with

respect,” he adds. (“Most Small Businesses,” 1993)

Case Study Henrik “One of Henrik Holgersson’s friends laughed in his face when he told him he was going to spend the better part of 2011 as a stay-at-home dad. ‘What kind of a man are you?’ the friend asked Holgersson, who works for an event management company. But just about everyone else was positive. His employer and cowork- ers patted him on the back and wished him luck. Holgersson took

out 240 days of parental leave paid for by the government while his girlfriend, Jenny Karsson, went back to her job as a real estate agent, after eight months at home with their son, Arvid. ‘To take care of Arvid is a real fatherly thing to do. I think that’s very mas- culine,’ said Holgersson, 34, gently rocking his 1-year-old son’s stroller on a walk around the block near his apartment in Sweden.”

Source: Nordstrom, L. (2011, October 25). Swedish dads swap work for child care. Associated Press, Tallahassee Democrat, p. 4.

offer paid leave for mothers and more than a dozen offer paid paternity leave for a couple

weeks or up to 14 months in Sweden. In 2000, 12.4 percent of eligible Swedish fathers took

the leave and that percentage nearly doubled in 2010.

Managing Work and Family 303

the Meaning of work and Leisure The next part of this chapter explores the meaning of work and leisure and its managerial

implications. Work is effort expended to produce or accomplish something or activity that is

rewarded, usually with pay. Effort is exertion or the use of energy to do something (Goldsmith,

1993). Because so many hours are spent in work, it makes a tremendous difference to one’s

overall sense of contentment and growth. Thomas Carlyle, a 19th-century British historian

and essayist, wrote, “Blessed is he who has found his work; let him ask no other blessed-

ness.” A fascinating study by Roehling, Roehling, and Moen (2001) explored the concept of

company loyalty and how it fits into the work and family debate. They found that flexible-time

policies have an almost universal employee loyalty payoff and that child care policies help as

well. Even more important is the existence of an employee-friendly atmosphere. Employees

appreciate supervisors who are sensitive to work–family conflicts and make adjustments

when necessary.

The average workweek today is about 30 percent shorter than it was a hundred years

ago. Around 1900, a six-day workweek was common. In 1938, President Franklin D. Roosevelt

signed the Fair Labor Standards Act, which established a 44-hour workweek, which was

reduced to 40 hours by 1941. A generation ago, the conventional wisdom among economists

was that America was turning into an “affluent society,” in which ever more efficient technology

would produce an abundance of wealth requiring less and less labor. This did not happen for

The Essence of Family and Medical Leave Act of 1993 the Family and Medical leave act applies to all public agencies, including state, local, and

federal employers, local education agencies (schools), and private-sector employers employ-

ing 50 or more employees in 20 or more workweeks in the current or preceding calendar year

within a 75-mile radius.

• Covered employers must grant an eligible employee up to a total of 12 workweeks of

unpaid leave during any 12-month period for the birth of a child or placement of a child for

adoption or foster care, for the care of a seriously ill child, spouse, or parent, or in the case

of his or her own serious illness.

• Employers have to continue health care coverage for the employee during the leave.

• Employers have to guarantee that employees will return to either the same job or a comparable

position.

• Employers can refuse to reinstate certain highly paid “key” employees after their leave.

Such employees are defined as the highest paid 10 percent of the workforce and whose

leave would cause economic harm to the employer.

• Employers can exempt employees who have not worked for at least one year and who

have not worked for at least 1,250 hours, or 25 hours a week, in the previous 12 months.

• A doctor’s certification has to be obtained to verify a serious illness. Employers may require

a second medical opinion.

• Employers can substitute an employee’s accrued paid leave (such as sick or annual leave)

for any part of the 12-week period of family leave.

• Under some circumstances, employees may take the leave intermittently, by taking leave

in blocks of time or reducing their normal weekly or daily work schedule.

• Employers are permitted to require an employee taking intermittent leave for planned

medical treatments to transfer temporarily to an equivalent alternative position.

Source: Goldsmith, E. (1993). Family leave: Changing needs of the World’s Workers. United Nations, Occasional Paper Series, No. 7, p. 6.

Table 10.1

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a variety of reasons, but the end result is that U.S. workers are working more at this point in

American history than was predicted. The four-day workweek is still elusive. Choice of occu-

pations has increased significantly. In 1850, the U.S. census listed 322 job titles; today there

are over 31,000.

The fact hit home for me when I returned to the U.S. in 1996 after a decade abroad.

I began to notice that not one of the other seven people in my office left their desks at

lunchtime, the way folks used to. . . . the Bureau of Labor statistics reports that since

1985 paid vacation time has declined, and so has the average time that workers take

off sick. Not surprisingly, more than one-third of the people in the FWI survey said that

they often or very often feel used up at the end of the workday. (Hunter, 1999, p. 38)

Feeling Overworked The typical American spends 15 percent of his or her life at the office so what happens during

that time greatly affects health and relationships with co-workers as well as with family and

friends. “Traditionally, researchers have focused on the ways in which different labor affects

the body, investigating the hazards associated with activities such as coal mining, truck driving

and professional football. In recent years, however it has become clear that even seemingly

safe workplaces can negatively influence well-being. This is largely because jobs don’t just

take a physical toll—they also exact a mental price” (Lehrer, 2011, p. C22).

Nonstandard work schedules can result in greater relationship dissatisfaction—an

example of the spillover from work to home. Working overtime not only brings in extra money

but also extra stress in an already overwhelmed family. It happens in many jobs that work-

ing evenings and weekends is not compensated with money. The employee is expected to

show up to award dinners, to take guests around, to go to parties and events. These sound

pleasurable but after an eight hour workday with commuting on top and taking time away from

family and friends these are not fun. One woman did not get home until 10:30 after a Thursday

evening event and said she could not do it anymore.

Notice the body language of this over worked employee.

Managing Work and Family 305

Sometimes a person really is working too many hours and other times they simply feel

over-worked because it is not just about quantity but also about intensity. According to a report

by Galinsky, Kim, and Bond titled “Feeling Overworked: When Work Becomes Too Much,”

Feeling overworked is a psychological state that has the potential to affect attitudes,

behavior, social relationships, and health both on and off the job. Information from our

focus groups suggested that feeling overworked is often an acute condition, which may

largely subside once work demands decrease, rather than a chronic condition—though

for some employees it is clearly an ever-present feeling. (2001, p. 6)

As may be expected, employees with poorer-quality jobs and less control express the most

dissatisfaction.

The kinds of things that lead to poorer jobs include less job autonomy, more wasted

time, fewer learning opportunities, the lack of affordable health insurance, and less job secu-

rity. Less-supportive workplaces, characterized by inadequate materials and equipment,

inadequate support from people at work, inadequate flexibility to manage work and family

responsibilities, and lack of respect, also add up to feeling overworked and unappreciated.

Overworked employees reported more work–life conflict, loss of sleep, higher levels of stress,

poorer coping skills, less successful personal relationships, and health problems and were

more likely to neglect themselves than were workers who said they were generally not feeling

overworked.

What are the implications for employers? Several categories of concern include

• workplace safety

• job performance

• retention (keeping workers)

• health care costs

An extensive study titled “Staying Ahead of the Curve 2003: The AARP Working in Retirement

Study” (2003) of workers ages 45–74 found that they most wanted

1. A friendly work environment

2. A chance to use skills and talents

3. A chance to do something worthwhile

4. Respect from co-workers

5. The opportunity to learn something new

The main conclusion is that workers 45 and older treasure their work as a way to connect with

others and to contribute to society, and they have practical concerns—such as making money.

Work Ethic Work ethic is the degree of dedication or commitment to work. Commitment refers to the

degree to which an individual identifies with and is involved in a particular activity or organi-

zation (Goldsmith, 1993). Work ethic is alive, well, and even flourishing in the United States

(Brokaw, 1999). Here are the typical hours worked by various populations, according to a

report from Bright Horizons Family Solutions in Watertown, Massachusetts,

• United States’ employees average 1,966 hours a year.

• Japan’s employees average 1,899 hours a year.

• England’s employees average 1,731 hours a year.

306 chapter 10

• Sweden’s employees average 1,552 hours a year.

• Norway’s employees average 1,399 hours a year.

Work ethic is part of an individual’s value orientation and, hence, is linked to managerial

behavior. Individuals who adhere to a strong work ethic appear to be more polite, responsible,

and conservative; they also tend to resist social change and be rigid (Furnham, 1987; Tang &

Tung, 1988). Predictability, discipline, and order are also associated with a strong work ethic

(Feather, 1984).

Case Study driven Professionals “Driven professionals possess tunnel vision when it comes to getting jobs done with all due speed and effectiveness. They’re very impatient with any obstacle or anyone who gets in the way of reaching the desired outcome. One doctor admitted that he became frustrated with those who got in the way of his crossing

things off his list—who prevented him from finishing a task when he wanted to do it or assembling the resources necessary to purchase state-of-the-art medical technology. This was also true when he was home and his young children didn’t achieve what he felt they should achieve . . . ”

Source: DeLong, T. J. (2011). Flying without a net. Boston, MA: Harvard Business Review Press.

The concept of the work ethic has been redefined based on the switch to the knowledge

economy. The new workplace requires specific skills (often online-related) and a great deal

of employee discretion. Many organizations reward employees who have the ability to inter-

pret and respond to change, including the unpredictable moods and actions of other people.

Thus, discipline remains an important attribute, but striving to learn, to conquer new prob-

lems, and to find solutions are more likely to generate success than is dutiful drudge work.

“The knowledge economy gives us not only the opportunity but also the obligation to reunite

work with independent thinking, self-expression, and even joy” (Postrel, 1998, p. A10). Even

Scott Adams, the creator of the comic strip “Dilbert,” which pokes fun at the workplace, says,

“I’m not at all sad about the state of work right now. I think people are generally happier than

they’ve been in a long time” (Stafford, 1998, p. 2E).

As work ethic is based on values, adherence or nonadherence to a work ethic is a form

of self-expression and definition. People develop a work ethic or not depending on what they

feel is important and if it is of a driven nature then inborn temperament plays a role as well.

Educators and parents influence the development of work ethic in children by rewarding work

performance. The overall culture, the economy, and work environments further contribute to

the development and the sustenance of a work ethic.

Workaholism and Vacations Workaholism refers to the inability to stop thinking about work and doing work, and

the  feeling that work is always the most pleasurable part of life. Work satisfies the need

to be recognized and approved of in a way that the other realms of life cannot satisfy.

Managing Work and Family 307

Most workers are not workaholics. True workaholics may have trouble sleeping, relax-

ing, going on vacation, or spending time alone or with their children and spouse. Here is

an example:

Publishing consultant Aaron Sigmond and his wife recently went to the Hudson Valley

in upstate New York for a 10-day vacation. After a grueling work schedule, the couple

needed time to regenerate and commune with the breezy Catskill Mountains, the

lulling flow of the Hudson River and the gently sprawling fields of nearby farms. The

only problem: They couldn’t stand it. Four days before the vacation ended, they left

the Victorian house they had rented. “The peace and quiet and solitude just wore on

me,” says Mr. Sigmond. “It was just the most stressful vacation ever.” (Sandberg,

2003, p. B1)

In an essay, the author Mark Kingwell says, “The values of work are still dominant in far too

much of life; indeed, these values have exercised their own kind of linguistic genius, creating

a host of phrases, terms, and labels that bolster, rather than challenge, the dominance of

work . . . ‘Don’t fire me! I don’t want to be out of work!’ Work looms larger than ever . . . ” (July

2011, “The Language of Work,” Harper’s Magazine, p. 19).

Twelve percent of American workers never take vacations, and the United States

does not have a nationally mandated vacation policy for workers. U.S. workers effectively

give back over $21 billion a year to their employers by not taking vacations (Sandberg,

2003). Some blame it on capitalism, materialism, competition, worry about job security,

and upward mobility. Vacations can seem like a step backward for workaholics: they feel

they will fall behind. Others find work stress to be predictable, even enjoyable; vacations

involve a lot of unknowns. During tough economic times, some fear that if they leave

for a vacation their job won’t be there when they return and this fear sometimes becomes

a reality.

Case Study Jared Jared was an engineer who had worked for a firm for 15 years as a project manager. He went on a family vacation for a week and on his return was met at the front door of the office building where he was employed and told he was fired and to return at 4 p.m. and a box of his belongings would be brought to him. He had no warn- ing. He was not allowed to go to his office to clean out his desk or to say good-bye to co-workers. It was a shock. He drove around

and finally went to a coffee shop where he spent the day before returning for his box which had in it family photos and a few odds and ends. He found out later that others had been let go in the week that he was gone. The firm gave him two months severance pay and it took him four months to find another job. Jared has since changed jobs two times and has not found a job as much as he liked the first one.

In terms of Freud’s definition of happiness as a combination of work and love, the con-

stant workaholic may be neglecting the “love” side of life in favor of the “work” side. One myth

about workaholics is that they are the most productive workers in a home or in an organiza-

tion. This is usually not true because workaholics are addicted to work, not necessarily to goal

308 chapter 10

attainment. They lack organization, and their energy is not channeled properly. Workaholics

often suffer from fatigue and stress, and may experience health problems from a lack of

exercise and rest. They also lack a sense of balance, and this deficiency may spill over into a

failure to understand why other employees or family members do not also work constantly.

In short, workaholics may be difficult to live with at home or at the office. A hard worker

is different from a workaholic. A hard worker realizes that work is just one part of life, tolerates

others’ mistakes and her or his own, stays on top of work schedules, cares about others, and

can choose to stop working—such as to take lunch breaks without worrying.

Gerson (2010) says we need flexible families as well as flexible workplaces to

function smoothly. Workaholics truly need flexible families and understanding about their

need for over-achievement and their inability to stop thinking about work (DeLong, 2011).

As a remedy for tunnel vision as a form of workaholism, Thomas DeLong recommends

seeking a range of experiences, to look within organizations for numerous opportunities

for learning and growth, volunteer, and talk with others. The answer is not to isolate but

to reach out.

The case study about Jared reinforces that taking a vacation may be taking a chance but

this is a rare occurrence and, of course, the layoffs were about to happen in his company,

his vacation had nothing to do with it. More and more companies are redefining their vaca-

tion policies and realize the value of vacations. When this book went to press, Netflix with 800

employees was offering three to five weeks off a year. The Motley Fool, a financial services

company, was offering four weeks on average. Traditionally, employees had to work at a

company for six months before they were given paid vacation time but a growing number of

employers are offering “no vacation” or “open-ended time off” policies that leave it up to the

employee or employer to agree on how much vacation is right. There is also more variance

in when the employee can take a vacation. Some employees find this liberating while others

would like more structure. What would be your preference?

The Three Ps: Procrastination, Parkinson’s Law, and Pareto’s Principle In contrast to a workaholic who constantly works or thinks about work, a procrastinator

puts off work and postpones decisions. Procrastinators are difficult to work with because

they seldom finish tasks on time and consequently often disappoint their co-workers

and employers. They are difficult to live with too because they often forget or fail to meet

family obligations.

Everyone procrastinates now and then, but procrastination is excessive when it is

pervasive across all arenas of life. When this happens, procrastination is more than a bad

habit—it has become a lifestyle. Procrastination is a way to escape responsibility and resist

the structure of growing up. It may be related to a fear developed in early childhood or to an

unresolved conflict.

Sometimes, a person procrastinates because he or she really does not want to do

whatever is required. A child who dislikes playing the piano will delay practicing. A child

who continually avoids practicing may be signaling that he is no longer interested. In that

case, perhaps the piano lessons should stop and another activity or free time be substituted.

Someone who constantly procrastinates on work assignments may be in the wrong job and

would be happier elsewhere.

Managing Work and Family 309

Some individuals (e.g., students putting off studying for a test and pulling an all-night

cramming session) say they like the feeling of rushing to meet deadlines and the excitement of

the last-minute push; they insist that they perform best when living on the edge. This approach

may work for them some of the time, but what if others are relying on them for information

(e.g., a team report for a class), there is a family crisis, or they become ill the night before

an assignment is due? Procrastination can be overcome if the procrastinators are willing to

change by rearranging their approach to assignments and rewarding themselves for planning

ahead and being on time.

Another concept related to the organization of work is called “Parkinson’s law.” In 1957,

the English historian C. Northcote Parkinson studied the Royal Navy and found that the more

people hired, the more work they created, without necessarily increasing the organization’s out-

put. His observation led to the formulation of Parkinson’s law, which states that a job expands

to fill the time available to accomplish the task. This law illustrates the elasticity of time and work.

Parkinson’s law is evident in people who have a lot of time on their hands. They may take

all day to mail a letter or to go grocery shopping. They stretch a routine task that could be

completed in half an hour into an all-day expedition.

The third P of working and its organization is the Pareto principle. Vilfredo Pareto, a 19th-

century Italian economist and sociologist, discovered that in any series of elements to be

controlled, a selected small fraction of the elements always accounts for a large fraction of

effectiveness. The Pareto principle, also known as the 80–20 rule, states that 20 percent of

the time expended usually produces 80 percent of the results, while 80 percent of the time

expended produces only 20 percent of the results. According to this principle, the bulk of an

individual’s time is wasted in low-productivity activities. The solution to this phenomenon is to

recognize that it exists and to focus more of one’s attention on the activities and relationships

that matter and to put less time and energy into things that do not.

Workforce Trends There are many trends in the workplace. An unfortunate one in recent years is the inability to

find work or having to take employment that is beneath one’s level of education and experi-

ence. Recent college graduates are struggling to find work. In 2010, total U.S. student loan

debt exceeded credit card debt and is on track to exceed $1 trillion (Dell, 2011).

Case Study amanda “Like many of the protesters at Occupy Wall Street in New York City, Amanda Vodola is young, underemployed and loaded with student debt. She spends her days running around, helping organize the movement, and her evenings bussing tables at a dine in movie theater in Brooklyn. Last spring, Vodola, 22, graduated

from Fordham University with a degree in English. ‘I grew up with this narrative that to get a good job I need to go to school,’ she says. But the job she has ‘is not enough to pay the bills.’ And the bills she’s dreading most are the ones tied to that narrative: the $30,000 she owes in college loans.”

Source: Dell, K. (2011, October). I owe you. TIME, 178(17), 42.

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In the workplace, another trend is sustainability which may refer to policies and practices

with lasting value or to going green: introducing environmentally friendly policies such as car

pooling and recycling. It refers to providing lasting quality impact. In sustainable organiza-

tions, the management takes the leadership position that home, work, and community would

benefit from green policies and incentives. It reflects their ethics as a company. A payoff can

be that being green helps bolster recruitment efforts and provides an environmentally friendly/

healthy workplace. A specific example is of NRG Systems, a Vermont company, which offered

$1,000 bonus each year to employees who bought a Toyota Prius. Of the 85 employees,

26 purchased a car the first year (Spors, 2008).

Another trend is simply more people working more than one job in a variety of settings or

working longer hours. A person may be an administrative assistant by day and a waitress on

nights and weekends. The average full-time job, although officially 40 hours, is in reality about

47 hours per week, according to Juliet B. Schor’s book The Overworked American (1991),

and can go to the extreme of 60 hours or more. Workers also report long commutes, chirping

cell phones, never-ending emails or twitters, and lost weekends. The “lost weekends” concept

(time spent reading reports, grading papers, answering email, etc.) illustrates the blurring of

the distinction between work and leisure.

Another trend is that the workforce is aging as the baby boomers move forward through

life. The Age Discrimination Act of 1967 protects most workers ages 40 and older from dis-

crimination in the workplace.

A worldwide trend is a redefinition of work space, whether at home or in more tra-

ditional workplaces. The move is away from individual offices and cubicles into shared

spaces and shared computers (many on wheeled tables), workstations, and so forth. It’s

all about mobility. “People are working in a variety of different settings. They’re moving

constantly, both within the office and outside the office” (Powers, 1998, p. 21). An early

experimenter with reducing office space was Anderson Worldwide, which reduced the

office-to-employee ratio from 1:1 to 1:5.3 in its San Francisco office, thus saving on the

cost of rent, furnishings, and utilities. As more and more companies scatter their employees

around the globe, they will be relying more on technology to bring people together rather

than on a physical space.

Mobility is also evidenced by people moving from job to job, and therefore from loca-

tion to location, more often today than in the past, according to Phyllis Moen of Cornell

University. She says that “The lock-step template of American life is obsolete. . . . This has

enormous consequences for policy, employers, communities, families, and individual lives”

(Powers, 1998, p. 14). For young people, job hopping is very common. A typical American

holds 8.6 different jobs between the ages of 18 and 32, with most changes occurring

before the age of 27, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. The point at which a

worker on the rise becomes a worker who’s consigned to history is coming earlier in peo-

ple’s careers, usually around age 44, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. To avoid

plateauing, workers are encouraged to try new projects, mentor younger workers, take

assignments abroad, and/or get fresh training so as to keep their careers lively, interesting,

and challenging.

In the United States and in other developed countries, the workforce is “graying,”

meaning more workers are getting older. By 2015, older workers (55 and up) will account

for 20 percent of the workforce. Studies show that older workers are actively engaged in

Managing Work and Family 311

constructing their work lives and their identities as workers (Work, Life, and Social Class,

2004). People’s careers are no longer linear with a distinct beginning and ending. Rather,

they are unpredictable and involve many phases in and out of employment or with different

employers.

Another trend is downshifting: opting for a simpler life, usually less pay, less stress, more

time, in a more personally satisfying occupation. Basically, in downshifting, a person decides

that more is not always better. The individual’s reduced income is offset by a more frugal

lifestyle. Obviously, downshifting is not for everyone. Someone whose self-worth is measured

by status and money would have a hard time turning his or her back on a large income. So,

who should consider downshifting? Not those who truly love their career and enjoy consuming

to the hilt:

But others, like Jacque Blix, just feel trapped in that world. For years, an unhappy

Ms. Blix couldn’t leave the AT&T marketing job that brought her a good salary and

the status of succeeding in a nontraditional role for women. “I felt if I took less money

I’d be taking a step backward and denying my potential as a human being,” she says.

Eventually, she and her husband, David Heitmiller, a corporate product manager, did

downshift, saving 30% of their income over three years to finance their corporate exits.

They tell their tale in their book, Getting a Life. “We saw that we could live with less

income and still be happy,” she says. (Lancaster, 1998, p. B1)

Home-Based Work and Telecommuting A final trend to discuss is the return to home-based work and the increase in the amount

of telecommuting. This may be through an employer or may be through self-employment;

and, as stated earlier, there is a rise in the number of self-employed. The term “home-based

work” in some ways is outdated because so much of work is done at airports, on commuter

trains, and in all kinds of locations. This section refers to work done outside of a traditional

office or workplace.

Case Study Sophia Sophia is 49 years old and a public relations manager with clients. She works out of her home to save money on renting an office space. Since she and her husband are empty-nesters their home has extra space for home offices, but she prefers to go out. So every weekday she takes her laptop and heads for Panera’s, a restaurant that provides free wi-fi and an atmosphere that she

likes. Sophia knows a lot of the regular diners and the staff. She gets coffee and something to eat and settles into her favorite spot and stays there for hours. She writes, meets clients, responds to radio interviews, nearly everything and she says this way she is around other people which she likes and doesn’t have to worry about giving directions to her house or cleaning it up.

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The information age, with its emphasis on online information and communication, has made

it possible for more people to work from many locations, but this trend is not without its

problems.

It didn’t take Tony Bono long to figure out he had a problem with telecommuting: “My

mailman was scared of me,” he says. A new job assignment had led him to start work-

ing from his Cherry Hill, N.J. home. But Mr. Bono soon grew so lonely that he found

himself waiting for the mailman each day and racing to greet him: “Hey! Hi, Tom, how

are you doing? Want to come in and have a drink?” Mr. Bono recalls saying. He wasn’t

surprised when the postman started avoiding him. It’s an ironic twist on corporate

America’s march toward telecommuting: A small but significant number of foot soldiers

dislike the trend. (Shellenbarger, 2006, p. D1)

Working from home has implications for interpersonal relations including family relations and

involves management considerations such as the arranging of child care and the allocation

of time, technology, money, and space (Tausig & Fenwick, 2001). Researchers have found

that for women the overwhelming reason given for working from home is the ability to take

care of young children while earning an income. Another reason is the difficulty finding outside

employment has forced many people to be creative. A nine-state study concluded that

Demands imposed through the complexity of the family were related to increased intru-

sions by means of telephone calls and space conflicts, illustrating that homebased

workers and their families must learn to manage the realities of overlapping tasks.

Resources can undoubtedly mediate these intrusions if the family can afford a separate

office or work space for the business, or a phone line dedicated exclusively to the busi-

ness, but when financial resources do not allow additions such as these, the throughput

process of the home-based worker and his or her family becomes even more important.

(Fitzgerald & Winter, 2001, p. 88)

Work meetings can take place anywhere.

Managing Work and Family 313

So having enough space is a key factor in success. Another factor is time management.

Methods such as the dovetailing and overlapping of activities described earlier in this

book come into play as home-based workers juggle their work and family responsibilities.

Owen, Carsky, and Dolan provide this insight into home-based work:

Even the choice of a home-based occupation over a market job may reflect a commit-

ment or priority by the worker to meeting the needs of the family, especially when family

demands are high, such as when young children are present. The degree to which

home-based workers can control the various aspects of time may influence the satisfac-

tion derived from the work and from the family/work interface. (1992, p. 136)

The stereotype of a home-based business is a female-owned enterprise, such as a child

care center. But that is inaccurate; a recent survey revealed that 59 percent of home-based

workers are male. The typical person is about 44 years old, married, and employed in a

white-collar profession such as marketing, sales, or technology—for example, software engi-

neering. Kathryn Stafford, a professor at Ohio State University who worked on a study with

Barbara Rowe of Purdue and George Haynes of Montana State, said: “We found that most

home-based workers are men performing traditional work in fields like sales and construc-

tion” (DeLisser & Morse, 1999). They also found that home-based business owners were

better educated and more affluent than the rest of the population. A further finding was that

88 percent of home-based owners sell most of their products or services within their state or

an hour’s drive from their homes. For example, in Ohio, home-based work contributes more to

the state’s personal income rolls than farming does.

In the late 1990s, 30 million Americans were working from home at least some of the

time, the highest share being among those ages 18–29 (Allen & Moorman, 1997) and the

trend continues. Are home-based businesses the nirvana people hoped for?

In some cases yes, but in others a number of problems are surfacing:

Many home-office workers feel as though they’re working in a vacuum. They feel

isolated and struggle with a perception that they’re not quite “legit.” They lament the

loss of support staff, employer-provided educational opportunities, health insurance,

pension plans, and paid vacation time. They scramble to find suitable places to meet

with clients. Those who run businesses also run the risks of running into zoning and IRS

audits. (Allen & Moorman, 1997, p. 57)

So, home-based businesses, like the other trends, have their pluses and minuses. The next

few decades will determine how these trends play out; which continue, which don’t; and in

what ways they will be altered as people search for new options. One switch is the inclusion

of more office space and built-in desks in new home construction, although it should be noted

that the trend toward wireless communication is affecting home space in other ways.

The bedroom will become the new frontier of multitasking, as growth in wireless tech-

nology allows work to expand into once-sacred domains of the home. Homes with

wireless networks will grow to nine million in the coming year. . . . Mark Chernis takes

his laptop to bed—a habit he says brings him and his wife closer. In the past, they had

to go to separate rooms wired for Internet use to go online after hours. “It used to be,

‘Good night, Honey, I’ll see you later.’ And I’d get this sad face from her,” Mr. Chernis

314 chapter 10

says. Now, he and his wife retire together “and she falls asleep on my shoulder while I’m

working on my laptop,” says Mr. Chernis, president of Princeton Review. Similarly, if his

wife wakes up in the night, she grabs a laptop they keep by their bed and browses the

Internet. (Shellenbarger, 2003, December, p. D1)

Volunteer Work So far this chapter has focused on paid work. Another type of work that requires time, energy,

and commitment is volunteer work, or work that does not generate pay. About half of all

Americans volunteer each year in the nonprofit sector. This compares to about 13 percent

in Germany and 19 percent in France. Regarding charitable donations, Germany leads the

group, followed by the United States, and France (“Review & Outlook,” 1999). Canadians

volunteer in large numbers, especially in the area of community service.

People perform volunteer work for a number of reasons, but one of the most important is

their sense of social consciousness. They want to contribute to their family’s well-being (e.g.,

by volunteering for Boy Scouts or Girl Scouts or the PTA) or to contribute to others and to the

community. Many of the volunteers are stay-at-home mothers who head school committees

and run large volunteer organizations. These experiences will be useful to them when they

re-enter the workforce as most stay-at-home mothers plan to do at some point.

Volunteer work also provides a sense of self-worth and self-esteem, and heightened

social and leadership skills. It is of enormous economic value to society. It provides social

cohesion and solidarity. Recognizing the worth to the community, some businesses and

government agencies allow workers to take time off to perform volunteer work such as tutor-

ing or helping with school events. They may actively build partnerships. Volunteerism used to

conjure up the image of a kindly lady volunteering at the hospital or through her garden club.

Today, volunteers come from all ages, races, and income levels.

High schools and universities are offering courses and credit for volunteer service. The

courses teach students how to work as volunteers and managers of organizations that have

goals other than making a profit. For example, Donald Tobias and Stephen Watson teach

such a course at Cornell University. The goal of their course is to introduce students to the

management practices and principles in public sector and nonprofit organizations.

“At Cornell we aren’t just turning out students who will be actively involved in careers,”

Tobias says, “We also are helping to produce people who will be citizens in their

communities. Many of our students may become members of boards of directors for

not-for-profit organizations, so they need to know how those organizations work and

how to think strategically about management decisions and strategies based on the

mission of the organization.” (Mackin, 1998, p. 10)

Leisure Earlier in this chapter under the section titled “Workaholism and Vacations,” the subject of

vacations was introduced because workaholics have a difficult time taking vacations, but the

subject of leisure is much bigger than simply vacations. Leisure is defined as freedom from

time-consuming activities, tasks, duties, or responsibilities. As seen in the last chapter, studies

show that we have more leisure time today than in the past, but it doesn’t feel like it.

Managing Work and Family 315

Critical Thinking

Is it possible to have too much leisure? What amount of vacation per year do you think is the right amount? Universities vary in their policies about when they are shut down. A typical time is between Christmas and New Year, and some colleges are shutting down for the whole of Thanksgiving week. What do you think of these policies? If you live in a country other than the United States, what are typical days that your university is shut down for holidays and/or vacation time?

By almost every measure, Europeans do work less and relax more than Americans.

According to data from the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development,

Americans work 25 percent more hours each year than the Norwegians or the Dutch.

The average retirement age for European men is 60.5, and it’s even lower for European

women. Our vacations are pathetically short by comparison: The average U.S. worker

takes 16 days for vacation each year, less than half that typically taken by the Germans

(35 days), the French (37 days) or the Italians (42 days) . . . For most Americans, work is

a rock-solid source of life happiness. Happy people work more hours each week than

unhappy people, and work more in their free time as well. (Brooks, 2007)

Why is there a difference between countries? Labor experts say powerful unions, especially

in Europe, have negotiated hard for more vacation time and have enjoyed political support as

time off has become intertwined with economics.

Though it’s a matter of intense debate, some European governments argue that the com-

bination of more holiday time and a shorter workweek translates into more jobs. U.S. workers,

on the other hand, have focused more on pay increases, accepting less time off as part of

the bargain (Shapiro, 1999). “We’ve got a cultural problem with leisure time,” says Herbert

Rappaport, a professor at Temple University. “We are an overworked, overtired, underplea-

sured culture” (Sandberg, 2003, p. B1).

Weekends are usually times of increased leisure. Studies indicate that men have more

leisure time for themselves and spend less time on weekend household chores than women

do. Interests and hobbies garner the maximum weekend leisure activity time for both men

and women; playing with children comes second. In a study of 1,404 men and 1,623 women,

researchers found that men were more likely than women to respond to overload by cutting

back (Higgins, Duxbury, & Lyons, 2010).

Leisure time is interspersed throughout people’s lives (such as reading, going to plays

and school events, jogging, text-messaging or spending time with family and friends) and is

formally designated in vacation time. The amount of time typically designated for vacations

varies considerably by country. As previously stated, the United States has no required-

vacation laws.

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summarysummary Work and family are two of the most important domains in our lives. We have to figure out ways to balance these domains or roles and find fulfillment. Flexible families and workplaces ease the balancing act. If an individual is so heavily involved in one domain that it impedes the other, it is called involvement balance.

This chapter emphasized the importance of social sup- port meaning the support of family, friends, and co-workers, in combating work stress and finding a life balance. It also focused on the problems of managing work and family life roles and provided solutions to work–family conflicts. The positive aspects of work were explored along with the stressors associated with it.

In the United States and other developed nations, the work- force is “graying,” meaning the proportion of older workers in the total workforce is higher. Employers and governments are re-examining child care, elder care, vacation, and family medical leave policies to accommodate employees’ needs.

Many countries offer paid leave for personal and family rea- sons. More than a dozen countries offer paid paternity leave with Sweden being one of the leaders in offering substantial time off for child care. The U.S. Family and Medical Leave Act of 1993 is an example of a national work–life policy for men and women.

About 60 percent of the U.S. workforce is eligible to benefit from it; but because it offers unpaid leave, fewer than one would expect actually take it.

The three Ps—procrastination, Parkinson’s law, and Pareto’s principle—are important to understanding the organization of time and work. So are the work ethic and workaholism. Today’s work- force includes more women and members of minority groups as well as more home-based workers. Telecommuting can have its drawbacks including an increased sense of isolation. Americans have surpassed the Japanese in average number of work hours. Researchers have found that the benefits to the employer of having work–life-friendly policies are increased company loyalty and employee retention.

Not all work is paid; volunteer work is an important part of many people’s lives. Just as work is changing, so is leisure. Indeed the amount of leisure is increasing, but it does not feel like it to many people. Legally required vacation days vary worldwide. The United States does not have legally required vacation days, but they exist in Finland, Sweden, Australia, Colombia, and Japan, to name a few. About 12 percent of American workers never take vacations. Too little time off and too much responsibility can lead to stress, the subject of the next chapter.

In The Harried Leisure Class (1970), Linder argues that high hourly earnings make time

so precious that many people cannot afford the time it takes to enjoy life on a daily basis and

are forced to eat meals on the run, cut short the foreplay of lovemaking, attend short religious

services, and browse or glance at books rather than read them. For example, Neil, a college

professor, says he reads movie and book reviews but rarely has time to see a movie or read a

book cover to cover. By reading reviews, Neil can still converse with his colleagues. He is not

distressed by his busy lifestyle and says that at this stage in his life he really values work over

leisure. He spends most of his time in work-related pursuits most of which he finds stimulating

and pleasurable.

In view of such approaches to work and leisure, what part does leisure play in human

life? People must answer this question for themselves. One person’s idea of leisure is sewing;

another prefers to play tennis. Leisure was once mostly associated with social or recreational

activities (e.g., snowmobiling, boating, swimming), but it now includes relaxation and medi-

tation as well as more lively pursuits. In its broadest context, leisure is a state of mind. Not

everyone has the time or the resources to go elsewhere to enjoy recreation and leisure. Thus,

there is a growing worldwide recognition of the need to provide leisure facilities such as parks

and fitness trails in crowded urban areas.

Managing Work and Family 317

termskey terms commitment 305 compromise 297 downshifting 311 effort 303 involvement balance 293

leisure 314 Pareto principle 309 Parkinson’s law 309 procrastinator 308 volunteer work 314

work 303 workaholism 306 work ethic 305

questions 1. How do you envision the workplace/office of the future? The

question arises, “Where is the workplace?” As “food” for thought, Robert Wong, who is Google’s Executive Creative Director, says whenever they have a big problem to solve in the Creative Lab they go to a neighborhood bar, grab a grilled cheese sandwich and some chunky fries and go at it” (The United States of Design, Oct. 2011, FASTCOMPANY, p. 115).

2. List three ways individuals and families can help resolve work–family conflict. Which one do you think is most effective?

3. The Russian playwright Chekhov said that life and work are inseparable. Our work is not in competition with our lives—it is merely one part of life. And in the end, we’ll be remembered for what we did with our life and how we lived it. Do you agree or disagree? Explain your answer.

4. The traditional image of volunteers and the reality of today’s volunteers are different. What is the difference?

5. What is your definition of leisure? Why would 12 percent of the American workforce never take vacations?

review questions

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I make the most of all that comes and the least of all that goes.

—Sara TeaSdale 11

Managing

Main Topics

Theoretical Frameworks Stress Research

Crises and adaptation to Stress Planning and Organizing Outsourcing decision Making and Stress The Body’s response to Stress diet, exercise, and Stress

Stress Management Type a and Type B Personalities

Techniques for reducing Stress Job Stress Burnout Stress and Nonevents Parents, Children, Stress, Burnout College Students and Stress

Fatigue The Body and Fatigue Systems Theory: Sleep, energy, and Fatigue

DiD you know that . . .?

. . . Children experience stress just as adults do.

. . . Americans, 15 and older, sleep on average 8 hours and 40 minutes per day.

StreSS and Fatigue

322 chapter 11

Coping with stressful times of the day is one of the most difficult things that families have to do. The case study shows that home builders and realtors are responding to their needs. Here is another coping example, this one focusing on the spillover from family to work:

It is a huge challenge to focus on work when something major happens in your per-

sonal life. Even under normal circumstances, employees struggle to balance personal

and work responsibilities. When personal demands skyrocket, that delicate balance can

collapse, whether the cause is happy—such as planning a wedding or preparing for

the birth of a child—or not, such as a family illness. At times, focusing on work can feel

nearly impossible. Some strategies can help: Planning, organizing and compartmental-

izing, say career advisors. (White, 2006, p. B8)

Building on the last chapter, this quote shows the interchange of work and family life and also

provides solutions in the form of strategies for dealing with stress, the subject of this chapter

along with fatigue management.

The word “stress” has many definitions, but for the purposes of this book, stress refers

to the body’s reaction to a demand, or a physical or an emotional situation that causes

imbalance. Stress usually involves a state of tension. It is considered a process rather than

an end state. A process implies that changes occur over time and across different situations.

Stress may be related to anxiety, fatigue, burnout, and decreased satisfaction with per-

sonal and work lives. It may also be linked to higher rates of absenteeism, quitting, and moving;

poorer physical and mental health; and lower rates of commitment to jobs and relationships.

Stress is as natural as breathing, but learning how to strategically handle stress is some-

thing we all have to do. Diverse family forms, more work demands, care of the chronically ill

and disabled, and other pressures on individuals and families stretch human resiliency as far

as it can go.

Managing stress, fatigue, and sleep is the subject of this chapter. Rapid information

transfer is just one example of the many stresses encountered in today’s world. Fatigue, a

concept covered extensively in early management books and courses, has re-emerged as a

significant management/wellness problem. People are not getting enough rest and relaxation.

They spend their weekends running around, getting ready for the next workweek. There is

just too much to accomplish in too little time. In addition to examining the effects of stress on

families and society, this chapter will offer suggestions on ways to manage stress and fatigue.

Case Study Hot Buttons “‘Families tell us there are two times of the day that are their hot buttons: getting ready for school and the evening with all their kids’ homework and cooking dinner,’ says Scott Thomas, national director for architecture at builder Pulte-Group Inc. Since laundry rooms are too small and most people use the back entry to their homes, ‘we’ve created the drop zone,’ says Mr. Thomas.

The drop zone is being brought into older homes, too. Wash- ington, D.C., real-estate agent Laura McCaffrey says she finds herself increasingly building them into mud rooms, hall closets or basement walls. ‘A place to actually put stuff is a much more sought-after area,’ she says. ‘A closet with a pole and hanger won’t do.’”

Source: Mitra Kalita, S. (2011, November 2). Blueprint for a New American home. The Wall Street Journal, p. D1.

Managing Stress and Fatigue 323

theoretical Frameworks There are several useful frameworks for understanding how stress affects individual and fami-

lies. The Process of Social Stress Theory says that a broad array of conditions combine over

time to create a process of stress. Three main domains are:

1. Sources of stress

2. Mediators of stress

3. Manifestations of stress (physical, mental, relational)

A way to diminish stress is to have social supports (as resources) to fall back on when times

get hard or when changes are occurring too rapidly. As individuals and as families “we need to

prepare ourselves for the possibility that sometimes big changes follow from small events, and

that sometimes these changes can happen very quickly” (Gladwell, 2000, p. 11).

Family ecology theory emphasizes how the family interacts with the environment. Major

sources of stress are factors outside the family like epidemics, crime, work demands, and foul

weather. People are far more sensitive to the environment than they are aware. The stress

literature tends to emphasize relational stressors, but environmental stressors are equally

important. Noise, pollution, poor lighting and ventilation, crowding, isolation, vibration, lack

of adequate parking, static, litter, car fumes, and poorly insulated and designed homes,

factories, and offices are all examples of environmental stressors. School and work are partic-

ularly stressful because these environments are central to most people’s lives, and they view

their self-worth in terms of their success or failure in these areas. Ray, a university vice presi-

dent, has an office overlooking a construction site. He says the pounding starts at 8 a.m. and

goes constantly until 5 p.m., and this is the prognosis for the next two years. He is definitely

stressed. How can he talk with people or write reports under these conditions?

Critical Thinking

Pauline used to work in advertising for the local newspaper. Now, she has another full- time job, but her son’s school keeps asking her to handle the advertising for their annual holiday bazaar. She wants to say no. Should she? What are her options?

Critical Thinking

How do you define stress? What causes stress to you? Think about what affects you emotionally and physically. What would you like to do differently?

324 chapter 11

In family systems theory, the family is viewed as a system where each member influences

the others. As in any system, boundaries need to be set.

People exhibit stress in lots of ways: replying angrily to a child, experiencing road rage,

and showing impatience to service providers. Daily hassles that build up stress include annoy-

ing practical problems, disappointments, disagreements, and family and financial concerns

(Garrison, Malia, Norem, & Hira, 1994). Contributing to this everyday stress are the new

technologies and constant streams of information. For example, owing to instant messaging,

messages that once took weeks to arrive are now immediate and require instant responses.

The pressure to respond and participate is enormous.

Clutter is a source of a great deal of stress. So, getting rid of mental as well as physi-

cal clutter is a de-stressor. According to the federal government’s National Institute for

Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), more than half the workers in the United States

view their job as a major stressor. Although this is a U.S. study, the author would like to point

out that students and faculty around the world have said that managing stress and fatigue is

a significant problem in their lives. Too much stress is not just a North American problem; it is

a worldwide problem.

Stress Research A person who is stressed experiences several stages or levels of stress. For example, getting

ready to give a speech involves many stages: preparation, writing, rehearsal, and delivering

the speech. Stress may occur at any or all of these stages.

It will be stated several times in this chapter that stress is inevitable. Although there

seems to be more stress today than ever before, stress is timeless. It exists in all societies no

matter how primitive. In fact, the potential for stress exists whenever one person interacts with

Technology can lead to more stress or stress relief.

Source: Creative Eye/MIRA.com

Managing Stress and Fatigue 325

another or with the environment. An approaching hurricane or tornado is stressful, and so is

an approaching belligerent ex-boyfriend or ex-girlfriend.

As these examples suggest, stress may occur when a person feels threatened or scared.

When the potential for harm is high or people feel they lack the resources to reduce the threat,

stress increases. Stressors are situations or events that cause stress.

Stressors can be categorized as internal (self-generated), relational, or environmental.

Here is a list of potential stressors; check off all that has happened to you in the last five years.

Starting a Job ___________

Quitting a Job ___________

Addition of a Family Member ___________

Loss of a Family Member ___________

Engagement or Wedding ___________

Sudden Unexpected Change ___________

Moving ___________

Ongoing Family Conflict ___________

Disappointing Event ___________

Roommate or Family Hassles ___________

Graduation from High School ___________

School Problems ___________

Caring for a Family Member ___________

Significant Illness (self or someone close) ___________

Stress can have positive or negative causes and is culturally and personally defined.

What is stressful in India may not be considered stressful in the United States and vice versa.

Individuals vary in their reactions to stress, too. What is acutely stressful for one person may

not affect another at all.

Stress also varies in degree from everyday, normal stress, such as minor disagreements

with roommates or family members, to more prolonged serious stress that can lead to trouble-

some symptoms. Telltale signs of stress, besides those already mentioned, include social

isolation and sudden changes in appearance such as disheveled clothing and significant

weight gain or loss.

Stress can be explained within the context of systems theory because stress comes from

a variety of sources (inputs) and has a variety of outcomes (outputs). As it is a process, stress

is generally considered a throughput, but stress can also be an input as it enters the system,

or an output because one person’s actions may cause stress in another person. For example,

worrying is a process that is stress-producing. The cause of the worry may be an outside

stressor that is input to the system. What the worrier finally decides to do may transfer the

stress to another person. For example, the retiring chairperson of a committee may gleefully

pass on a thick file of past committee business and procedures to the incoming chairperson

and in so doing pass the stress on to the other person.

There is evidence of gender difference in reacting to stress. Men’s blood pressure rises

more sharply in response to stress than does women’s. But women react to more stressors

and a greater variety of them; they report feeling stress more often, perhaps because they see

daily life with a wider scope (Adler, Kalb, & Rogers, 1999).

326 chapter 11

Crises and Adaptation to Stress Crises, which are events that require changes in normal patterns of behavior, often cause

stress. Getting a flat tire while driving to work is a crisis. The driver must deviate from her

normal pattern and fix the tire. How the driver reacts to the crisis will depend on many fac-

tors—the time, her expertise at changing tires, whether she has a spare tire or not, how far

she is from a service station, and so forth.

Several researchers have developed models and scales that illustrate how individuals and

families adapt to crises. These models and scales show the systematic interaction of crises,

resources, pileup, and adaptation. Stress overload, pileup, or spillover refers to the cumu-

lative effect of many stresses building up at one time. An upset employee might say, “I can’t

take it anymore, I quit!” On the home front, stress spillover may take a different sort of mode.

Case Study Stress Spillover in Couples “The term ‘stress spillover’ refers to when stress from external sources leaches into a relationship. In an ongoing longitudinal study of 300 couples in the first five years of marriage, researchers at the dating site eHarmony, found that relationship satisfaction declines when an individual talks about a bad event with a partner who isn’t supportive. And the couple is more likely to argue the next day. If the parent is supportive, the study found, relationship

satisfaction stays steady and the couple is less likely to argue. Gian Conzaga, psychologist and senior director of research and development for eHarmony in Santa Monica, Calif., says, ‘If your normal response to your partner is to not be supportive, over 20 years that will become a really big problem.’ On the other hand, sharing a good event with your partner makes you happier in the relationship, regardless of the partner’s reaction . . . ”

Source: Berstein, E. (2011, October 4). Putting the honey back in “honey, I’m home.” The Wall Street Journal, p. D4.

Using the rating scale in Table 11.1, individuals can determine how much stress they

have experienced in the past year. The originators of the scale, Holmes and Rahe, claim that

substantial stress pileup can increase the incidence of illness. Note that the highest stressor

event is the death of a spouse (100 points) and the lowest stressor event on the scale is a

minor violation of the law (11 points). Scores of 100–200 are normal, but scores over 300 are

considered high and indicative of trouble ahead.

As the Holmes and Rahe scale illustrates, stress levels can rise as a result of one major

life change or from a series of small changes. Fixing a flat tire on the way to work may not

be a big problem by itself, but as the day unfolds if the driver loses her keys, fights with her

boss, and forgets an important meeting, stress pileup can occur. The individual may feel she

cannot handle any more stress. Likewise, families experience stress pileup: too many conflict-

ing appointments and too many demands on time, energy, emotions, and money will cause

stress to build up to the point where the family cannot cope.

“When an aversive event is unpredictable, it is more upsetting and distressing than one

that is predictable,” says Prof. Richard McNally. “The 1986 shuttle explosion was pretty

jarring, but for people who remember Challenger the loss of Columbia is similar enough

to be less shocking.” Even dissimilar stressors can produce habituation. “When a lot of

Managing Stress and Fatigue 327

bad things happen you just can’t react as intensely,” Prof. Prigerson says. “Some sort

of adaptation kicks in.” Predictability, too, can lead to habituation. The human nervous

system has evolved to pay selective attention to novel and surprising stimuli and to

ignore expected and repeating ones, the better to conserve finite processing resources.

(Begley, 2003, p. B1)

David Dollahite (1991) developed the ABCD-XYZ Resource Management Model of Crisis/

Stress. His model emphasizes how individual and family decision making, adaptive coping,

and management behavior can be activated to reduce the impact of crisis/stress situations.

As shown in Figure 11.1, his model has seven key parts:

A Stressor event or situation, the stimulus that forces some response

B Coping resources

C Definition of the situation

Social Readjustment Rating Scale: The Stress of Adjusting to Change Events scale of impact Events scale of impact

death of spouse 100 Son or daughter leaving home 29

divorce 73 Trouble with in-laws 29

Marital separation 65 Outstanding personal achievement 28

Jail term 63 Spouse begins or stops work 26

death of close family member 63 Begin or end school 26

Personal injury or illness 53 Change in living conditions 25

Marriage 50 revision of personal habits 24

Fired at work 47 Trouble with boss 23

Marital reconciliation 45 Change in work hours or conditions 20

retirement 45 Change in residence 20

Change in health of family member 44 Change in schools 20

Pregnancy 40 Change in recreation 20

Sex difficulties 39 Change in church activities 19

Gain of new family member 39 Change in social activities 19

Business readjustment 39 Mortgage or loan less than $10,000 17

Change in financial state 38 Change in sleeping habits 16

death of a close friend 37 Change in number of family get-togethers 15

Change to different line of work 36 Change in eating habits 15

Change in number of arguments with spouse 35 Vacation 13

Mortgage over $10,000 31 Christmas 12

Foreclosure of mortgage or loan 30 Minor violations of the law 11

Change in responsibilities at work 29

life change is stressful. To determine how much stress you have experienced from life changes in the last year, add up the points for each of the

events listed that you have experienced in the last year. Then refer to the following chart to determine how serious your condition is. For example,

if you get married, get pregnant, buy a house, take a vacation, and celebrate Christmas, your total would be 50 + 40 + 31 + 13 + 12 = 146.

Life Change Score Chance of Illness in Next Year

0–150 37%

150–300 51%

300+ 80%

Scores of 100–200 are common; 300-plus is high.

Source: Holmes, T. H., & Rahe, R. H. (1967, August). The social readjustment rating scale. Journal of Psychosomatic Research. Reprinted with permission from Elsevier.

Table 11.1

328 chapter 11

D Demands of the situation

X Crisis or stress

Y Cognitive coping and management

Z Adaptive behavior, which entails growth and change and leads to a better fit between

the environment and the person or family

An oval surrounding ABCD-XYZ places individuals and families within their historical, eco-

nomic, technological, cultural, legal, political, religious, and natural environmental contexts.

Health (mental and physical), values, heredity, and development (stage of life cycle) form other

important contexts. Mostly what this model shows is a systems approach to stress: one area

affects another. Stress and stressors cannot be studied in isolation; they are part of an interac-

tive system involving individuals and families in a larger environmental context.

Planning and Organizing This section ties closely to Chapter 6 on Planning, Implementing, and Evaluating and Chapter

9 on Managing Time. Stress reactions can be diminished by

• Planning and organizing daily activities by making lists and segmenting your day. Try

to focus either on work or on personal life, but not on both at the same time. If under

extreme stress, reschedule appointments and push back deadlines.

DEMANDS of

situation D

C DEFINITION

of situation

B Coping

RESOURCES

Y COGNITIVE

COPING and

MANAGEMENT

Feedback

Feedback

Economy

Religion

Acting

DecidingPerceiving

Stimulus

History

Culture

Values

Health

Heredity

Technology

Development

Natural environment

A STRESSOR

event or situation

Politics

Law

Z Demand

responses ADAPTIVE BEHAVIOR Resource changes

X CRISIS

• STRESS

TIME

Figure 11.1 ABCD-XYZ resource management model of crisis/stress. Source: Dollahite, D. C. (1991). Family resource management and family stress theories: Toward a conceptual integration. Journal of Family and Economic Issues, 12(4), 265, with kind permission from Springer Science + Business Media.

Managing Stress and Fatigue 329

• Using the ABC method of time management described in Chapter 9. Reset priorities:

Decide what is most critical to accomplish which are the A-level activities, goal-oriented,

and relegate C-level activities to another day or in the evening.

• Realizing the need to set a new agenda or develop a new plan.

• Calling on a trusted friend to talk through a personal crisis.

• Finding a way to release emotions so that they don’t distract you.

Here is an example of developing a new plan:

Mr. Davila had to ratchet up his organizational skills. In the past year, he has spent about

25% of his typical work day helping his elderly parents. They evacuated to Texas right

before the storm hit. The ensuing flood destroyed about 70% of their home, Mr. Davila

estimates. His sister also lives in New Orleans, and had to deal with rebuilding her own

heavily damaged home after the flood. Responsibility for their parents fell primarily to

Mr. Davila. His tasks included helping them sell what remained of their home, finding

them new housing in Atlanta, and helping them secure a loan for the new home . . .

At the same time, his clients depend on him and he didn’t want to let them down. His

solution: Hyperorganization. (White, 2006, p. B8)

His hyperorganization involved writing out a plan for the next day at the end of each day. At

night when he was home he made a list of telephone calls that needed to be made to help

his parents. He created spreadsheets with phone numbers and names. So, evening became

family time and during the day he dealt with work issues.

Outsourcing One way to adapt to stress is to try to reduce it. To lessen stress, Americans increasingly are

outsourcing traditional homemaking and child care functions, a trend driven by three factors:

more women working, an older population, and a larger middle class. Outsourcing is defined

as paying someone else to do one’s work. Seventy percent of the U.S. population is classified

as middle class based on their income.

In the United States most adult women work outside the home. About 37 percent drop

out of the workforce for an average of 2.2 years (Hymowitz, 2007).

Outsourcing is a logical extension of David Ricardo’s 1817 theory of comparative

advantage. Individuals, no less companies, do best when they focus on activities in

which they can add the most value, and outsource other activities to specialists. And

since housework has traditionally not been counted as an economic activity, the impact

on the economy of extending outsourcing into the huge household-services sector will

be massive. (Sheth & Sisodia, 1999)

The potential benefits of outsourcing include generating more employment and higher tax

revenues, putting more individual effort into higher work productivity, and investing remaining

time into hobbies or other preferred activities. The following are some examples of activities

and tasks that are being outsourced:

• Meal preparation/cooking: increased use of restaurants, home delivery, takeout, personal

chefs, and prepared foods from supermarkets.

• Child care, elder care (including home-based nursing), and pet care including pet walking

or in-house care.

330 chapter 11

• Shopping: personal shoppers, buying over the Internet, using services that will pick up

and deliver—such as for shoe repair, firewood, dry-cleaning, videos, and mailing pack-

ages (in short, less in-person shopping).

• Yard work, pool cleaning, interior design, and home improvements.

• Organizing. Personal service companies who rearrange closets, clean garages, or wait for

the television or computer repair person are on the rise (in the latter case much of that is

done online rather than having a person come to the house or office).

Contrary to popular belief, it is not the rich who are driving up the demand for these

services (they already have them), but the time-starved middle class who are taking outsourc-

ing to new heights. The hesitation to outsource has eased as more people have extra income

and place a higher value on their personal time. Do they want to spend it cleaning house or

mowing the lawn? Or would they prefer to pay for these services and spend their time doing

something else? How much they outsource has a great deal to do with their comfort level with

the idea, a subject to be explored next.

Comfort Zones and Internal and external stress Stress is present in all human relationships and activities and only becomes harmful when there

is a resource imbalance and rebounding is thwarted. Stress reduction is a means of restoring

balance in lives. As mentioned in Chapter 2, in systems terminology the return to balance is

called homeostasis. When a system becomes unbalanced, the homeostasis mechanism is

triggered, and an attempt is made to reach a comfort zone. A comfort zone is a combina-

tion of habit and everyday expectations mixed with an appropriate amount of adventure and

novelty. It represents that space in which the level of stress feels right for the individual—the

quantity of work is enough to make life interesting, but is not so burdensome as to produce

discomfort or other undesirable effects. However, if one wants to get ahead socially or in a

profession, often one has to move out of one’s comfort zone by meeting new people and

going to new places. For example, when moving into a new neighborhood you can wait for the

neighbors to introduce themselves or you can greet them when you see them.

Professionally, you may have to go to meetings, conferences, or training in other cities.

In short, a comfort zone is a good thing, the way the lives of most of us are arranged; but

taken to the extreme it can be limiting. For example, a student from a small town in Vermont

graduated with a degree in chemistry from Dartmouth. He was accepted into graduate

school at the University of Chicago; this means getting out of his New England rural/small

town comfort zone. He is excited about the program and the city, and also a little worried;

but he is going forward.

Families and organizations have comfort zones just as individuals do. For example, a

sudden drop in the stock market may shake the comfort zones of Wall Street brokerage

firms as well as those of families who have invested in the stock market. The passage of

stress from Wall Street to the family and individual level is an example of the domino effect.

Another example of the domino effect is the impact that a company president’s personal

problems may have on the entire organization. The anxiety at the top may rumble downward

through the organization, leading to a long list of workplace problems: diminished worker

satisfaction, decreased productivity, subgroup conflict, misuse of authority, role confusion,

scapegoating, and substance abuse (Ulrich & Dunne, 1986). In situations such as this,

where stress is brought on from outside the individual, people are said to be experiencing

external stress.

Managing Stress and Fatigue 331

External stress may come from any of the following three kinds of experiences:

1. Acute major stress resulting from a recent event, such as a car accident, job loss, moving,

or death of a loved one.

2. Ongoing, role-related stress caused by chronic difficulties in one’s work or family roles.

3. Lifetime trauma stress resulting from having undergone severe trauma, such as early-

childhood loss of one or both parents or exposure to calamitous strains such as wartime

or natural disasters.

In contrast, internal stress originates in one’s own mind and body. An ambitious person

may bring on internal stress by setting too high a standard for achievement (e.g., expecting

to win every award, title, or promotion). Or a person may be stressed about her or his body

image or lack of friends. Adolescents are particularly sensitive about their physical appearance

(McLellan, Bragg, & Cacciola, 1992).

Everyone tries to balance internal and external stresses. Some stress is necessary to

drive behavior—to get individuals out of bed in the morning and get them going. In this sense,

stress serves as a motivator. Too much stress can be debilitating, however, and leads to

immobilization.

Hans selye: founder of stress researCH Despite the long-standing fascination with stress, it was not until the last century that a scien-

tific explanation for stress and its effects on the body was developed. Hans Selye, a biology

professor at the University of Montreal, is called the father or founder of stress research. He

pointed out that everyone lives with some degree of stress all the time and that complete

freedom from stress is death. Perhaps his greatest contribution was in showing that there are

two types of stress: harmful stress—called distress—and beneficial stress—called eustress

(from the Greek word eu, meaning good, as in euphoria). A person who gets on an airplane

and feels sick with fear and anxiety is distressed. A fellow passenger feeling a sense of adven-

ture and excitement is experiencing eustress. Both people are in the same situation, but they

react differently. As this example illustrates, to understand the stress reaction, one must con-

sider the person involved and not just the situation or crisis. The example also shows that not

all stress is upsetting or damaging.

As Selye (1976) wrote, normal activities, such as a game of tennis or a passionate

kiss, can produce stress without causing conspicuous damage. A woman manager says,

“I oversee over 500 volunteers where I work. My day is filled with complaints, but when I

solve issues one at a time, I get a buzz from the results. That’s when stress is energizing”

(Arnott, 2002). Another way to think of good stress is to call it “challenge stress.” Challenge

stress is related to a lot of endeavors, from public speaking to participating in races. This

kind of stress leads to things employees or participants value—such as money, skills, fame,

or promotion.

Selye studied the body’s adaptive response to stress and reported that the stress

syndrome is fundamental to virtually all higher forms of animals. He developed a compre-

hensive theory of the body’s adaptive processes, based on a three-stage general adaptation

syndrome. He was also the first scientist to identify the main organs and hormones involved

in the stress response. His concept of stress led to new avenues of research in degenerative

diseases, including coronary thrombosis, brain hemorrhage, hardening of the arteries, high

blood pressure, kidney failure, arthritis, peptic ulcers, and cancer.

332 chapter 11

His experiments led him to theorize that to eliminate stress and individuals’ adaptive

reactions would be to eliminate all change, including growth, development, and maturation.

Without stress human lives would be at complete rest—rather boring, to say the least.

Selye was often asked what could be done to reduce distress. He advised individuals to

watch for signs that they were becoming too keyed up. On a personal note, he said that he

tried to forget immediately everything that was unimportant because trying to remember too

many things is a major source of psychological stress.

Decision Making and Stress Selye’s conscious decision to forget unnecessary information was one method he used to

reduce stress. Delegating work or decisions to others is another way to reduce stress. For

example, using the services of travel agents to arrange trips or booking online can reduce

stress for a frequent traveler. In efficient households, chores are often delegated to spouse

and children. A third way to reduce stress is to postpone decisions when there is no hurry.

Most good decisions are not made in a hurry. Taking the time to think out all the alternatives

and identify the best use of resources leads to sounder decisions. In addition, individuals,

employees, and families can use many other methods to reduce stress. As an example, Toffler

(1970) observed:

I have seen a woman sociologist, just returned from a crowded, highly stimulating

professional conference, sit down in a restaurant and absolutely refuse to make any

decisions whatever about her meal. “What would you like?” her husband asked. “You

decide for me,” she replied. When pressed to choose between specific alternatives,

she still explicitly refused, insisting angrily that she lacked the “energy” to make the

decision. (p. 324)

In an employment situation, a way to reduce stress is to surround oneself with competent

workers. Consider how carefully a newly elected president, prime minister, or governor selects

the members of the cabinet. A navy admiral expressed his thoughts on the importance of

employee selection:

If you have the capability to do this, surround yourself with competent, capable people.

I found that if I have people that are working for me of this caliber, that makes my job

much easier. . . . you try to get the best performer you can get—the best qualified, the

best experienced. It gives you confidence in what they are doing and that it’s going to

be correct. (Quick, Nelson, & Quick, 1990, p. 55)

How to react to stress is a decision involving conscious problem solving. Because stress

permeates all aspects of individual and family life, everyone needs to master these problem-

solving skills: Sound decision making leads to improved lifestyles and a sense of well-being.

As Chapter 8 pointed out, potential stressors for individuals and families include poverty,

lack of adequate housing, and disabling conditions. Each of these stressors provides ample

opportunity for decision making.

Using data from the National Survey of American Life, researchers Karen Lincoln and David

Chae (2010) found that social stressors that occur inside the home such as financial strain as well

as those experienced outside the home such as unfair treatment had negative consequences for

marital quality and psychological distress. Further, they found that African Americans especially

experience mental health consequences from unfair treatment and financial strain.

Managing Stress and Fatigue 333

PsyCHologICal HardIness Hardy individuals tend to have an internal locus of control, meaning they feel responsible for

their own lives and most of what happens to them. For example, when Debra, a 35-year-old

bride, learned the morning of her wedding day that the dry cleaners had ruined her “going

away dress,” she quickly drove to the nearest clothes store, grabbed half a dozen dresses

in her size, tried them on, and bought one. Was it what she had planned? No. Was she

stressed? Yes.

Was she calm? Yes, according to store clerks who waited on her. They reported that she

bought a dress in less than 10 minutes and left happy. Debra exhibited a personality charac-

teristic called psychological hardiness. In looking back, she said, “I was so happy to be getting

married, nothing was going to bring me down.” Psychological hardiness describes people

who have a sense of control over their lives; are committed to self, work, relationships, and

other values; and do not fear change. Such people may suffer fewer health consequences

from crises or traumas.

Debra’s experience with the ruined dress was a nonnormative stressor event. These

events are unanticipated experiences that place a person or a family in a state of instability

and require creative effort to remedy. Normative stressor events are anticipated, predict-

able developmental changes that occur at certain life intervals. For most college students,

registering for classes is a normative stressor event. Flunking out of school is a nonnormative

stressor event.

Some people are extremely resilient when faced with either type of stressor event. People

who are likely to be resistant to stress have a disposition composed of the three Cs: commit-

ment, control, and challenge (Kobasa, 1982). They have a sense of purpose, are committed to

their work and their families, rely on others, and know that others count on them.

Psychologically hardy people realize that stress and challenge are normal parts of life

and that they have the resources to deal with them. Individuals who perceive less stress and

express more hardiness report significantly greater work–life satisfaction (Nowack, 1991).

Listening to music is a stress reducer.

334 chapter 11

tHeory of adaPtIve range Someone once jokingly said that the only person who really welcomes change is a wet baby.

But the theory of adaptive range suggests that some level of change is vital to everyone’s health

and well-being, although too much unwanted change can be damaging. As mentioned earlier,

everyone’s life includes a comfort zone in which certain things and relationships do not change.

Consider the example of James, a 40-year-old male who has gone through a series of

relationships and has been divorced twice. He likes to travel, eat different foods, visit with

friends, and see the latest movies. If something new is happening, he is there. He wears

“in” clothing and has the latest exercise equipment. He is highly intellectual and easily bored.

On the surface, he looks like the epitome of change and adventure, but in a later interview

James reveals that he has had the same job and house for 15 years and has a 10-year-old

Irish setter he loves.

The moral of this story is that most people opt for stability and consistency in certain areas

of their lives and opt for change or novelty in others. James opts for stability in his work and

home, but wants change in his appearance, entertainment, and relationships. As a footnote

to this story, James says he is tired of dating and is looking for a stable, lasting relationship. Is

this believable? Is he ready for change?

Before exploring further about personality and ways to manage and accommodate

change and stress, an examination of how the body responds to stress is necessary, because

stress has as its base a physiological response.

The Body’s Response to Stress Does the daily grind set your teeth on edge? Do you wake up with a sore jaw or aching teeth?

You may have habits such as grinding your teeth that can escalate into pain in the temporo-

mandibular joint, or TMJ, which joins the jaw to the skull. Thus, stress from a messy breakup

or financial crisis can affect how you sleep and how you feel when you wake up in the morn-

ing. In the case of TMJ, the most common treatment is wearing a night guard that makes

grinding more difficult. Some patients are still clenching or grinding their teeth during the day

and that will involve other appliances, treatments, physical therapy, and even the realigning of

computer keyboards and monitors so that the person holds his or her chin and jaw differently.

Pain in TMJ is just one example of what happens to a person’s body when he or she

experiences stress. The usual order is:

• First an alarm reaction takes place. The alarm response begins when the brain perceives

a threat to the sense of equilibrium. Something is not right. A loud siren, a sudden clap

of thunder, or any other such disturbance serves as an alarm signal. After the brain is

alerted, a chain of events ensues as both hormones and nerves bring about a state of

readiness. In 1932, Walter Cannon of Harvard Medical School coined the phrase “fight

or flight syndrome” to refer to this alerted condition of the body as it quickly prepares

for physical battle or energetic flight to escape the situation. A threatened or alerted

person will experience some or all of the following physical actions:

• Pupils of the eyes widen.

• Muscles tense.

• Heart races or pounds.

• Hearing sharpens.

• Breathing quickens.

Managing Stress and Fatigue 335

• Hair stands on end.

• Hands feel clammy.

• Mouth becomes dry.

These actions, when synchronized, provide support for the emergency physical response, if

needed. In the meantime, the brain is trying to process how to react next.

Second comes resistance. In this stage, the body adapts to the demand. If a woman

driving a car hears a siren, she will become alert to a threat and try to find the source of the

noise. If the siren is coming from an ambulance behind her, she will pull over to let it pass. After

the ambulance goes by, her body will relax and return to normal. Stress can be an energizer.

For instance, people go to adventure movies and car races that give them a quick, but safe,

brush with stress. Each person needs stimulation to survive. Staying in a safe, comfortable job

for 20 years is one way to keep stress and stimulation low. Changing jobs or applying for a

promotion increases stress and provides stimulation.

Third is the exhaustion stage. Once the danger and the excitement have passed, the body

may feel tired and possibly susceptible to various illnesses. A family as well as an individual

can reach the stage of exhaustion, leaving family members susceptible to various disorders

and feelings of discontent or restlessness. For example, a family may feel let down, exhausted,

or bored after a busy holiday season. Or, a student may experience letdown when finals end

and he returns home.

Diet, Exercise, and Stress Stress research and theory have generally focused on the negative aspects of stress (or

distress). Because people are eager to reduce these negative aspects, they invest in the many

stress-reducing products and regimens offered in the marketplace. But, consumers should

remember the cautionary phrase caveat emptor, meaning “may the buyer beware.” Walking is

a free and effective stress reducer.

Before investing any money in a miracle vitamin or food, consumers should know that

the best nutritional preparation for stress is a balanced and varied diet as part of a lifestyle

that includes regular exercise. No known singular food, vitamin supplement, or herbal remedy

will eliminate stress, so don’t buy into those claims. During stress, all three energy fuels—

carbohydrates, fat, and protein—are depleted. Individuals who eat well to obtain the nutrients

needed and engage in regular exercise will be better prepared to withstand the impact of

unavoidable stress than individuals with poor diets and low fitness levels.

Exercise is recommended as a necessary part of a health-promoting lifestyle and

helps increase the ability to concentrate and perform tasks. Moderate exercise can combat

excessive weight gain and has been shown to reduce stress because it raises the level of

beta-endorphins, chemicals in the brain associated with pain relief, which has a positive effect

on mood and behavior.

Innumerable research studies have been conducted on the beneficial effects of exer-

cise in reducing stress. A study of scale development by Chang, Brown, and Nitzke (2008)

found that increased physical activity and reduced dietary fat intake behavior impacted on

stress management in low-income mothers. According to the American Heart Association

(AHA), only 1 in 10 Americans follows a consistent exercise program. The AHA says that

even 10 minutes a day is beneficial. For the average healthy adult to maintain health and

reduce the risk of chronic disease, he or she should exercise five days each week for

336 chapter 11

30  minutes each day (at moderate intensity) according to updated guidelines from the

AHA and the American College of Sports Medicine. They suggest that the person do 8–10

strength-training exercises, with 8–12 repetitions of each exercise, twice a week. Moderate

intensity means working hard enough to raise the heart rate and break a sweat, yet being

able to carry on a conversation.

Stress Management Beyond managing diet and exercise, what else can a person do to reduce the effects of

stress? It appears that adults as well as children need time out meaning time to sort things out

and reflect, relax, and do something to take the mind off of the current activity.

If a person wants to be innovative, creative, and find solutions they need to set boundaries.

Other stress-reducing methods include:

• Restructuring work or reducing work demands

• Knowing when to shut down by cleaning off a desk, turning off phones and laptops

• Limiting checking email to twice or four times a day or whatever would be a reduction

• If you work at home, having a daily ritual that indicates the end of work, shutting lights off

or closing a door, walking away.

• Getting more rest and relaxation

• Outsourcing (as discussed earlier)

• Meditating and deep breathing

• Doing massage, yoga, exercise

• Seeking social support

• Scaling back on service and volunteer work

Evidence suggests that stress relief and social support can prolong life. For example, in

one study melanoma patients who received six weeks of structured group support suffered

only half as many recurrences as suffered by their peers (Cowley, Underwood, & Kalb,

1999). In another study, patients with early breast or prostate cancer who attended stress

management groups lived significantly longer than equally ill patients who weren’t in groups

(Elias, 1998).

Case Study Fast Lunches “Time-pressed executives are ordering something new for lunch— fine dining at the speed of a drive-through window. In cities from New York and Chicago to Dallas and San Francisco, many white-tablecloth establishments are catering to their booked-solid clientele with a formal lunch that takes 30 minutes, from ordering through dessert. It’s not exactly fast food. But the format does

bring a new level of efficiency to a business ritual that other- wise can go on for an hour or more . . . Chris Tamblyn, a general manager for Internet service provider Level 3 Communications, Inc. says it helps him persuade customers to commit to a lunch meeting when he tells them it’s the 30-minute lunch at Il Forrnaio, a chain of upscale Italian restaurant.”

Source: Dizik, A. (2011, June 8). Restaurants Court Diners with no time to spare: Soup to pastry in 30 minutes, hold the chitchat. The Wall Street Journal, p. D1.

Managing Stress and Fatigue 337

Often a combined approach is best. Individuals must determine the stress management

techniques that work best for them. (Additional techniques will be discussed in the next sec-

tion.) People with severe stress problems may seek individual treatment from a psychiatrist,

psychologist, or physician, or they may join a support group or counseling workshop. These

groups and workshops, which are usually offered at mental health clinics, hospitals, universi-

ties or through workplace Employee Assistance Programs (EAPs), may last from half a day

to several days. Who attends stress management programs? Men and women are almost

equally likely to feel stress, but women are almost twice as likely to seek help (Waldrop,

1993). According to Cotton (1990), three categories of individuals tend to seek assistance

with stress management:

1. People who are not experiencing any particular difficulty with stress, but are generally

health conscious. They are interested in the preventive aspects of stress.

2. People who are distressed, anxious, or depressed. A distressed person is facing many

ongoing stresses or hassles.

3. People with medical problems related to stress. These people are often Type A and may

be referred by their physician. Read on for further information on Type A and Type B

personalities.

Type A and Type B Personalities Researchers have established linkages among stress, illness, and certain types of personali-

ties. One schema separates people into two groups of personalities:

• Type A persons are characterized by excessively striving behavior, high job involvement,

impatience, competitiveness, desire for control and power, aggressiveness, and hostility.

• Type B persons are more relaxed, easygoing, reflective, and cooperative.

Each person has a unique personality as discussed earlier in the book, but one way to generally

categorize personalities is as either Type A or Type B. You lean more one way than the other.

Each type reacts differently to stress. The Type B personality is usually calm and collected,

and such persons are rarely stressed. They are patient; their pace is relaxed. They experience

stress but are more likely to internalize it, and sometimes they can shrug it off.

The Type A personality is often impatient, wants things to happen quickly, and such

persons become angry when things slow down. So, Type As do not handle stress well. On the

other hand, they do not internalize it. Everyone around them will know they are stressed and

Case Study Jalecia “I can’t tell you how much I want to get off this Board of Direc- tors,” said Jalecia. “It has been way more work than I expected and we meet in person or online several times a month. I’ve had to fly to Washington, DC a lot. Next month is the end of the two year appointment and that is it.” You could hear the weariness in

her voice. She was trying to balance the Board with a family and full-time job in a state quite distant from Washington. This was a service appointment with no pay that her employer wanted her to take for networking purposes.

338 chapter 11

they let some of the stress out by talking about it. The strength of interpersonal relationships

will help them through stressful times. In a study of German business managers comprising

Type A and Type B personalities, it was found that Type A personalities had greater perceived

levels of stress, lower job satisfaction, and poorer physical and mental health than did Type B

personalities (Kirkcaldy, Shephard, & Furnham, 2001).

Time urgency refers to the feeling that there is not enough time to do everything. It leads

to impatience, tension, restlessness, preoccupation (e.g., inattentiveness to others), and rapid

eating and talking. Hostility means evaluating people, events, or situations negatively and

being suspicious, distrustful, aggressive, and competitive. Type A personalities rarely leave the

office; a suggested remedy is to encourage Type As to take lunch breaks and walks and get

more of a life outside the office.

Type Bs are characterized by an absence of the habits and traits associated with Type

As. They lack a sense of time urgency and its accompanying impatience. Type Bs wait in line

better than Type As; they can relax without guilt, are more cooperative with others, and take a

break when fatigued. They are more likely to recognize signs of stress within themselves and

to take time for fun. Type Bs have goals and ambitions, but they have a confident style that

allows them to wait for things to happen.

Several studies have linked Type A behavior to an increased rate of heart attacks and

other diseases, but counter-studies indicate that the factors are more complex. Thus, there

is no agreement on the health risks associated with Types A and B behavior. Similarly, the

origins of Types A and B behavior are uncertain. It has been suggested that the Type A

behavior pattern is established at birth as part of inborn temperament and is accentuated

through childhood if the parents are high achievers and impose high standards on their

children. In summary, although there are some discrepancies and research continues on this

topic, researchers agree that stressors are experienced differently by different types of people

and that coping responses vary by dominant personality type.

Techniques for Reducing Stress Coping strategies to reduce everyday stress that is not chronic or disease related can be

divided into two types: problem-focused coping and emotion-focused coping (Lazarus, 1991).

Problem-focused coping attempts to alter the actual relationships and change behaviors or

environments. Emotion-focused coping concentrates on regulating the emotional distress

Case Study Soothing Sounds Technology provides new ways to reduce stress. Oliver, a cubicle worker in an office, found that HeavyDutyApps works for him during the day as well as at night. According to the company “The usage varies from people who need help concentrating while

working in noisy environments, commuters who need a break from train noise and travelers that need a peaceful environment,’ says Benny Shaviv, chief executive of the Westchester, NY-based com- pany. The $1.99 app has had more than 1.6 million downloads.”

Source: Mir, A. (2011, August 31). To tune out distractions, white noise climbs to the top of the playlists. The Wall Street Journal, p. D1.

Managing Stress and Fatigue 339

caused by harm or threat. Someone could do this by avoiding thoughts of the stressor, replac-

ing negative thoughts with positive, denying, or distancing. Positive thinking is used more by

Type As than Type Bs as a coping strategy (Havlovic & Keenan, 1991). Emotion-focused

coping requires a change in thinking or interpreting and a change in acting. Moderate stress

can be relieved by first determining the cause of stress, then removing the stressor or moving

out of the stressful environment, and, lastly employing techniques that change the response

to stress.

Specific techniques to help manage stress include the following:

• Identify the most helpful people in your life. Who is pulling for you?

• Manage smart phone technology to your advantage.

• Organize time to allow for enjoyment, relaxation, fun, hobbies, and exercise.

• Complete tasks that have been started. There is more evidence building that multitasking

doesn’t work.

• Acknowledge and celebrate your own uniqueness and successes. Comparing with

others can be a trap.

• Cultivate a sense of humor.

• Indulge yourself. Solitude works especially for those with demanding families. It is not

just about being physically alone, but also about having only yourself on the agenda. An

example is commuters pulling inside themselves and decompressing. They enjoy the

commute, listening to favorite music, reading, and thinking their own thoughts.

• Find quiet environments and build family and friendship bonds. A study by Karen Grewen

of the School of Medicine at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, found that a

brief hug and 10 minutes of handholding with a romantic partner greatly reduced the

harmful physical effects of stress (Elias, 2003).

• Keep things in perspective. Stay flexible. “Ultimately, it’s how you spend your days—not

your downtime—that matters” (Spencer, 2003, p. D1). The new thinking is to deal with

stress when it happens by changing how you react to it rather than waiting for vacations,

the spa, or yoga classes (although they help).

• Develop a positive attitude. Realize that one person cannot change everything. Much

stress comes not from stressors but from perceptions of situations. Ask yourself the

following questions:

1. What is true progress? What is it that I want?

2. What satisfaction level do I have? Am I mostly content?

3. How much am I learning? They say that more is learned from failure than success.

Consider the following quote:

We believe, value, choose, and know unconsciously as well as consciously. . . . The way

we perceive reality is strongly influenced by unconsciously held beliefs. The phenomena

of denial and resistance in psychotherapy illustrate how thoroughly one tends not to see

things threatening to deeply held images conflicting with deeply held beliefs. (Harman,

1998, p. 15)

A study by pollsters Roper Starch Worldwide revealed that when stressed

• Twenty-three percent of men and 15 percent of women take a day off from work.

• Nineteen percent of men and 36 percent of women buy clothing.

• Fifteen percent of men and 26 percent of women eat a special dessert.

340 chapter 11

These techniques and study results may be useful, but how does a busy person find the time

to relax? Consider the opening paragraph of an article on stress that appeared in Parents

magazine:

“We all know what we need to do about stress,” says Alice, a legal secretary and the

single mother of two young children. “We need to be good to ourselves, exercise regu-

larly, eat well, get plenty of rest, and allow enough time for pleasure.” Then she laughs

and adds, “In other words, what we all really need is two weeks at a spa, complete with

daily massage. Then when we return, we need a full-time maid, cook, and chauffeur.”

(Levine, 1990, p. 68)

As this quotation makes clear, reducing stress is more easily said than done. It is one

thing to describe successful techniques for reducing stress; it is another, to fit them into an

already busy life.

Job Stress Job stress is the harmful physical and emotional responses that occur when the demands

of the job do not fit the worker. The demands may be beyond the capabilities and train-

ing of the employee. Job stress can lead to poor health, injury, and even death. For many

years, the Japanese have been aware of the severe consequences of too much work.

Their word karoshi means death by overwork. Japanese researchers have found a link

between long hours, heart disease, and high blood pressure coupled with an unhealthy

lifestyle including no exercise, poor diet, and few medical visits to increase strain and

anxiety.

Extreme work is a term referring to jobs that require 60-plus workweek hours as well as

jobs that require a lot of travel and a 24/7 on-call schedule.

Extreme jobs are taking their toll on the health and emotional well-being of men and

women. Even though a majority of people in these jobs say they love the challenge and

adrenaline rush they get from them, they also suffer more ailments, such as high blood

pressure and anxiety, as well as relationship problems with spouses and children they

have hardly any time for. . . . (Hymowitz, 2007, p. R8)

Challenges are different from stress. Challenge energizes people and motivates them

to learn new skills. When a challenge is met, the reactions are satisfying and relaxing.

Thus, challenge is a natural and healthy part of productive work. Job stress, however,

results when job demands are not met, usually because of excessive workloads: constant

criticism, no end results, and only a sense of exhaustion and failure. Employees need to feel

they are winning and succeeding and, if not, the expectations or the game plan needs to

be redefined.

During a downward economy, job stress goes up because there are fewer jobs and less

job security. Also, there are fewer workers for the amount of tasks to be accomplished. When

employees leave or retire, their positions are not filled.

Most workers report job stress, and often those lowest in the organization experience the

most stress because they have the least control over their work and must answer to a long line

of bosses. Waiting for signatures or approvals are stressors. Not surprisingly, those higher up

in organizations report the least stress.

Managing Stress and Fatigue 341

Karen Nussbaum, executive director of the Women’s Bureau in the United States

Department of Labor, says,

I think of stress and working parents in two issues—time and work. When you are a

parent who works outside the home—which is the case for more than 50 percent of

all mothers of preschoolers—you have less time and more worry. And the combination

results in high stress. (Levine, 1990, p. 68)

As Chapter 10 observed, stress is an inevitable result of work–family time conflicts. Travel

associated with work can be a stressor. More than 8 in 10 business travelers say that work

travel is stressful (Fisher, 1998). Travel is hardest

• On workers with young families. In one study, 6 in 10 married travelers said they

experienced stress when missing family milestones, such as a birthday or a wedding

anniversary, or a child’s sporting event (Fisher, 1998).

• At night. Traveling workers especially miss their children at bedtime.

• On spouses who are left behind. The burden of household work and child care falls on them.

• When piles of work are waiting for the worker upon return from travel.

• When things go wrong. Canceled flights, lost luggage, or reservation difficulties create stress.

On the other hand, the most enthusiastic travelers are those between the ages of 18 and 34.

They enjoy seeing new places. Almost 70 percent say that overnight business travel makes them

feel important, and 68 percent say that trips provide a needed break from home and regular life

(Fisher, 1998). Thus, travel can produce distress or eustress. A lot of the reaction has to do with

the traveler’s lifestyle, age, career stage, and other criteria—such as location of the travel destina-

tion and the meaning of the travel to their job success.

Critical Thinking

Darby set as her main career goal an all-expense-paid international trip by her retail com- pany. When it finally happened, she realized she had to set a new goal. What are some of her options? If your job could send you anywhere in the world, what would your first choice be?

Typically, work and work-related activities, transportation to and from work, and prepara-

tion activities take up over 40 hours a week. Boredom, overload, role ambiguity, underutilization

of talent or skills, poor job design, lack of advancement, shift work, low pay, transfers, miscom-

munications, difficult bosses, too many meetings, high job turnover, poor labor–management

relations, lack of control, and incompetence all contribute to job stress.

Negative consequences or effects of stress may include anxiety, being accident prone,

lower productivity, and a host of other physical, mental, and behavioral problems.

Although work produces stress, remember that according to Hans Selye, not all stress is

bad. Work provides a purpose for living and provides challenges. According to Selye (1974),

work is a biological necessity:

[The] principal aim should not be to avoid work but to find the kind of occupation

which for you is play. The best way to avoid harmful stress is to select an environment

342 chapter 11

which is in line with your innate preferences—to find an activity which you like and

respect. (p. 85)

Further, he said, one of the worst stressors is continuous leisure from enforced retirement

or solitary confinement. The person wonders what to do when there is a lack of schedule,

rewards, goals, and demands. Earlier, Benjamin Franklin expressed this same sentiment when

he said, “There is nothing wrong with retirement as long as one doesn’t allow it to interfere

with one’s work.”

Another way of looking at work and stress is that the workplace may actually serve as a

haven from the stress, disappointment, and problems encountered in home and family life. It

may be a relief to go to an office where everyone is polite, well groomed, and courteous, if, for

example, there are constant fights at home or a family member is an abusive alcoholic. A more

popular image of the home, however, is as a place where the wounds inflicted in “that jungle

out there” can be soothed (Ulrich & Dunne, 1986). As these examples indicate, asking people

where they work and what they do is not enough. Professionals interested in helping families

should ascertain whether work is a haven, a stressor, or a mixture of both for each individual

in a given family. They can also help individuals find ways to transition from the career–life

balance the person has to the career–life balance the person wants.

Burnout On National Public Radio on their Talk of the Nation show a discussion of burnout took place

which included the following comments:

People who are suffering from burnout tend to describe the sensation in metaphors of

emptiness—they’re a dry teapot over a high flame, a drained battery that can no longer

hold its charge. Thirteen years, three books, and dozens of papers into his profession,

Barry Farber, a professor at Columbia Teachers College and trained psychothera-

pist, realized he was feeling this way. Unfortunately, he was well acquainted with the

symptoms. He was a burnout researcher himself . . . He’d just completed a book about

burnout among teachers, a subject he’d once considered exceptionally urgent. “Yet

even as I was writing,” he says, “I had this sense that I really wanted to finish it so that

I could go on to something else. I felt somewhat bored, and somewhat depleted. I’d

said all I wanted to say.” He ponders this point. “I guess,” he says, “I lost the sense that

it was important.” (Senior, March 15, 2008)

New projects or careers may seem perfect in the beginning. This is the honeymoon stage,

when everything is wonderful. Employees are enthusiastic, with all sorts of hopes and

expectations: Life is under way. They would rather work than do anything else. This is a recipe

for burnout, a state of physical, emotional, and mental exhaustion caused by unrealistic

goals and aspirations, and long hours. Burnout is a common feeling in society; young and old

experience it.

Drive and idealism are good things, but if a hardworking perfectionist or a self-motivating

achiever hits obstacles, frustration or failure may result. This stage is called the “awakening,”

the realization that early expectations might have been unrealistic, and it may lead to what the

American Psychological Association calls brownout (a predecessor to burnout). In this stage,

fatigue and irritability show up; eating and sleeping patterns may be disturbed; cynicism and

indecision set in; and unless something or someone steps in to halt the downward spiral,

Managing Stress and Fatigue 343

burnout may result. The onset may be slow and the result of role conflict (being pulled in too

many directions), role ambiguity (unclear expectations), or role overload (the inability to say

“no,” taking on too much responsibility).

Mental symptoms can include feelings of frustration, isolation, hopelessness, cynicism,

apathy, failure, despair, detachment, and powerlessness. Every day is as bad as the last

one. Stressed people know the end is in sight and feel some degree of control, whereas true

burnouts do not see the end of their troubles. For example, holidays and vacations are eagerly

looked forward to when someone is stressed or even-keeled. A burned-out person knows

time off won’t help much, if at all.

Physical symptoms may include aches in the neck, head, or back, or just a general lack

of energy. The word “burnout” is associated with being worn out from doing too much work.

Originally, “burnout” was used in the aerospace industry to describe the termination of rocket

or jet-engine operation because of insufficient fuel. In resource management, burnout refers to

emotional or physical exhaustion brought about by unrelieved stress. This all-inclusive defini-

tion shows that burnout can come from many sources.

Potential job burnout can result from fatigue, or frustration with a cause, a way of life, or

a relationship that has failed to produce the expected reward, such as a politician losing an

election. The president of an organization can experience burnout. A stockbroker described

being on a country club board of directors for 15 years; when he had finally had enough of

hearing complaints from members and being thwarted when he tried to introduce new ways

of doing things, he quit when his term was over. Looking back, he is much relieved to have left

that position, which was voluntary, yet caused a lot of stress.

In the 1970s, “burnout” was first associated with teachers, social workers, and others

who worked in jobs involving considerable responsibility for the welfare of others. These jobs

tended to have high turnover rates because workers were said to burn out after so many years

on the job. In the 1980s, “burnout” was used to refer to just about anybody who was tired at

the end of the day.

During that decade, Charles Maslach (1982) published the Maslach Burnout Inventory,

which defined burnout as the subjective experience of emotional exhaustion, depersonaliza-

tion, and reduced personal accomplishment resulting from the continuous caring for needy

clients in human-service professions.

Today, burnout refers to both everyday and long-term exhaustion. Regardless of how the

word is used, the phenomenon should not be ignored. If burnout is acute, a person may have

a breakdown in health, may not be able to continue performing at the expected pace, and

may become discouraged and drop out of a profession, when what he or she really needs is

a break, a chance for retraining, and perhaps a better job–environment–person fit. Here are

some other ways to combat job burnout:

• Be realistic about expectations, aspirations, and goals. Get in touch with yourself and

what you really want, remember what felt good in the past, rebuild your inner resources.

• Clarify the job description with a supervisor. Maybe you need a new description or a

transfer.

• Rest and relax; do not take work home with you (mentally or physically, learn to turn it off).

• Create balance in your life with other activities, groups, hobbies, and exercise.

• Avoid isolation: Closeness brings new insights, and it is hard to be agitated and

depressed when surrounded by people and pets that you love. Confide in others outside

the immediate workplace.

344 chapter 11

• Take time off, a long vacation or a leave of absence.

• Ask for something different to do, take on a new project or set of responsibilities, get out

of the rut.

Burnout can happen in friendships, caregiving, and marital relationships, too. Distance, vaca-

tions, a new setting, or a renewed commitment may all help reduce relationship burnout.

The importance of vacations was introduced in the last chapter, but here are another study’s

results to consider:

Of 12,000 middle age men at risk for coronary disease, researchers found those who

failed to take vacations had a higher risk of death from any cause, but particularly from

heart disease, than those who took regular vacations. The results were controlled for

education, income and the possibility that some of the men’s health was too poor to

take vacations. . . . Researchers say good vacations have a power that extends beyond

the time you’re away. (Shellenbarger, 2003, March 27, p. D1)

Burnout is generally regarded as a negative. But, like stress, burnout has its positive side.

Burnout can be a signal for change. Viewed in this way, burnout can be a functional, posi-

tive developmental experience, rather than a dysfunctional, negative one. In 1997, Christina

Maslach, a professor of psychology at the University of California, Berkeley, and coauthor of

the book The Truth about Burnout concluded that

Most people think burnout is caused by work overload. . . . But while having too much to

do can cause stress, it doesn’t necessarily cause burnout. People will work long, hard

hours willingly and happily if they love what they are doing, or if they can see it is making

a difference. . . . Respect helps, too. (Smith, 1997, p. 11D)

Stress and Nonevents Most of the stressors covered so far have been caused by events or reactions to events. An

interesting line of research has focused on the stress caused by nonevents—specific occur-

rences in people’s lives that they look forward to and make plans around but that fail to

materialize. Examples of nonevents are canceled weddings (these may be more stressful than

divorces), postponed vacations, or not being invited to a follow-up job interview or an impor-

tant social gathering. According to John Eckenrode of Cornell University,

We know that unanticipated negative events are more stressful than anticipated ones.

With an anticipated event, you can do some preparatory coping. You know it’s going to

happen and you can mobilize your resources. Things that just hit you out of the blue, on

the other hand, are more stressful because you don’t know they’re coming. And when

you’ve invested a lot of emotional buildup in whatever it is you’re looking forward to, the

effects can be huge. (Powers, 1995, p. 6)

Eckenrode says that many times people’s plans are thwarted by others or something in the

environment that is beyond an individual’s control. He speculates that stress from nonevents

is just part of life, that disappointment is as normal an occurrence as the good things that

happen.

Managing Stress and Fatigue 345

Parents, Children, Stress, Burnout The parent–child relationship can lead to stress for all concerned. Children are as vulnerable

to stress and burnout as are adults. Hurried schedules and meals affect children as well as

parents. Experts think childhood stress is increasing (Adler et al., 1999).

As adults, we are usually busy as parents and workers and often feel stressed and expe-

rience burn-out at times, but would you ever think that children can experience stress

too? Most of us probably think that childhood is a time when children are carefree,

having no worries or responsibilities; yet, studies tell us that many children experience

stress and have similar symptoms as those of adults. Like adults, children often have

bad feelings and have difficulty handling their stress. Unlike adults, though children do

not have the means or the skills to understand or manage their stress in appropriate

ways. Children must depend upon us to help them. (Ruffin, 2001, p. 1)

Critical Thinking

Have you ever experienced a nonevent? What was it? Gloria described a fund-raising party for the animal shelter, which cost $100 a ticket, as a nonevent: hardly anyone showed up, it was disorganized, and the food was mediocre. She said she knew it was for a good cause but it was disappointing. What are the odds she will go next year or recom- mend it to friends?

Working can be a pain in the neck.

346 chapter 11

For parents, the stresses of child rearing may begin as soon as the newborn infant arrives

home from the hospital. One study of parents of infants three to five months old identified a

number of stressors. Fussy behavior ranks near the top of the list.

A study by researchers Bronte-Tinkew, Horowitz, and Carrano (2011) found that policies

should be aimed at decreasing parental stress especially for fathers living in poor families.

They also found that the more engaged fathers are with their children the less likely they are to

report aggravation and stress.

A study found that the Americans most likely to be stressed out are women between the

ages of 30 and 44 because they tend to be working mothers with young children (Waldrop,

1993). And at midlife, a major source of stress for the women surveyed was the return of adult

children to the home for economic reasons. Another study found that single parents and their

adolescents are under potentially significant amounts of stress owing to family structure and

developmental factors, such as the adolescents’ movement toward independence (Houser,

Daniels, D’Andrea, & Konstam, 1993).

A study of divorced fathers revealed that they too are stressed and sometimes backed off

from child care as a way to lessen stress in their lives. They essentially gave child care and the

daily hassles to the mother and took on breadwinning as their major role (DeGarmo, Patras, &

Eap, 2008). Of course, this is not true of all divorced fathers many of whom have sole custody

or joint custody, but one of the main findings was that the more engaged and involved fathers

experienced the greater levels of daily stress.

stress WarnIng sIgns In CHIldren Stressed children give off many warning signs: poor appetite, excessive crying, headaches

and stomachaches, withdrawal, clinging behavior, hyperactivity, moodiness, and sleep prob-

lems. Children can experience stress from homesickness, parental divorce, and problems

with family, friends, community, and school. In young children, possible signs of stress include

bed-wetting, crying spells, tattling, hitting, kicking, thumb sucking, grinding teeth, fingernail

biting, baby talk, and accident proneness. Parents and caregivers need to observe changes in

behavior such as these. Younger children cannot articulate what is wrong. The general mes-

sage is that it is all right to feel angry and disappointed, and with older children management

alternatives can be suggested or discussed, solutions sought. Calming techniques are helpful.

Competition for grades and activities produces stress. Jen, who transferred from a school

200 miles away, did not get picked for the varsity cheerleading team. She said she cried for

weeks and could hardly face the kids at the new school. She never went to a football game in

high school. She never felt she was given a fair chance. She said the places on the team were

all predetermined for young women whom everyone had known for years rather than being

filled based on athletic ability.

Barbara Howard, a pediatrician at Johns Hopkins, says a quarter of her patients are

there for stress-related problems. She says, “They’ll come in with abdominal pain, urinary

frequency, headaches . . . a whole variety of complaints which could be mistaken for medical

problems and often are” (Adler et al., 1999, p. 63). In addition,

Parents are frequently wrong about the sources of stress in their children’s lives,

according to surveys by Georgia Witkin of Mount Sinai Medical School; they think chil-

dren worry most about friendships and popularity, but they’re actually fretting about

the grown-ups. “The biggest concern,” she says, “was that the parents are going to

be sick, or angry, or they’re going to divorce.” And “often and somewhat surprisingly,”

Managing Stress and Fatigue 347

says Giedd [Jay Giedd of the National Institutes of Health], “children have very global

worries”—wars, environmental issues and crime, the same things adults worry about.

(Adler et al., 1999, p. 63)

Furthermore, researchers report, “Children who were neglected by their parents or raised

in orphanages tend to have higher levels of stress hormones and may be ‘hot reactors’ later

in life. As adults, they may feel empty or bored when on edge” (Adler et al., 1999, p. 60). On

the other hand, according to Megan Gunnar of the University of Minnesota, children raised in

secure, loving homes learn to modulate stress reactions.

Children can experience stress and overload from competitive, win–lose, rule-bound

situations just as adults can. Consequently, the nature and outcomes of highly structured,

competitive team sports can be childhood stressors. It is generally agreed that this type of

sports activity is too stressful for very young children. To help children through these and other

stressful situations, parents should be sensitive to any change overload, responsibility over-

load, or emotional overload their children may be experiencing.

In The Hurried Child, David Elkind, professor of child development at Tufts University,

says that today’s children are pressured to grow up too fast. He gives this example of respon-

sibility overload:

Janet is ten years old but has many adult responsibilities. In addition to taking care of

her clothes and room, she must prepare breakfast for herself and her younger sister

and make sure that they get off to school on time. (Her mother leaves for work an hour

before Janet needs to get to school.) When she gets home, she has to do some house-

cleaning, defrost some meat for dinner, and make sure her sister is all right. When her

mother gets home, Janet listens patiently to her mother’s description of the “creeps”

at work who never leave her alone and who are always making cracks or passes. After

Janet helps prepare dinner, her mother says, “Honey, will you do the dishes? I’m just

too tired,” and Janet barely has time to do some homework. (1988, p. 150)

Janet is stressed not only from the work she has to do, but also from the amount of respon-

sibility placed on her shoulders at such a young age. In many one-parent and dual-career

families today, children are required to take substantial responsibility for housework and child

care. How much is too much is a question worth thinking about.

Elkind points out that not only are homes more stressful today, but schools are also more

stressful. Besides the usual competition for grades and in sports, children today are exposed

to more threats and violence in schools than ever before.

Like adults, children can learn to moderate stress by following the techniques described

earlier in the chapter—eating a balanced diet, engaging in regular exercise, enjoying free time,

and being with people with whom they are comfortable. Elkind says that children can suffer

from chronic stress, usually brought on by significant life changes, which can be reduced by

reassurance and attention from parents and teachers. Parents and caregivers need to instill

confidence in children and provide security. One idea is to say, “Try this out on your own first,

but if you need help, let me know and I’ll be there.”

College Students and Stress It is generally assumed that the teen years are stressful and that the transition period from

high school to college is exciting yet highly stressful. College students, most of whom are in

their teens and 20s, are living in or emerging from a stressful life period. Boredom and school

348 chapter 11

burnout are often the stressors during the high school years. By college age, many of the

boredom and burnout problems get replaced by renewed enthusiasm for education because

of the new setting and the opportunity to specialize although some students report a sopho-

more slump, a slower period after the initial high of being a freshman.

College students are usually dedicated and in school by choice—they enjoy school for

the most part and want to keep learning. They have career ambitions and life goals. But for

all the pluses, the college years also have some negatives—stressors in the forms of relation-

ships, grades, and emotional and physical problems. Uncertainty about what lies ahead is an

ever present stressor. Other causes of stress include major losses through divorce or separa-

tion, which have increased in recent years; having two working parents (which gives teens less

time with parents); and higher and earlier exposure to drugs, sex, and violence.

Ranjita Misra (2000) found that time management behaviors had a great buffering effect

in reducing stress and that female undergraduate students were better than male students at

time management. However, women had higher academic stress and anxiety. Males seemed

better at using leisure as a stress reducer. In the Misra study, freshmen and sophomores

reported more stress and higher anxiety levels than juniors and seniors.

Critical Thinking

What year in college are you? Have you observed that beginning students are more stressed than seniors? What sort of stresses are seniors experiencing?

Case Study Ben Ben, a 21-year-old college student, is studying hard for an exam. He might do well to give his brain a break. “Just what he does during that break will determine how helpful that pause will be, a growing body of research shows. A stroll in the park could do wonders, for instance, while downing coffee could leave him just as stressed and depleted as before the break. And, sometimes

forcing oneself to simply power through mental fatigue can be more effective than pausing. Like a muscle, our brains appear to get fatigued after working for sustained periods of time, particularly if we have to concentrate intensely or deal with a repetitive task, says Michael Posner, an emeritus professor at the University of Oregon who studies attention.”

Source: Wang, S. S. (2011, August 30). Coffee break? Walk in the park? Why unwinding is hard. The Wall Street Journal, p. D1.

According to another study, the top academic stressors for college students were tests

and finals, and the top personal stressor was intimate relationships (Murphy & Archer, 1996).

Another study found that the most psychological distress was experienced in freshman year

and that it declined over the next four years (Sher, Wood, & Gotham, 1996). In response to

Managing Stress and Fatigue 349

this, many colleges and universities have put more effort in recent years into offering freshman

orientation programs, specialized seminars, and living/learning dormitories for freshmen only.

For certain individuals, mild test anxiety has been found to motivate and facilitate per-

formance. But test anxiety is more commonly associated with negative motivation and poor

test performance (Hill & Wigfield, 1984). One study of undergraduate college students tried

to determine whether test anxiety could be significantly reduced through regular relaxation

exercises or physical exercises (Topp, 1989). The students were divided into three groups:

a nonmeditative relaxation exercise group, an aerobics dance group, and a control group

who did not meet during the seven-week study. Both the relaxation exercise group and the

aerobics dance students (who increased in fitness also) reported a significant decline in test

anxiety; the control group did not experience any change in test anxiety. The results from this

study suggest that exercise reduces test anxiety, so a student suffering from it should con-

sider incorporating exercise into his or her life. Another stressor for college students is meeting

deadlines—deadlines for term papers, for projects, for club reports, for registering for classes,

and so on. Time management techniques, including prioritizing, allocating time as best as one

can, checking progress, and keeping a calendar or list, should help with the problem of meet-

ing deadlines.

Not all college students are in their late teens or early 20s. More and more people over

age 25 are returning to school after serving in the armed services, raising a family, or being

engaged in some other work or family activities that caused them to postpone entering or fin-

ishing college. In addition to the college life stressors already mentioned, older students have

Types of technology. Which ones do you own or would like to own or upgrade?

350 chapter 11

the problems involved with combining family life with student life, doubts about their ability to

compete with younger students, more complicated financial situations, and other concerns

about mixing a more mature lifestyle with the demands of college life. These students face

such stressful choices as the following: Should I go to see my in-laws on Sunday or finish my

term paper? Should I make dinner or study? Their self-doubt concerns may range from what

to wear to the first class to how to study for a test after not having taken one for 20 years.

All college students, regardless of age or life stage, undergo a change in their usual life-

style. And as explained previously, change is stressful. As going to college is a new experience

and the people and the environment are new, it is not surprising to find many students feeling

and acting shy (Greenberg, 1983). Making new friends, talking with professors and advisers,

using the services of counselors in the student counseling center and dormitories, and attend-

ing stress management workshops should help reduce stress along with following many of the

solutions covered in this chapter.

Fatigue College students experience fatigue as well as stress. Irregular hours, studying for final exams,

and weekend parties all contribute to fatigue. Chronic fatigue leads to impaired memory and

response time. Fatigue refers to a lack of energy or motivation and a strong desire to stop,

rest, or sleep. This feeling can come from mental or physical exertion, work, or play.

Fatigue may either be related to stress or have nothing to do with it. For example, at

night you may be tired from a long day of activity and feel fatigued, but you are not necessarily

stressed or tense. Short-term fatigue can be easily remedied with some rest, but long-term,

chronic fatigue is more serious. Closely linked to fatigue are weariness, tiredness, exhaustion,

and lethargy. We think of yawning as associated with fatigue or sleepiness. But, is it?

Critical Thinking

Read the following and see how you respond. “Have you ever thought about yawning, for instance? Yawning is a surprisingly powerful act. Just because you read the word ‘yawning’ in the previous two sentences—and the two additional ‘yawns’ in this sentence—a good number of you will probably yawn within the next few minutes. Even as I’m writing this, I’ve yawned twice. If you’re reading this in a public place, and you’ve just yawned, chances are a good proportion of everyone who saw you yawn is now yawning too . . . ”

Source: Gladwell, M. (2000). The Tipping Point (pp. 9–10). Boston: Little, Brown and Company.

Yawning

Causes of fatigue can be emotional as well as physical or a combination of the two.

Physical symptoms are extreme; generally, a fatigued person simply feels tired. Fatigue is a

normal part of daily life, but sometimes a person is more keenly aware of it than at other times.

Fatigue can sneak up on an individual or build up to a point where the individual cannot func-

tion well. It can also be dangerous, as when someone falls asleep at the wheel. Because of

Managing Stress and Fatigue 351

this potential danger, individuals need to recognize personal fatigue sensations and do some-

thing about them.

Fatigue comes from many sources, such as sleep disturbances, sleep apnea, a variety

of diseases including heart and lung diseases, pregnancy, depression, anxiety, and grief. As

Chapter 10 emphasized, the demands and conflicts arising from trying to achieve too much

in the work and family realms can result in fatigue. A survey of 666 male and female clerical

and professional employees revealed that fatigue levels were similar at home and at work. One

male professional penciled in the following comment at the end of the survey: “Going home

is just exchanging one set of problems for another.” The study also revealed that professional

women experienced significantly more fatigue and role overload than did professional men

(Goldsmith, 1989).

These findings have implications for those interested in personal and family manage-

ment. What is happening in offices and homes that produces so much fatigue? And why are

researchers finding that home and family life is just another stressor rather than a reliever of

stress and fatigue?

The Body and Fatigue MRI scans of fatigued brains look very much like brains of people who are fast asleep. There is

a point at which the body is not performing well, a person is simply too tired to think straight.

Like stress, fatigue originates as a physiological response, and it comes from both internal and

external sources. Regardless of where the fatigue originates, it is always felt as a subjective

sensation by the person (Atkinson, 1985). Certainly, a person should consult a physician if

fatigue is extreme and unexplained in origin. The physician will want to know whether the level

of fatigue is constant throughout the day or whether there is any pattern.

Fatigue begins at an unconscious, microscopic level and progresses through stages

until the person thinks, “I’m tired.” At the final stage, the person experiences fatigue as a

sensation (Atkinson, 1985). Because the mind is included at this level, psychological factors

such as boredom, depression, and being upset are combined with the physiological ones

that cause fatigue.

Systems Theory: Sleep, Energy, and Fatigue Systems theory is relevant to the discussion of fatigue because fatigue is a sign of energy

imbalance: too much energy is being expended and not enough is being conserved. One way

to look at energy is to envision an energy pool with an imbalance of energy boosters (inputs)

and energy drainers (outputs). The energy pool is depleted when there are more energy

drainers (bad habits, overwork, mental strain, illness, and occupational hazards) than energy

boosters (nutrition, exercise, good sleep, pleasure, and mastery).

sleeP Sleep is not a passive activity because insufficient sleep is recognized as an essential

component of health and safety—we don’t want drowsy drivers on the road.

Individuals ages 15–19 sleep more hours a day on average than older individuals. Sleep

time tends to decrease with age until age 65 when it starts increasing. The Bureau of Labor

Statistics American Time Use Survey collects data on sleep times. They report that the

352 chapter 11

teenagers sleep considerably more on weekends than during weekdays showing less consis-

tency in sleep patterns than older adults do. On average, Americans ages 15 and over sleep

8 hours and 40 minutes a day.

Sleep absolutely affects health, says Julian Thayer of the National Institute on Aging (Elias,

2003, p. 7D). The immune system seems to tune up at night, adding natural killer cells to fight

off disease. “There’s preliminary evidence that the strength of the immune system actually

influences the quality of sleep in addition to being affected by it,” says Michael Irwin of the

UCLA Neuropsychiatric Institute (Elias, 2003, p. 7D).

Case Study Katie “‘I get a lot less sleep [than I need]—less than six hours a night,’ says Katie Danziger, whose New York City-based company, nomie baby, sells parent-sanity-saving washable car seat covers and stroller blankets. Like many overloaded entrepreneurs, Danziger doesn’t get any exercise. Instead, she turns all her time over to nomie baby and her three kids. If you don’t take care of yourself,

you can’t take care of your business. But that bit of common sense usually gets trampled by overload and its partner, stress. Stop for a second? Not possible. Delegate? It would take too long to explain the how-tos to a staffer. Take a break to refuel? Too much to do. Shut off the BlackBerry at night? Might miss a sale. Entrepreneurs are, of course, an action-oriented bunch by definition.”

Source: Robinson, J. (2011, April 11). Don’t melt down. Entrepreneur. http://www.entrepreneur.com/article/printthis/219311.html.

Sleep, a critical energy booster, is vital to maintaining well-being and enthusiasm for life.

It plays a major role in preparing the body and brain for an alert, productive, and psychologi-

cally and physiologically healthy tomorrow (Maas, 1998). Even though everyone needs sleep,

sometimes the amount and timing are difficult to control. For example, falling asleep after a

stimulating day may be difficult even though you are very tired. Another time, you may feel

drowsy, even though you want to stay alert, such as in an afternoon class. Have you ever

heard the expression, “I need to sleep on it”? It turns out that people all over the world say

some version of it, and it has been proven to have some substance.

Sleep researchers have found that sleep influences “complex cognitive procedural think-

ing” (Stickgold, Winkelman, & Wehrwein, 2004, p. 58).

Each waking moment bombards your brain with scores of sensations, thoughts and

feelings. If your brain tried to store them all as memories, you might experience termi-

nal overload and be able to remember nothing. Undoubtedly, you’re editing out some

impressions as they hit you during the day. But sleep also seems to help. (Stickgold

et al., 2004, p. 60)

As noted in Chapter 10, humans spend about one-third of their lives sleeping. A century ago

nine hours per day was the norm. Recent studies indicate that the average married mom

gets 6.7 hours. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (cdc.gov) about

one-quarter of the U.S. population reports not getting enough sleep now and then and about

10 percent report chronic insomnia. Sleep is necessary for two reasons:

• To restore energy levels

• To help the body regulate and synchronize itself

Managing Stress and Fatigue 353

Sleep provides rhythm to life (Goldsmith, 2007). Most people go to sleep and awake about

the same time every day. While asleep, humans go through certain cycles of light and deep

slumber. Figure 11.2 illustrates the rhythmic nature of typical sleep patterns.

There are two kinds of sleep: REM and NREM sleep. REM, or rapid eye movement

sleep, occurs when the sleeper is in a light sleep; most dreams happen during REM. NREM,

or non-rapid eye movement sleep, occurs when the sleeper is in an inactive, deep slum-

ber. Through the night, the sleeper goes back and forth between REM and NREM sleep.

Insomnia is the perception or complaint of inadequate or poor-quality sleep because of

one or more of the following:

• Difficulty falling asleep

• Waking up frequently during the night with difficulty returning to sleep

• Waking up too early in the morning

• Unrefreshing sleep

When people are deprived of sleep for a long time or do not get the right balance of REM

and NREM sleep, they can feel fatigued and irritable, and their abilities to make decisions and

to concentrate diminish. This is why fatigue and insomnia are integral parts of the study of

resource management.

Appropriate levels of sleep and rest are

resources. For example, many athletes experi-

ence some form of precompetition stress that

may result in insomnia during the night before

their competition. This sleep withdrawal, even

though temporary, has a negative influence on

performance. Sleeping poorly impairs the ability

to remember and learn.

According to the National Center on Sleep Disorders Research, preschool children (ages

three to five) should get between 10 and 12 hours of sleep including naps. Older children need

Suggested Activity Plot your sleep pattern for three days on a graph. Mark when you go to sleep and when you wake up; include nighttime sleep and daytime naps. Do you see a pattern? Does doing an activity like this make you more conscious of your sleep patterns? Were you more likely to go to sleep earlier at night and get up earlier than normal?

Starting out awake

Drifting off

NREM sleep

• Deep sleep • Dreaming is light • Difficult to rouse

• More dreaming • Easy to wake

Typical sleep cycle

REM sleep

REM sleep

Lighter sleep

Figure 11.2 Typical sleep cycle. Source: Based on National Center on Sleep Disorders Research.

354 chapter 11

less; those between the ages of 6 and 12 need about 9 hours of sleep a night. Teenagers

need about 8–9 hours. Parents can help children sleep better by limiting drinks loaded with

caffeine before bed, setting routines, and allowing time for children to unwind before bedtime.

Caffeine may stay in the body up to 12 hours, so caffeine consumption should stop around

noon. Here is the caffeine content (milligrams per 8 ounces) of several popular drinks:

• Coffee, 110 (approximate, varies by type of coffee)

• Mountain Dew, 37

• Coca-Cola, 23

• Arizona green tea, 7.5

Other disturbers of sleep are alcohol and drugs. Alcohol not only sedates but also disturbs

normal sleep patterns.

Sleep problems are more prevalent in older people. As people age, natural changes in

circadian rhythms and medications affect sleep patterns. Other things affecting sleep are the

need to use the bathroom more often at night, physical pain from arthritis, coughing, nighttime

heartburn, headaches, and depression.

Circadian rhythms are triggered by nighttime darkness, which releases a surge of melato-

nin leading to sleep; the dawn triggers awakening (Stickgold, Winkelman, & Wehrwein, 2004).

Electric light (artificial illumination) appears to disrupt this natural pattern. Older people often

feel sleepy early in the evening, and this can lead to falling asleep at 8 p.m. and waking at 4 a.m.

Daytime exposure to natural light appears to help a person sleep better:

For Mrs. Homer, it worked. The increased exposure to light “made a difference,” she

says. It also helped her realize how much time she was spending indoors in dimly lit

rooms. Since then, she’s kept up the exposure to light by visiting a park across the

street from her high-rise a few times a week. “I didn’t go into that deep dream sleep

before, and I’m dreaming now.” (Greene, 2002, p. R10)

There are hundreds of sleep disorder clinics accredited by the American Sleep Disorders

Association. Clinic staff study sleep patterns and help people suffering from chronic insomnia.

Among the discoveries of these clinics is that stress and anxiety can affect the length and

quality of sleep.

Work schedules can also influence sleep patterns and insomnia. For example, studies

have shown that shift workers get three hours less sleep than people who work a normal

daytime schedule, and up to 90 percent of shift workers report sleep disturbances (Atkinson,

1985). Irregular and rotating shifts (e.g., working nights one week, days the next) play havoc

not only with the individual’s health and sleep patterns, but also with family schedules.

Sometimes a family may see shifts as an asset; for example, shifts may allow someone to be

home with the children always. On the negative side, however, husband and wife working on

different shifts may rarely see each other. More intimate, face-to-face communication may be

replaced with hurried phone calls and written messages.

According to James Maas (1998), two primary rules to follow are to establish a regular

sleep pattern and get enough nightly sleep. Another rule suggested by the National Sleep

Foundation is to make the bed a sleep- and sex-only zone. For someone experiencing

sleep problems, desks, filing cabinets, clutter, and computers and other reminders of work

should probably be in another room beside the bedroom. See these suggestions and more

in Table 11.2. Finally, keep following the latest scientific discoveries on sleep. So far we know

that sleep makes a person demonstrably smarter and appreciably healthier; it is an important

part of a long and healthy life.

Managing Stress and Fatigue 355

energy and alertness Clearly, getting adequate rest and sleep is an energy booster. An energetic person has

the capacity to take on a job or an activity and complete it to the best of her or his ability.

There are many types of energy boosters. In addition, some individuals seem to be born with

more energy than others. Research is incomplete as to why this difference exists. Another

little-understood energy phenomenon is how people re-energize themselves during the day.

Many people at one time subscribed to the drain theory, which asserted that individuals

wake with a certain level of energy in the morning. As the day wears on, each activity takes

away some of that energy until by nightfall the energy is depleted and the person sleeps. Then,

according to the theory, sleep restores the person, and the pattern repeats the next day. The

problem with the drain theory is that not all people are highly energized on first waking up, and

during the day such things as food, exercise, and excitement refuel people. Each person has

typical energy rhythms or patterns during the day, which can be altered by events. We experi-

ence ups and downs in alertness over the course of the day, even when our nighttime sleep is

adequate. Alertness is quite strong around 10 and 11 a.m., which makes this a good time to

take classes and tests. It dips at midafternoon, goes up again around 6 p.m., and then starts

to fall until bedtime.

fatIgue management The purpose of this book is not just to describe life management problems (e.g., people do not

get enough sleep or rest), but to also present possible solutions.

Systems theory asserts that system parts are interconnected: If one part of the system

is affected, other parts are affected, too. The subjects of sleep, energy, and fatigue are so

interlaced that it is difficult to discuss one without discussing the others. To cope with fatigue

problems, an individual needs to examine each part of the system, including diet, exercise,

sleep, activity, and relationships.

Specifically, what can one do to manage energy and fatigue better? First, an individual

should be able to recognize his or her sleep patterns and fatigue signs and assign time and

energy accordingly. In other words, it is up to the individual to self-monitor. Successful people

rarely go blindly into a new activity; they first think about how much of their time and energy

will be required. Second, when fatigue is imminent, the individual should try to cope with

it by napping or sleeping, relaxing, eating properly, changing activity, or adopting whatever

Sleep Hygiene Suggestions The promotion of regular sleep is known as sleep hygiene according to the Centers for

disease Control and Prevention. Here are the recommendations for improving sleep from the

National Sleep Foundation.

1. Go to bed at the same time each night and rise at the same time each morning.

2. Make sure your bedroom is a quiet, dark, and relaxing environment, which is neither too

hot nor too cold.

3. Make sure your bed is comfortable and use it only for sleeping and not other activities,

such as reading, watching TV, or listening to music. remove all TVs, computers, and

other “gadgets” from the bedroom.

4. Physical activity may help promote sleep, but not within a few hours of bedtime.

5. avoid large meals before bedtime.

Source: Retrieved November 3, 2011, from http://www.cdc.gov/sleep/about_sleep/sleep_hygiene.htm.

Table 11.2

356 chapter 11

combination of these activities works best. As mentioned earlier, daily exposure to natural

light, keeping a regular schedule, and avoiding all stimulants such as coffee, tea, and soft

drinks containing caffeine at least two hours (some would say six hours) prior to going to bed

will help improve sleep.

And, most of all, people should take time to sleep: It is important to their daily functioning

and there is a threat to public safety when people are sleepy at the wheel or when operating

machinery. Sleep is not a waste of time.

CHronIC fatIgue syndrome According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (cdc.gov) chronic fatigue

syndrome (CFS) is a debilitating and complex disorder characterized by profound fatigue that

is not improved by bed rest and can be worsened by physical or mental activity. The CDC

says that the symptoms affect several body systems and may include weakness, muscle pain,

impaired memory and/or mental concentration, and insomnia, which can result in reduced

participation in daily activities. The number of people with CFS is difficult to measure because

it tends to be underreported or misdiagnosed, or associated with other diseases such as dia-

betes or thyroid disorders. Sometimes there are flu-like symptoms. It is a public health concern

because of missed days at school and work. Chronic fatigue is a contentious topic: It is not

clear what causes the disease or even whether it is one disease or many; research is still under

way. It may be a long-acting viral infection, a form of allergy, or something entirely different.

Patients with extreme chronic fatigue cannot work and have little energy for anything.

People with chronic fatigue exhibit a variety of symptoms. The CDC defined the syndrome in

1988 and it has identified the main symptoms as chills or low-grade fever, sore throat, tender

lymph nodes, muscle pain, muscle weakness, extreme fatigue, headaches, joint pain (without

swelling), neurological problems (confusion, memory loss, visual disturbances), sleep disor-

ders, and the sudden onset of symptoms (Cowley, 1990).

In addition to these symptoms, chronic fatigue differs from ordinary fatigue brought on by

overexertion in several respects. In chronic fatigue

• Rest is not restorative.

• Minimal physical activity can bring on significant “exhausterbations” (S. Straus, personal

communication, August 24, 1989).

Chronic fatigue is long-lasting and affects children as well as adults. A good night’s sleep

or a leisurely vacation will not help true chronic fatigue. It appears that lifestyle changes such

as regular exercise like yoga and tai chi, stress and time management, a healthy diet, and, in

some cases, medication supervised by a physician will help relieve symptoms.

summarysummary Stress is normal, even useful but too long and too much can have negative consequences for relationships and one’s own sense of well-being. It is a physical reaction to emotional or physical situa- tions or demands. Planning, organizing, compartmentalizing, and outsourcing can all help in the management of stress.

When individuals experience excessive stress and fatigue, they question their life choices and they need to re-evaluate their time use and commitments. They wonder whether it is necessary to hurry all the time. And are they really achieving more by hur- rying? A fundamental question is in the rush, are families being

Managing Stress and Fatigue 357

termskey terms brownout 342 burnout 342 chronic fatigue syndrome 356 comfort zone 330 comparative advantage 329 crises 326 distress 331 domino effect 330 eustress 331 external stress 330

extreme work 340 fatigue 350 fight or flight syndrome 334 insomnia 353 internal stress 331 job stress 340 karoshi 340 nonnormative stressor events 333 non-rapid eye movement (NREM)

sleep 353

normative stressor events 333 outsourcing 329 psychological hardiness 333 rapid eye movement (REM) sleep 353 sleep hygiene 355 stress 322 stressors 325 stress overload, pileup, spillover 326 Type A person 337 Type B person 337

shortchanged? “Extreme work” is a term that describes 60 hours or more of work per week and 24/7 access plus excessive travel. The Japanese have the word “karoshi” that means death by overwork.

This chapter has largely been based on theories and research from psychology and the health and wellness fields. An important point is that moderate levels of stress and fatigue are a normal part of life.

Hans Selye was a major contributor to stress research. Among other things, he differentiated between two types of stress: distress (harmful) and eustress (beneficial).

Stress originates from two sources: internal and external. Stressor events can be normative (expected) or nonnormative (unanticipated). The body’s response to stress and the fight or flight syndrome are important to understanding how stress works. An individual’s personality and emotional state play significant roles in the evaluation of and reaction to stress. Type A and Type B personalities react differently to stress.

The meaning of burnout has changed over the years, but long-term exhaustion is serious and should not be ignored. The steps leading up to burnout and possible solutions to burnout were described in this chapter. Brownout is a predecessor to burnout.

Prolonged fatigue, irritability, frustration, and neck, head, or back ache are all signals of burnout.

Although stress exists throughout the life cycle, childhood stress and the stress college students experience are particularly troubling. David Elkind has observed that children today may be pushed to grow up too fast and assume adult responsibilities at an early age.

Energy boosters can have a restorative effect on persons suffering from fatigue, so can sleep. Sleep researchers have distinguished rapid eye movement sleep from non-rapid eye move- ment sleep. Ordinary fatigue can be reduced by sleep and rest. Children need different amounts of sleep depending on their ages. A century ago nine hours of sleep a night was normal; now Americans ages 15 and older average eight hours and forty minutes according to the Average Time Use Survey conducted by the Bureau of Labor Statistics, and one-third of them get by on six or less.

Far more research is needed on the complex interplay among energy, fatigue, sleep, personality, and stress. Individuals can strive to maintain a balance of activity, rest, and energy; acquire the skills to understand themselves; and enjoy each other more. The next chapter covers another potential stressor and relaxer— the environment.

questions 1. David Elkind observed that children are growing up too fast;

they are pushed into too many activities and adult responsi- bilities. Do you agree or disagree? Explain your answer.

2. A book editor explained that he was Type B on the outside and Type A on the inside. How could this be? Do you know someone who appears to be one type of personality, but is in reality the other type? Explain.

3. What happens to the body during each of the three stages of the stress reaction?

4. How could burnout have a good side? What may be a benefit?

5. Describe the drain theory of human energy and explain why it is inadequate.

review questions

358 chapter 11

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361

What is the use of a house if you haven’t got a tolerable planet to put it on?

—Henry DaviD THoreau 12

Managing

Main Topics

Sustainability The Ecosystem and Environmentalism

Problem recognition Biodegradability Biological Diversity individual and Family Decision Making incorporating agriculture into Communities

Environmental Problems and Solutions Water Quality and availability energy noise Waste and recycling air Quality

DiD you know that . . .?

. . . There is a decided trend toward more land being voluntarily conserved as family farms, forests, community gardens, and urban parks.

. . . A century ago, a house may have had one electrical socket per room; today four is typical, and many rooms have 12–16 electrical outlets.

EnvironMEntal rEsourcEs

362 chapter 12

B ike lanes, micro wind turbines, and new water and waste collection systems—how can we build greener cities and lifestyles? This chapter shifts from a focus on self and individual worries about stress and fatigue to family ecosystems—the interaction between families and their environments. We return to issues introduced earlier in the book

about home environments and the future pressing needs of cities as their populations grow.

Due to a slowing economy and environmental concerns in the United States, the average

house size which peaked in 2007 at 2,521 sq. ft. shrunk in 2010 to 2,377 sq. ft. For historical

perspective, the average U.S. house size in 1950 was 983 sq. ft. Worldwide the sizes and

configurations of homes are shifting along with improving techniques and practices regarding

energy and water use (Abeliotis, Koniari, & Sardianou, 2010; Berkholz, Stamminger, Wnuk,

Owens, & Bernado, 2010).

Wayne Gretzky, the hockey great, once said, “I skate to where the puck is going to be,

not where it has been.” In this spirit we look forward, how can we have a better planet and

healthier families? Increased environmental awareness as it impacts on individuals, families,

and households is offered to the reader along with solutions for households. We don’t stop

with simply listing problems; everyday solutions are given. Here is an example:

Preventing energy waste has become a household preoccupation in the era of nearly

$4-a-gallon gas and rising prices for everything from airline tickets to milk. Whether

motivated by environmental impulses or a desire to reduce utility bills, many Americans

are researching ways to create a more energy-efficient home. (Hodges, 2008, p. D1)

Sustainability Energy-efficient choices can save families about a third on their energy bill without sacrific-

ing comfort. We also want to make sustainable choices for our children and grandchildren.

As stewards of the earth, we have a responsibility that extends beyond our immediate

family circle.

Sustainability is about conscious design and the consideration of the impacts

consumption choices make on the environment given finite resources. It involves ethics,

ecology, and estimations of system life expectancies. A widely used definition comes from the

Brundtland Report (1987) which states that sustainability is about “meeting the needs of the

present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs.” This

report set forth a coherent set of principles and forms the bedrock of many disciplines. Some

of the concepts include inter-generational justice and the three legs of sustainability:

• social

• economic, and

• environmental

Depending on the discipline one of these aspects is emphasized. In this chapter we are mostly

talking about the environmental side with applications to the social unit of the family. The cost

savings discussed and worldwide impact touch on economics. A trend to be pointed out is

that “despite a weak economy, more U.S. land is being voluntarily conserved as urban parks,

family farms, forests, gardens and farmers’ markets—a total of 10 million new acres since

2005, says a report out today. . . . ‘Even when times are tough, people want to take care of

their home—the places they see every day,’” says Rand Wentworth, president of the Land

Trust Alliance, a conservation group (Koch, November 16, 2011, p. 7).

Managing Environmental Resources 363

Resource education brings current and potential sustainability problems to the forefront

for discussion and resolution. It goes beyond sensitizing people to giving them the tools and

information to act for sustainable development.

The ultimate goal is sustainable development—a form of growth wherein societal

needs, present and future, are met. Sustainable development requires the input and coop-

eration of all segments of society, producers as well as consumers. Toward this end, more

careful decisions at every level are being made about the products and services brought into

and used in the home.

The impact on the land, air, and sea from consumption of goods and resources is known

as the ecological footprint. To explain further, the ecological footprint is the “amount of

biologically productive land and sea area required for the support either of an individual’s

current lifestyle or the consumption patterns of a particular population. It should include the

area required to absorb and render harmless the corresponding waste” (www.dolceta.eu,

November 10, 2011). More specifically, the carbon footprint has to do with measuring and

reducing the environmental impact of carbon emissions resulting from activities such as the

use of fuel to transport goods or for travel.

A new concept is entering the consumer lexicon: the carbon footprint. First came

organic. Then came fair trade. Now makers of everything from milk to jackets to cars are

starting to tally up the carbon footprints of their products. That’s the amount of carbon

dioxide and other greenhouse gases that get coughed into the air when the goods are

made, shipped and stored, and then used by consumers. (Ball, 2008, p. R1)

As the quote indicates, almost anything can be measured for the carbon footprint, and

nations are rated on carbon dioxide emissions from fossil fuel consumption, in annual tons per

capita. Table 12.1 shows the top six nations on carbon dioxide emissions, according to the

International Energy Agency.

Once carbon footprint is measured, the next issue is how to label products about carbon

footprint or being green in general. These labels are known as eco-labels.

Airplanes have high decibel levels.

364 chapter 12

The dairy industry doesn’t plan to put carbon-footprint labels on milk cartons, says Rick

Naczi, an executive vice president for Dairy Management. “It’s something that would be

very, very difficult to make understandable to consumers,” he says. (Ball, 2008, p. R4)

An Australian study (D’Souza, Taghian, Lamb, & Peretiako, 2007) found that label dissatisfac-

tion on green products was higher in older and middle-age respondents. Within this group of

respondents, there was some disagreement about accuracy of labels and about the ease in

understanding them. The United States does not have an agreed upon government eco-label

across many lines of products, but government-sponsored eco-labels are available in over

20 countries including Canada, Australia, Japan, and Sweden.

College campuses are experiencing a renewed interest in going “green.” More colleges are

making sustainability programs a high priority, putting more resources into energy-conservation

efforts, and setting goals to reduce carbon emissions, according to survey results released by

the National Wildlife Federation. Given the popularity of all things green, that’s not surprising

(Carlson, 2008).

Critical Thinking

What is your campus doing about recycling, food waste, green transportation, bicycles, cleaner air, energy use, compact fluorescent light bulbs, and other green adjustments? Do you agree or disagree that today’s college age students are the greenest generation? Explain.

This chapter also touches on economic development. In the language of economics, the

environment is considered a natural capital, a good we have to protect. Decisions are being

made that are consistent with economic growth and environmental protection. According to

Harris (2002), all nations seek economic development, but only in the last 40 years have they

considered the impact that growth has on the environment. In many nations, the concept of

environmental protection is even more recent than that.

Top Six nations on Carbon Dioxide Emissions country percent of Global Total

China 23.3

uSa 18.11

european union 14.04

india 5.78

russia 5.67

Japan 4.01

Source: International Energy Agency.

Table 12.1

Managing Environmental Resources 365

In the United States the recycling rate has doubled during the last 15 years. In this chap-

ter the 3-Rs solution—reducing, reusing, and recycling—will be highlighted. It is increasingly

being accepted worldwide as a means of combating the negative effects on the environment.

There is also a growing recognition of the total product life cycle—from the resources used

to make the product, through its actual use, until its final disposal. The study of the life cycle

of household products involves not only the material resources involved in their manufac-

ture, distribution, and disposal, including energy use, but also the human resources involved

(Uitdenbogerd, Brouwer, & Groot-Marcus, 1998). The modern term for this is life cycle

assessment (LCA). LCA manufacturers are finding ways to reduce pollution and waste (see

Figure 12.1). To summarize, environmental problems are intertwined with human behaviors.

Sigmund Freud, the founder of psychoanalysis, best known for his theories about the

psyche (the mind) and social interaction, also made observations about humans in environ-

mental contexts. In Civilization and Its Discontents (1930), Freud wrote that as civilizations

become increasingly complex and modern, humans must renounce their innate selves. We

must think about things greater than our immediate surroundings.

The difficulty may be in change resistance. For example, in some Scottish supermarkets,

shoppers were accustomed to using store bags that were free, but now they are asked to pay

a small charge for store bags or to bring their reusable bags from home.

Critical Thinking

Does your grocery store encourage the use of bags from home or charge for in-store bags? If it doesn’t, but intends to start that policy, how do you think it would go over? If it was only 5 or 10 cents a bag, would shoppers say okay or be incensed?

Raw materials and

transportation Manufacturing Packaging Transportation Use

Recycling and

Disposal

Figure 12.1 Life cycle assessments (LCA).

As world population continues to grow, and economic activity expands at an even faster

rate, sustainability will become both more important and more difficult to achieve. This

is the major challenge of the twenty-first century, and both economic and ecological

understanding will be needed to formulate global, national, and local responses. (Harris,

2002, p. 439)

Thinking about others and the future of the planet is this chapter’s theme. The management

process takes place within an environmental context as illustrated in Figure 12.2. Building on

366 chapter 12

the chapters on resources and managing human resources, time, stress, and fatigue, this

chapter gives practical examples about how to manage the environment, particularly the near

environment that directly affects individuals and families. The resource chapters share the

philosophy that the way individuals and families allocate resources has an impact on the state

of the environment and global well-being. Certainly, decisions and actions at the household

level collectively affect not only the present state of the world, but also the world that is to

come. Even one simple behavioral change, such as carpooling, using cold water when laun-

dering, or recycling bags, affects the environment.

The present state of the environment is a result of developments and changes in the

past as well as of current conditions. According to the best estimates, the human species,

Homo sapiens, is 250,000 years old, and the earth is 4.5 billion years old (Gould, 1989).

Phrasing it poetically, Gould says that in terms of the age of the earth, humanity arose

just yesterday as a small twig on one branch of a flourishing tree. The realization of our

minor place in earth’s history gives us a sense of the magnitude of our responsibility to

preserve what we have inherited. We are just beginning to understand both the limits and

the potential of our planet and our role. What separates us from previous generations is

this greater awareness of the benefits and limits of our environment. The importance of the

choices individuals and families make regarding the environment is enormous and social

influence has a tremendous effect on recycling and consumption behaviors (Goldsmith &

Goldsmith, 2011).

the Ecosystem and Environmentalism A house is a system of interrelated parts, so the systems approach used throughout this

book is particularly appropriate when discussing environmentalism. Systems are composed

of living and nonliving things. Living systems (e.g., plants, animals, societies) are open sys-

tems that react to feedback. They can exist only in certain environments. Any change in the

Chapters 1 and 3

Step 1

Chapter 3

Step 2

Chapter 4

Step 3

Chapters 5 and 6

Step 4

Chapter 6

Step 5

Decide, plan, and implement

Accomplish goals and evaluate

Identify resources

Identify problem, need, want, or goal

Clarify values

Feedback

Environment

Chapters 2 and 7

Chapters 2 and 12

Figure 12.2 The management process model.

Managing Environmental Resources 367

environment, such as a change in the temperature, air pressure, hydration, oxygen, or radia-

tion outside a relatively narrow range, produces stress to which living systems cannot adjust.

Under severe stress or deprivation, they cannot survive.

As discussed in Chapter 2, the family ecosystem is the subsystem of human ecology

that emphasizes the interactions between families and environments. Ecology is the study

of how living things relate to their natural environment (Naar, 1990). An ecosystem is the

subsystem of ecology that emphasizes the relationship between organisms and their environ-

ment. Organisms are living things—plants or animals. The place where an organism lives is

its  habitat.

The external conditions that surround and influence the life of an organism, an individual,

a family, or a population constitute its environment (Naar, 1990). According to Gould (1998),

beyond these basic definitions, there is a certain mystery to the balance of life:

We do not yet know the rules of the composition for ecosystems. We do not even know

if rules exist in the usual sense. I am tempted, therefore, to close with the famous words

that D’Arcy Thompson wrote to signify our ignorance of the microscopic world (Growth

and Form, 1942 edition). We are not quite so uninformed about the rules of composi-

tion for ecosystems, but what a stark challenge and what an inspiration to go forth: “We

have come to the edge of a world of which we have no experience, and where all our

preconceptions must be recast.” (p. 404)

Concern for the environment is called environmentalism. It can be found at all levels,

from the individual—including activists like Rachel Carson—to the family to community

organizations to government and industry. Furthermore, the levels overlap. For example,

individuals can work through institutions by banding together, boycotting products, writing

letters, and voting for appropriate candidates. They can positively affect what industry pro-

duces, by buying only “green” (environmentally friendly) products. However, it should be

pointed out that

Most consumers lack the scientific background to understand many environmental

issues and few have relevant previous experience to guide them in assessing the rela-

tive environmental merits of market-place alternatives. Thus, the potential for consumer

fraud and deception is great. (Cude, 1993, p. 207)

A major emphasis of environmentalism is how to retain existing environmental resources.

These resources can be divided into two types: social and physical. Social environmental

resources include an array of societies, economic and political groups, and community

organizations. In each of these, people are united in a common cause, such as saving the

manatees, or in a more general concern, such as reducing global warming. Global warming

is caused when carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases collect in the air and trap solar

heat reflected from the earth; over time, it can alter the earth’s temperature, sea level, and

storm systems (Pinchon, 1990). As an example, ocean temperatures have risen 1.4 degrees

since 1970. Carbon dioxide is released into the atmosphere by the burning of fuels, such

as coal and oil; and the natural process of carbon dioxide recycling gets impeded by the

destruction of forests.

Physical environmental resources include natural tangible (e.g., trees, soil, and

ocean) and less tangible (e.g., air, sound, and light) surroundings. The latter part of this

chapter will explore physical environmental management problems in the home and suggest

eco-friendly practices.

368 chapter 12

Ecoconsciousness refers to the thoughts and actions given to protecting and sustain-

ing the environment. Conservation is the act or process of preserving and protecting natural

environments from loss or depletion. Individuals and families who are ecoconscious discuss

environmental issues, recycle, conserve, reduce energy consumption and waste, buy “green”

products, and support environmental causes and groups. The degree of ecoconsciousness

varies, as shown on the continuum in Figure 12.3.

Problem Recognition Differences among members in their ecological interests and practices may be a source of

conflict in families. One family member may move around the house turning on the lights,

whether required or not, while another follows carefully turning off the lights. Eventually, one of

them is going to become irritated with the other’s behavior.

Problem solving begins with the recognition that there is a problem to be solved. Problem

recognition occurs when an individual or a family perceives a significant difference between

the lifestyle practiced and some desired or ideal lifestyle. The discrepancy must be large

enough to push the individual to action. For example, Shannon and Dan enjoy fishing. One

Saturday they go to a nearby lake and see a sign that says the fish in the lake are contami-

nated by high levels of mercury. Disappointed because they cannot fish, they recognize that

water contamination is a problem affecting their choices and lifestyles. Shannon and Dan did

Air emissions are potential problems.

PassiveAnti-environmentalist Pro-environmentalist

Figure 12.3 Continuum of environmental activism.

Managing Environmental Resources 369

not create the problem, but now they realize they are affected by it. What alternative courses

of action do they have? They can quit fishing, go to another lake, or join others in an attempt

to clean up the lake.

A problem can arise in one of two ways: need recognition and opportunity recognition.

In need recognition, the person realizes how much he or she needs a certain product,

service, or condition. In opportunity recognition, the individual realizes that she or he

may have limited or no access to a product, service, or condition. For example, suppose

the price of gasoline soared to over $15 a gallon—this is definitely need recognition. Nearly

everyone needs gasoline, but who could afford it? Now, suppose a gasoline shortage forces

gasoline stations to close for a few days—this is

an example of opportunity recognition. Drivers

cannot purchase gasoline even if they want

to, a situation that has occurred in the United

States and other countries. Many environmen-

tal problems involve both need and opportunity

recognition. Objects in the environment can

trigger a need or opportunity recognition and

reaction and alter the pursuit of goals.

Communication plays a large part in the recognition of environmental problems.

The sign warned Shannon and Dan not to eat the fish they caught. The federal govern-

ment communicates environmental information through news releases, press conferences,

warnings, and legislation. Television is a great communicator of environmental news, as are

magazines, newspapers, and radio. Besides media sources, families communicate news

about environmental conditions and behavior. Parents model littering or recycling behaviors

for their children.

Once an environmental problem has been recognized, the individuals involved engage

in an information search to resolve it. Information has been dubbed the ultimate renewable

resource (meaning that it is essentially unlimited), because new technologies are constantly

being devised to transmit, collect, store, process, package, and display it (Elkington, Burke, &

Hailes, 1988). Through television and the Internet, stories of environmental disasters such as

oil spills are immediately transmitted to the public. This is one of the reasons why environmen-

tal awareness is greater now than ever before.

Marshall McLuhan (1962), who coined the phrase “the medium is the message,” said

that the spread of electronic communications technology has established a global network.

As individuals become more globally connected, they naturally become more globally aware.

An example of the importance of global communications was the International Whaling

Commission’s decision, supported by the United States, to place a moratorium on commercial

whale harvesting (Bohlen, 1990). Television reports on the plight of the whales undoubtedly

played a part in the decision.

Biodegradability Biodegradability is defined as the capability of material to decompose over time as a result

of biological activity; more specifically it is a substance’s ability to be broken down by micro-

organisms. Germs are microorganisms which can cause disease. There are biodegradable

detergents. A detergent is any substance or preparation containing soap and/or surfactants

for washing and cleaning purposes.

Suggested Activity Where do you place yourself on the ecoconsciousness continuum? Explain your answer and discuss in groups. Where do most students develop ecoconsciousness—at home, at school?

370 chapter 12

Biological Diversity Species extinction or depletion is caused mainly by the loss of habitat—and that loss is nearly

always caused by human encroachment. As humans use more resources (land and water), fewer

resources are available for other life forms. Biological diversity is a multidimensional concept

encompassing the variety and variability among living organisms and the ecological complexities

in which they occur. The term includes different ecosystems and species and their relative abun-

dance. In Chapter 4, utility was defined as the usefulness, value, or worth of a resource.

For a substance or idea to be considered a resource (something useful for achieving an end

purpose or goal), it must first be recognized as having current or potential utility. For example,

at one time, uranium was considered a worthless, silvery white metal. Now it is used in scientific

research and as a nuclear fuel. One of the reasons animals, minerals, plants and habitats must

be protected is that their potential use and their particular role in the total ecosystem may

not be fully understood yet. Scientists have identified/named 1.7 million species (this includes

bacteria, fungi, nematodes, plants, animals, and insects) out of at least 11 million and perhaps

100 million. They are developing an easy-to-use, publicly accessible database on every species.

Many difficult decisions lie ahead as to which species will be saved and which will not.

These decisions are part of a branch of study called environmental ethics. Ethics are systems

of morals, principles, values, or good conduct. No discussion of environmentalism would be

complete without considering the ethical issues involved. Each person has to decide what is

the right course of action in personal situations as well as in the broader societal context. As

E. O. Wilson, Harvard University biologist, said, “I suppose it will all come down to a decision

of ethics—how we value the natural worlds in which we evolved and now, increasingly, how

we regard our status as individuals” (1988, p. 16).

Individual and Family Decision Making Individuals and families are taking on a greater share of responsibility for their environment and

are relying less on larger institutions. Many people realize that government or business alone

cannot be depended on to solve all the environmental ills that exist. The problems are too

Water pollution has undesirable effects.

Managing Environmental Resources 371

widespread to be remedied by one group alone. Furthermore, the boundaries of the problems

are often difficult to discern. For example, consumption and disposal practices of individuals

and families, as well as those of businesses and industry, contribute to the waste stream (all

garbage or trash produced). This blurring of the boundaries between the traditionally defined

roles of the public sector and the private sector is a growing trend.

One of the most difficult aspects of environmentalism is determining what is a real, acute

problem or shortage and what is not. Media often give out conflicting messages about the

severity of a problem or the best solutions. Now, more than ever before, critical thinking skills

are needed to evaluate environmental information. Cross-checking the information by looking

at several different reliable sources is one way of arriving at the truth of a situation.

Environmental decision making by individuals is complicated enough, considering the

range of values, resources, goals, and decision-making steps involved. Environmental deci-

sion making in families is necessarily all the more complicated. Family members may differ in

their use of electricity; also, some may want to recycle bottles, jars, and cans, whereas others

throw them away in the garbage—just two examples of conflicting environmental behavior.

Sometimes one family member takes on the role of an environmentalist and sets the

rules, turns down the thermostat, and turns off the television when not in use. With so much

environmental education taking place in schools, it is not unusual to find a school-aged child

rather than a parent taking on this role. Children may be better informed about environmental

issues than are their parents; and, with their youthful optimism, they are willing to try new ways

of managing household waste or adjusting consumption patterns.

Critical Thinking

Can you think of an environmental activity you participated in as a child? Was it at home, at school, or in a club or organization? Did you plant a tree? Describe the activity and your memory of it.

Incorporating Agriculture into Communities People have had backyard or kitchen gardens for centuries, but there is a trend back toward

“back to nature” or “back to the farm” with growing edible food in school and community gar-

dens. There are three ways of incorporating agriculture into suburbia or smaller places such

as parks within cities:

1. Setting aside land for a farm, orchard, or vineyard. The land could be managed by farm-

ers, landscape crews, or other salaried workers, perhaps started by a builder of a large

housing development.

2. Community gardens which are tilled, ready to plant, with rules and rental fees usually. In

some cases a class or cooperative is involved with meetings and a market is formed for

selling produce or plants.

3. Open areas with fruit and nut trees or berry bushes, lettuce, and other simple-to-grow

vegetables available to residents in an area.

372 chapter 12

To put this into family resource management context, within the same family there may

be vast differences in types, styles, and levels of environmental awareness. Differences are

even more evident between families and between communities. Some communities have

active gardening programs others have recycling programs making it easier for people to

participate. Ease and convenience are significant factors in the success of conservation or

agricultural programs.

It does not have to be gardens per se. Developers are catching on with master-planned

communities featuring nature belts for walks and using materials and landscaping that require

less upkeep. Some U.S. communities in the West and Southwest where water is scarce have

banned traditional lawns in favor of more easily maintained native landscapes and areas for

agricultural production. Elsa Fuss, a mother of two who was looking at a development south-

west of Denver that featured a 4-H livestock ranch and hundreds of acres of community

gardens, said, “I know my kids will know computers, technology—all those things they‘re

growing up with. . . . I also want them to know working with their hands” (Simon, 2011, R3).

Green building is about the relationship of a house and its occupants with the environ-

ment; it involves eco-friendly design and processes. Conservation of energy, water, and land

are encouraged. The National Association of Home Builders estimates that more than half

of its members incorporate green features such as eco-friendly finishes, formaldehyde-free

cabinet components, flooring from sustainable sources, and efficient appliances when they

build (Johnston & Gibson, 2008). From the consumer side, research indicates that “greens”

like living with other “greens.” In other words, a homeowner does not want to have the only

house on the block with solar panels or a tankless water heater; he or she wants like-minded

neighbors. They are looking for “green” communities.

Officials of Pardee Homes, a Los Angeles-based unit of timber-giant Weyerhauser Co.,

say that over the past year they have also opened two green subdivisions in San Diego

after seeing the demand for savings on energy bills. By using fluorescent lighting and

tankless water heaters, they say, they have been able to achieve energy savings of as

much as 75% compared with conventional homes. They add that local environmental

groups helped persuade them to take land-preservation measures such as replanting

trees and plants. (Carlton, 2003, p. B1)

case study Farms instead of golf courses A 2,300-acre development outside Charlottesville, Virginia, has apple orchards and cattle pastures. “Used to be, developers built high-end suburban communities around golf greens. The hot amenity now? Salad greens. . . . Forget multimillion-dollar recre- ation centers—‘our amenities are watching the cows graze and the leaves change,’ says Joe Barnes, development principal for

Bundoran Farm . . . The trend has its roots in the growing distaste for prototypical suburban sprawl: mile after mile of look-alike homes broken up by the occasional park. The sustainability move- ment, with its emphasis on conservation, preservation and local food production has helped, too.”

Source: Simon, S. (2011, September 12). An apple tree grows in Suburbia. The Wall Street Journal, p. R3.

Managing Environmental Resources 373

Environmental Problems and Solutions The remainder of this chapter is divided into five parts: water, energy, noise, waste and

recycling, and air quality. Each part describes the problems and presents solutions appli-

cable to individuals, families, and households. To keep the chapter a manageable length,

some important topics, including ocean pollution, ozone depletion, desertification, defor-

estation, climatic changes, and loss of soil, had to be omitted. All of these are important

avenues for future study and research. Many of them overlap. For example, desertification

refers to the increase in dry, barren land that supports little or no vegetation. This happens

for many reasons, including the loss of soil, overpopulation, overgrazing, deforestation,

and overcultivation.

Common to all environmental problems is the widespread increase in pollution.

Pollution is a general term referring to undesirable changes in physical, chemical, or

biological characteristics of air, land, or water that can harm the health, activities, or survival

of living organisms. It can be thought of as contamination of a resource, a reduction of qual-

ity or usefulness (Harris, 2002). The information that follows is as accurate as possible, but

it is up to the reader to keep abreast of the latest developments in the ever-changing field

of environmentalism.

Water Quality and Availability Clean, safe drinking water for all is the goal. In most U.S. communities, the sources of

drinking water include rivers, lakes, streams, ponds, reservoirs, springs, and wells. The

Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) prescribes regulations to limit the amount of certain

contaminants in public water systems. The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) regulates

contaminants in bottled water. Drinking water including bottled water is reasonably expected

to contain some contaminants. The reason is that as water travels to the surface it dissolves

certain materials and picks up other substances from animal or human activity. Contaminant

categories include:

1. Microbial contaminants such as viruses and bacteria

2. Inorganic contaminants such as salts and minerals

3. Pesticides and herbicides from a variety of sources from households to agriculture

4. Organic chemical contaminants including synthetic and volatile organic chemicals

5. Radioactive contaminants which can occur naturally or from oil or gas production and

mining activities.

After water is pumped to the surface, U.S. cities may add disinfectants and fluoride for dental

health. Adding fluoride is debatable and is not a standard practice around the world. In some

cases, well water passes through activated carbon filter units or sand filtration systems to

remove certain chemicals before entering the public water supply.

Worldwide, the two main problems associated with water are shortages and pollution.

Since 1900 there has been a sixfold increase in worldwide water use. About one-fifth of the

earth’s population does not have safe drinking water. The primary concern is that water is

374 chapter 12

safe and the secondary concerns are the aesthetics of color, taste, and odor. “With rising

per capita incomes and growing populations, human consumption of water is rising while the

demands for water for agriculture, manufacturing, recreation, and the environment also are

increasing” (Libecap, 2010, p. 10).

The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) requires all drinking-water suppliers to pro-

vide an annual quality statement. These reports are available at the Web site epa.gov or from

your local utility. According to the EPA, approximately 50,000 water contaminants have been

identified, and more than 100 of these are regulated in the United States. All contaminants

are potentially hazardous to human health. Lead is of particular concern for small children

and pregnant women. One way to lessen exposure to lead when water has been sitting for

several hours is to flush taps for 30 seconds to two minutes before using water for drinking

or cooking.

Households with private wells need to get their water supplies tested periodically. If a

contaminant is found, the report will include how much was found and whether the level

exceeds health standards. About 10–20 percent of Americans draw their water from pri-

vate wells. In this case, samples of water can be tested at certified laboratories. The coop-

erative extension service can inform residents about testing services available. The EPA’s

safe-drinking-water hotline is 1-800-426-4791 for information on state-certified testing

laboratories.

Because of the fear of water contaminants, water-purifying businesses ranging from legit-

imate to quasi-legitimate are thriving. Each year, U.S. residents spend over a billion dollars

on home-based purifying equipment and water filtration services. In addition, consumers

spend billions on bottled water, some brands of which are unregulated and less pure than tap

water. Before investing in any equipment or services, consumers should first have their water

checked by legitimate testing services that are not selling a product. Consumers can also

check with their local Better Business Bureau or consumer protection agency to see whether

there are any recorded complaints against the company from whom they are considering

buying equipment or services.

DAILY RESIDENTIAL INDOOR WATER USE (before conversation measures)

Toilet 26.7%

• If all U.S households installed water-saving features, water use would decrease by 30%. This would save an estimated 5.4 billion gallons of water per day, resulting in daily dollar- volume savings of $11.3 million or more than $4 billion per year.

• The largest daily user of water in the home is the toilet. By replacing this one product with a high- efficiency toilet (HET) you can greatly reduce a home’s total water use.

Shower 16.8%

Faucet 15.7%

Clothes Washer 21.7%

Leaks 13.7%

Other 5.3%

Figure 12.4 “Daily residential indoor water use.” Source: American Water Works Association Research Foundation, “Residential End Uses of Water.”

Managing Environmental Resources 375

Contamination of drinking water is not the only water-related issue. There are many

others, including the following:

• Drinking water: Supply and conservation, treatment, and health considerations.

• Groundwater: Availability and depletion, quality and contamination, consequences to

public health, detection, and monitoring.

• Seawater: Quality and quantity; preservation of sea life.

• Water for agricultural use: Conservation and supply.

• Water for industrial use: Supply and pollutants.

• Water for household use: Supply and quality, conservation, and water-efficient products.

Because this book is concerned primarily with individual and family management prac-

tices, this discussion will focus on drinking water and household water use.

Water Consumption and shortage The typical U.S. household uses 5,300 gallons of water a month. More than half of this usage

happens in the bathroom with toilets using the most (24 percent), showers (21 percent), and

baths (9 percent). Washing machines also use a substantial amount at 22 percent of the total.

One way to conserve is to have energy-efficient, low-water-use washing machines. Leaks can

waste 5–10 percent.

Given that the bathroom is the main source of water use, in 1994 the Federal Energy

Policy Act restricted all new household faucets and showerheads to 2.5 gallons per minute.

The Act also restricted toilets, limiting flush capacity to 1.6 gallons compared to a standard of

4 gallons in the 1970s.

Water used to be cheap, clean, and abundant, but in many metropolitan areas and in the

dry Southwest including west Texas and southern California, water has now become a limited

resource. As a result, many areas are regulating water use through rules and legislation. During

shortages, cities have ordinances governing when cars can be washed or sprinklers used. In

Piped water polluting a lake.

376 chapter 12

households, 20–62 percent of their total water use could be on outdoor areas such as lawns

and pools. So, if homeowners want to cut their water bill, they would have to examine both

indoor and outdoor water use.

praCtiCal Ways to reduCe household Water use Most homeowners cannot afford to replace their toilets, and this is certainly not practical for

renters. Nevertheless, there are many low-cost or free ways to save water:

• Do not leave the water running while doing dishes, brushing teeth, or shaving.

• Run full loads in the washing machine and dishwasher.

• Match the water level to the size and type of laundry load. Use cold water.

• Install low-flow shower heads. They mix air into the water flow to increase the water pres-

sure. A 10-minute shower under a water-efficient shower head will save five gallons of

water over a bath and save over $150 a year on energy used to heat water.

• Fix leaky faucets. A slow drip from a single faucet adds up to 170 gallons of water loss

per month.

• Landscape with native plants that do not require additional watering.

• Use only the necessary amount of water for cooking and rinsing food.

• Water the lawn and garden early in the morning to avoid losing too much water to evapo-

ration in the heat of the day. Watering cans use less water than hoses. Cover soil with

compost or mulch to reduce evaporation.

• Use buckets of water to wash the car rather than running water continuously from a hose.

This list could go on, but these suggestions provide a starting point. Desalination research

provides hope for a plentiful water supply in the long term. Desalinated sea water is the main

source of water currently used in nations like Malta, an island nation in the Mediterranean

Sea. Another solution is to grow crops that require less water. Currently, the world’s human

population continues to grow while the supply of freshwater remains constant. Cities are con-

centrating on these solutions:

1. Reducing unwanted chemical usage.

2. Reducing pollution.

3. Initiating recycling programs.

4. Building and monitoring efficient water distribution systems.

Learning how to conserve and apportion water will be one of the greatest management

problems of the 21st century. Though the United States ranks sixth among water-rich nations

in the world, it ranks third in water consumption and waste. As water becomes scarcer, its

perceived value as a resource will increase. Learning to conserve now will begin a lifelong habit

that will lead to saved money and a healthier environment.

Energy The main problems associated with energy are energy production, energy wastage, and

pollution from the use of fossil fuels. Fossil fuels are the remains of dead vegetation, such as

coal, oil, and natural gas, which can be burned to release energy (Naar, 1990). Fuel is used to

provide physical comfort and mechanical power (Elkins, Hillman, & Hutchison, 1992).

Managing Environmental Resources 377

Because electricity is the main form of energy used in today’s homes, the emphasis in this

section is on electricity with a few introductory comments here about the value of natural gas

as an alternative for household use. Homeowners using natural gas appliances have unlim-

ited hot water, faster clothes drying time, more precision if using a chef-quality range, and

an alternative to burning logs in gas fireplaces. It is economical in that is uses one-third less

electricity, reduces personal carbon foot steps, and some cities offer rebates as incentives to

use natural gas.

Historically, usable energy was most often produced by burning wood or a natural fuel such

as coal or oil. One of the mistakes in North America’s past was “cut-out and get-out forestry.”

Newer approaches involve replanting. Today, electricity is produced from coal using generators

driven by steam, from other fossil fuels such as oil and natural gas, and from nuclear fuel.

Hydroelectric power, which comes from generators turned by falling water, is another

source of energy. Dwindling fossil fuels and concern over potential accidental radioactive dis-

charges from nuclear power plants have led to efforts to find alternative sources of electrical

energy. Among the alternatives under consideration are solar batteries, geothermal power

stations, nuclear-fusion reactors, and magnetohydrodynamic generators. Whatever the source

of power, electrical energy is generated at a central point (e.g., a dam, an energy plant) and

then transmitted to delivery points or substations from where it is distributed to consumers.

Figure 12.5 gives an ecosystem view of energy plants. The impacts of energy plants on soci-

ety and the economy are noted in Figure 12.6.

Air emissions

Visual impact

Contaminated land

Waste

Flora and fauna

Transport

Effluent and

sewage

Water useRaw materials

Energy

Figure 12.5 The environmental framework of an energy plant. This illustrates the interconnectedness of various factors in the energy plant environment.

Source: Welsh Development Agency.

378 chapter 12

energy audits and researCh Energy audits, which are assessments of a home’s energy efficiency, can range from free

do-it-yourself audits with instructions over the Internet to inspections by paid professionals

who can spend up to three hours scrutinizing a house including the attic and basement.

Local utility companies or city or county utility offices may provide free or low-cost home

energy audits.

An energy audit is performed by a specialist who makes a “walk-through” inspection of

the interior and the exterior of a home. Upon completion of the inspection or shortly after-

ward, homeowners receive an analysis of what they can do to improve the energy efficiency

of their home. Auditors focus on determining where a house loses heat in winter and cool

air in summer, and they identify appliances and heating/cooling systems that have better

efficiency levels. College graduates who have studied resource management have been hired

to work as home energy auditors for city and county government and utility companies, and

as energy educators, researchers, and policy makers in state and national governments.

For example, “because of the main environmental impact of the laundry process on energy

consumption, the sustainability of laundering has also been of interest to researchers at the

U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) almost since its inception” (Hustvedt, 2011, p. 228). There

are 16 DOE National Laboratories that conduct research on a variety of subjects including

home energy use.

Shareholders Shareholder value

Contractors

Customers and supplies

Fair trade Fair payment

Neighbors Neighbor relations

Staff

Community

Social inclusion Employee

volunteering Community support

Training and development

Working conditions Health and safety

Labor rights Equal opportunities

Flexible working

Figure 12.6 The socioeconomic framework of an energy plant. This illustrates the people and policy aspects of energy plant environmental management.

Source: Welsh Development Agency.

Managing Environmental Resources 379

Home energy use has gotten more complex with technology advancements. A century

ago, a typical home may have had one electrical socket per room capable of delivering 100

watts of power; typical homes today have at least 4 per room and as many as 12–16 electrical

outlets, and a typical home is wired to provide 12,000 or even more watts. On a late summer

afternoon, a large house may consume over 4,000 watts of electricity (Crossen, 2001). The

reasons for this growth include

• Larger houses. As mentioned earlier in the chapter, the size of the average U.S. home is

2377 sq. ft. In some parts of the country huge houses are the norm. In Aspen, Colorado,

it is 15,000 square feet and in Boulder, Colorado, it is 6,000 square feet. To gain a per-

spective on this, the average South Korean family lives in a 1,200-square-foot apartment.

• More and larger appliances.

• The popularity of computers and entertainment equipment.

• More air-conditioning. What was once thought of as a luxury is now standard.

An incredible amount of energy is lost from such simple things as drafts.

The U.S. Department of Energy’s office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy

(EERE) estimates that draft reduction within a home can lower energy costs any-

where from 5% to 30% annually. Meanwhile, according to Department of Energy data

provided by the U.S. Green Building Council, homes account for 21% of U.S. carbon

dioxide emissions. And claiming a green home remodel makes for great bragging rights.

(Hodges, 2008, p. D1)

Energy-efficient windows and window treatments can reduce loss from drafts. Depending on

the climate and the home’s insulation, for a 1,900-square-foot single-family detached home

Children learn what comes into the house.

380 chapter 12

with an average of 2.7 occupants, about 50 percent of energy goes to space heating and

cooling, 15 percent to hot water, 14 percent to appliances, 11 percent to lighting, and the rest

to a variety of things including clocks, televisions, radios, and computers. So, the best way to

cut energy bills is to alter heating and cooling, have energy-efficient appliances, and remove

drafts. By improving insulation, weather stripping, and making a few alterations in a home

(e.g., shutting drapes and doors, adding overhangs, adding storm windows), homeowners

can save money and energy.

Besides windows, another source of heat loss is through cracks in walls and doors.

Sometimes the homeowner will not notice these hairline cracks, but trained specialists can

detect them using high-tech devices like infrared scanners. Specialists can also suggest how

much home repairs will cost and where to get help.

Here are the sources of air leaks in homes, according to the U.S. Department of Energy:

• Floors, walls, and ceilings

• Ducts

• Fireplaces

• Plumbing penetrations

• Doors

• Windows

• Fans and vents

• Electric outlets

31 percent

15 percent

14 percent

13 percent

11 percent

10 percent

4 percent

2 percent

HOW MUCH ELECTRICITY DO APPLIANCES USE?

Electric Blanket

Microwave Oven

Television

Dehumidifier

Well Pump

Home Computer

Aquarium/Terrarium

Dishwasher

Electric Cooking

Freezer

Water bed Heater

Clothes Dryer

Washing Machine

Refrigerator

Pool Pump

Spa (pump and heater)

This chart shows how much energy a typical appliance uses per year and its corresponding cost based on national averages. For example, a refrigerator uses almost five times the electricity the average television uses. Not surprisingly, pools and spas are energy hogs. Visit www.energysavers.gov for instructions on calculating the electrical use of your appliances.

kwh/year 0 500 1000 1500 2000 2500

Cost/Year 0 $42 $83 $125 $166 $208

Figure 12.7 “How much electricity do appliances use?”

Managing Environmental Resources 381

Several states charge different prices for energy use at different times of the day. The idea

is to spread out the energy use by making people pay higher prices during periods of peak

demand.

When Florida’s summer heat gets blistering, Lamar Faulkner used to simply turn down

the thermostat to keep his three-bedroom home near Pensacola comfortably cool. Now,

he turns it up a few degrees. The reason: Mr. Faulkner’s utility charges a premium—

as much as five times the standard rate—to use electricity during summer afternoons

when demand is greatest. (Gavin, 2002, p. D1)

praCtiCal Ways to reduCe household energy use Conducting an energy audit is a good way to find out about a specific home’s energy use. This

section provides several energy-saving ideas applicable to most homes.

Because air leaks are a major problem, insulation is an important way to reduce energy

loss. Insulation comes in three forms: rigid panels or sheets of insulation; blankets, batts,

or rolls (composed of fiberglass or rock wool); and blown insulation (rock wool, fiberglass,

cellulose, or polyurethane foam). The higher the R-value (R stands for resistance), the

higher the insulation properties. Insulation with an R-30 rating provides a better heat-flow

barrier than one rated R-10. The better rating comes with a higher price. Another solu-

tion is double- or triple-glazed windows to reduce heat loss or heat gain. Storm windows

are usually triple-glazed. Weather stripping around windows and doors will also seal leaks.

Window awnings will reduce heat gain in summer, and drawn, insulated drapes will reduce

heat loss in winter.

The site is the location or situation of a house. Orientation is the location or situation

of the house relative to points on a compass. In selecting the site and the orientation of the

house, the homeowner and builder should take the natural environment into account. Warmth

and shelter can be enhanced if environmental factors, such as hills, trees, winds, water, and

the sun, are considered. The climate will determine the best site and orientation for a house.

In states with hot climates, houses should have few windows on the west side to avoid the

afternoon sun. What you don’t want is huge sliding glass doors and balconies or patios on

this side. In states with predominantly cold climates, houses should have few windows on the

north side to reduce the cold drafts.

Landscaping affects heat loss and heat gain. Deciduous trees, such as oaks and

maples, that lose their leaves in the winter are good choices. Their leaves will shield the house

in the summer but let the sunshine through in the winter. Trees and bushes can also serve

as wind barriers.

According to the Department of Energy, the average U.S. household spends more than

$1,000 each year to run household appliances. The following suggestions can reduce this

amount considerably:

• Install a new, computerized thermostat; look for one that is ENERGY STAR-qualified.

A programmable thermostat turns heating and cooling systems on and off at

preprogrammed intervals.

• Clean or replace filters on furnaces regularly. Have an annual maintenance check of

heating and cooling systems.

382 chapter 12

• Turn the thermostat down on water heaters. Each 10-degree reduction cuts water-heat-

ing energy bills by 3–5 percent. However, to get dishes clean in a dishwasher, the water

heater should not be set below 140°F (Fahrenheit), unless the dishwasher has its own

water-heating system.

• When drying clothes, dry similar clothes together because lightweight synthetics dry

much more quickly than thick robes or bath towels. Dry two or more loads in a row to

take advantage of the residual heat.

• Keep the temperature setting in the refrigerator between 38°F and 42°F and the freezer

between 0°F and 5°F. If the refrigerator and freezer are kept 10 degrees colder than this,

energy consumption can increase by as much as 25 percent. Clean refrigerator coils at

least once a year. A filled refrigerator or freezer is more energy-efficient than an empty or

partially filled one.

• Use small appliances when possible because they require less energy than large

ones. Microwave ovens and toaster ovens use less energy than conventional ovens.

Coffeemakers, hair dryers, irons, and toasters do not consume much energy overall; they

draw a lot of power but are in use for short periods of time. Because refrigerators and

freezers run constantly, they use far more energy than other kitchen appliances do.

• Keep the refrigerator door open for a short time rather than opening and closing it fre-

quently, which wastes more energy. Most of the cold air rushes out of the refrigerator as

soon as it is opened.

• Replace old, inefficient appliances with efficient models. A refrigerator more than 10 years

old uses twice the energy of a new one.

• Clean the dryer’s lint screen after each use. Run full loads in the dishwasher and clothes

washer rather than running small loads more often.

• Heating water accounts for 95 percent of the energy consumed for washing in the

clothes washer. Save money and energy by washing in cold water, unless the clothes

require hot or warm water, and always use a cold-water rinse.

The ENERGY STAR label is the national symbol for energy efficiency developed by the

EPA and supported by the U.S. Department of Energy to help consumers select low-energy

appliances. Appliances, and heating and cooling products that earn the ENERGY STAR label

exceed the minimum federal standards for energy efficiency. Consumers should look for the

Energy-Guide label (see Figure 12.8 for an example). Also, in cooperation with the EPA and

the DOE, most computer and television manufacturers have joined the ENERGY STAR pro-

gram that promotes the design of equipment that use less energy when turned on and off. The

ENERGY STAR program is a work in progress; for example, more stringent standards went

into effect for clothes washers in 2007.

Reducing the amount of energy used by appliances is helpful, but it is a myth that turn-

ing off lights and the television is the best way to conserve energy in the home; in fact, these

consume a small portion of the home’s electricity (Merline, 1988). Even small savings help,

however, and consumers can reduce home energy consumption by

• Installing dimmer switches.

• Lighting areas for specific needs.

• Installing fluorescent lights or compact fluorescent lights (CFLs), which last longer and use

significantly less energy than incandescent lights do.

Managing Environmental Resources 383

• Using light colors on ceilings, walls, floors, and furniture because they reflect more light

and brighten a room.

• Replacing old lamps with new, more efficient ones. Dusting light bulbs and tubes

increases light output and reduces the risk of potential pollutants.

• Turning off lights when not in use.

• Checking Energy-Guide or ENERGY STAR label before buying.

These suggestions can help, but it is important to remember that the greatest savings come

from turning the thermostat down to 60°F in winter and turning it up to 80°F in the summer, or

turning it off altogether and opening the windows in pleasant weather.

Energy company records reveal that energy use varies widely even in neighbor-

hoods where houses are the same size and style. Efficient appliances and lighting and the

management of human behavior (e.g., shutting windows when the air conditioner is on) can

substantially affect the energy use in the home.

In the future, there will be more total home automation systems. South Korea is a lead-

ing country in innovations for home technology for everyday household tasks. They use cell

phones to manage everything from gas valves to washing machines.

. . . a really good example of home automation at work is South Korea, where Samsung

has its homevita automation system installed in about 4,000 apartments nationwide.

The system lets homeowners manage everyday household items such as washing

machines, lights, security cameras, and air conditioners with a touch panel, radio fre-

quency device, cell phone, or PDA: in addition, homeowners can access and manage

devices through a password-controlled Web site. (Cutting Edge, 2006, p. 374)

Information about features, capacity, and size, so you can compare models.

Manufacturer, model number, and appliance type.

The range of ratings for similar models, from “Uses Least Energy” to “Uses Most Energy.” Scale shows how a particular model measures up against competition.

Estimate of annual energy use. The lower the number, the more energy efficient and the less it costs to run.

An estimate of the annual cost to run this model.

Figure 12.8 The energy-guide label.

384 chapter 12

Noise Far less information is available about noise pollution than about water and energy conser-

vation. Noise pollution is less easy to delineate because people are not billed for the use of

noise, and each person is a producer as well as a consumer of noise. Noise is simply any

unwanted sound.

The intensity, or loudness, of sound is the amount of acoustic energy transmitted through

the air; it is measured in decibels (dB). The lowest sound humans can hear is 1 dB. An aver-

age home on a quiet street has a dB level of 50 (Pearson, 1989). A noisy office, a preschool

classroom, or an alarm clock can be as loud as 80 dB. Sounds above 85 dB can cause

hearing loss. A Rolling Stones concert or being honked at on the street clocks in at about

115 dB. At 120 dB the hearer experiences discomfort or pain; a jet taking off is about 140 dB.

Household appliances range from 60 to 90 dB, with the food disposal being the noisiest at

over 90 dB. Too much noise can be annoying, besides being harmful, making it difficult to

concentrate or relax.

Homes, offices, and other environments should strive to maintain a comfortable amount

of noise. Research shows that people feel uneasy if they are deprived of environmental stimu-

lation (i.e., too little sound, movement, or light) for too long. Too little sound may make a

person feel uncomfortable or lonely. To counteract this effect, music is piped in to elevators,

grocery stores, and dentists’ offices. Many people go to sleep better at night with the hum of

a fan or the drone of a radio in the background. Too much noise is a more common problem

than too little, however.

Noise from loud neighbors, ringing telephones, barking dogs, and screaming children

can become an intolerable burden. Often it is not the noise itself that is irritating or harm-

ful, but the continuing nature of noise or the combination of noises (e.g., the noise of the

vacuum cleaner, the blender, the television, and children slamming doors occurring at the

Children can help with household recycling.

(Source: istockphoto.com) 

Managing Environmental Resources 385

same time). Poorly constructed buildings add to the noise level. Insulation and absorb-

ing surfaces such as carpet, cork, or acoustical tiles can reduce noise. On common walls

between apartments, brick, earth, and concrete reduce noise better than wood or aluminum

siding. As a general rule, soft, porous surfaces absorb sound, and hard, smooth surfaces

reflect sound. A solution while on airplanes or working in a noisy office is to use an acoustic

noise– canceling headset.

praCtiCal Ways to reduCe noise The following suggestions will help reduce noise in the home:

• Find housing away from noisy traffic, airports, schools, and factories.

• Plant barrier trees and hedges to reduce noise. High walls and earth mounds also cut

noise.

• Place bedrooms in quieter parts of the house. Put the garage on the noisy side of

the site.

• Buy “quiet” appliances—these have more insulation.

• Turn down sounds on electronic devices.

• Draw heavy drapes and close blinds to shut out neighborhood noise.

• Weather strip windows and doors to prevent outside noise from entering the home.

Inside the house, solid-core doors will reduce noise between rooms. On a busy street,

use double- or triple-pane windows.

As the world becomes more crowded, noise pollution will become a greater manage-

ment problem than it currently is. Finding a quiet, peaceful place may become more difficult.

Decreasing noise is a way to de-stress life. Another way to reduce stress is to add sounds

that are soothing and pleasant. The rustle of trees, the singing of birds, and the sound of wind

chimes and ocean waves are soothing to many people. Bringing more of these natural sounds

into one’s life and removing some of the irritating, mechanical ones may increase a person’s

overall sense of well-being.

Waste and Recycling The average American receives 41 pounds of mail (most of it unwanted) annually which wastes

100 million trees. According to the EPA, during the past 35 years the amount of waste (paper

and otherwise) each person creates has almost doubled from 2.7 to 4.4 pounds per day. The

most effective way to reverse this trend is to prevent waste in the first place, also known as

source reduction. Source reduction refers to any change in the design, manufacture, pur-

chase, or use of materials or products, including packaging, to reduce the amount or toxicity

before they become municipal solid waste. Another way is to reuse products or materials.

Reuse centers include Goodwill and Salvation Army and specialized programs for building

materials or unneeded school materials. Manufacturing has changed too so that since 1977

the weight of a 2-liter plastic soft-drink bottle has been reduced from 68 grams to 51 grams.

That represents 250 million less pounds of plastic per year going into the waste stream.

Municipal solid waste (MSW), also known as trash or garbage, is a worldwide problem

as the population grows and more people gravitate toward cities. MSWs include products,

packaging, grass clippings, furniture, clothing, bottles, food scraps, newspapers, appliances,

paint and kerosene, and batteries. Historically, landfills were cheap and readily available, but

386 chapter 12

vacant land is no longer cheap and is becoming increasingly scarce around cities. Suburbs

have sprung up where landfills used to be.

Composting is on the upswing. It consists of decomposing organic waste such as food

scraps (fruit and vegetables, not meat or poultry) and yard trimmings with microorganisms

(mainly bacteria and fungi) to produce a humus-like substance that can be used in gardening

and landscaping.

The skyrocketing cost of land, coupled with concern about environmental pollution, has

led to the exploration of new methods of waste disposal. Possible avenues include burying

waste, burning it, recycling it, or not producing so much of it. Combining all four methods is

called integrated waste management. In this system, waste products are sorted, recy-

clable items are reused, and the rest are burned cleanly in a furnace that also produces steam

to generate electricity. Only the remaining ash goes to the landfill.

According to the EPA, the breakdown of U.S. garbage is as follows:

• Paper and paperboard

• Yard waste

• Food waste

• Plastics

• Metals

• Glass

• Wood

• Other (rubber, leather, textiles, etc.)

38.6 percent

12.8 percent

10.1 percent

9.9 percent

7.7 percent

5.5 percent

5.3 percent

10.0 percent

Recycling is popular and has gone mainstream, so recycling bins at work and at home are

common. The EPA estimates that 52 percent of all paper, 31 percent of all plastic soft-drink

bottles, 45 percent of all aluminum beer and soft-drink cans, 63 percent of all steel packing,

and 67 percent of all major appliances are now recycled. Examples of recycling include the

following:

• Plastic: Used for fiberfill for pillows, decks, flowerpots, paintbrush bristles, fence posts,

insulation, and docks. For example, according to the American Plastics Council, U.S.

households recycle over 1.4 billion pounds of plastic bottles each year.

• Paper: Used for game boards, puzzles, stationery, newspapers, toilet paper, paper

towels, egg cartons, boxes, books, and tickets.

• Glass: Used for bottles, street paving, tiles, and bricks.

• Aluminum: Used for cans, lawn furniture, window frames, and car parts.

praCtiCal Ways to reduCe Waste Households can adopt the 3-Rs solution to the waste problem:

1. Reducing. Avoid buying products with excessive packaging; use a coffee mug at work

(avoid using Styrofoam cups); buy in bulk (fewer packages); use lunch boxes instead of

paper or plastic bags; and buy recycled paper products.

2. Reusing. Use both sides of sheets of paper; reuse old envelopes for messages and lists;

reuse wrapping paper and ribbons; and reuse cardboard boxes and glass jars.

3. Recycling. Take recycling materials to recycling centers. Hand down clothes from child to

child; alter and reuse existing clothes; and donate used clothing to charities. Refinish, sell,

or donate old furniture. Recycling is a series of activities.

Managing Environmental Resources 387

These three methods all involve management. Each requires time, energy, and commit-

ment; decision plans must be made and carried out. Children can be taught the value of waste

reduction in their families and in schools, or in organizations such as Boy Scouts and Girl

Scouts. Starting small and local makes the most sense for children. They can see the results

of picking up litter in their playground and neighborhood. At home, children can separate

waste into the appropriate recycling boxes and can help their parents take trash to community

recycling bins. Children enjoy being part of a community effort, and parents can model good-

citizenship habits for the future. The fundamental message to children should be that each

person can make a difference in the health of the environment.

Air Quality The Clean Air Act provides the principal framework for national, state, and local efforts to

protect air quality. Clean air is given a high priority in the list of environmental concerns. The

pollutants that lead to deteriorating air quality come from many sources, not from a single

source. Air quality is threatened by too much ozone, airborne particles, sulfur dioxide, lead,

nitrogen oxides, and carbon monoxide. Natural sources like windblown dust, debris from fires,

and volcanic eruptions pollute. More than half of the nation’s air pollution comes from mobile

sources such as cars, trucks, motorcycles, airplanes, trains, buses, and boats. Stationary

sources such as factories, dry cleaners, homes, and oil refineries also pollute the air.

Under the Clean Air Act, EPA established air quality standards to protect public health

and the environment. The EPA has set national standards for six principal air pollutants:

• carbon monoxide

• ozone

• lead

• nitrogen dioxide

• particulate matter

• sulfur dioxide

Go to epa.gov to find out conditions where you live. Statistics show that national average

air quality continues to improve as emissions decline.

Air pollution contributes to many health and ecological problems, such as decreased

quality of aquatic life and vegetation damage. Pollution is sometimes worse indoors than out-

side, particularly where buildings are tightly constructed or sealed to save energy or where

they have poor ventilation systems. Sick-building syndrome is caused by the presence of

pollutants in the air compounded by inadequate ventilation systems. Harmful indoor pollutants

may come from building materials, furnishings, space heaters, gas ranges, wood preserva-

tives, aerosols, and cleaning agents.

More than 90 percent of air pollution deaths occur in developing countries. Eighty percent

of these deaths are caused by indoor air pollution; many poor people lack access to clean fuel

and burn dung and wood for cooking and heating (Vo, 1998).

In the United States, the top 10 indoor air pollutants according to the American Lung

Association are

1. Secondhand smoke—smoking, radon, and secondhand smoke are the leading causes of

lung cancer.

2. Biological contaminants—including bacteria, viruses, animal dander, dust mites, cock-

roach parts, pollen, molds, and fungi. These are usually inhaled alone or by attaching

themselves to dust that is then inhaled.

388 chapter 12

3. Particulates—including solid particles and liquid droplets such as dirt, dust, and smoke.

4. Household products—including cleansers, personal-care products, and paint.

5. Carbon monoxide (CO)—an odorless and colorless gas, a product of the combustion of

fossil fuels and burning wood. It is a leading cause of accidental poisoning in the United

States. It is fatal at very high concentrations. Symptoms include headaches, dizziness,

disorientation, nausea, and fatigue. Average CO concentrations have decreased sub-

stantially over the years according to the EPA. Many states require new homes to have a

carbon-monoxide monitor. Common sources are faulty furnaces, gas appliances, fireplaces,

car exhaust, water heaters, and barbecue grills, but other sources are culprits as well:

One June day three years ago Thad Dohrn turned on the air conditioner in his

three-bedroom house in Ames, Iowa, for the first time that summer. The next morn-

ing his wife Stephanie complained of a headache. As he walked to the bathroom

to check on her, he passed out. He came to, but then Stephanie passed out. “She

came to and we walked outside. I was crying on the phone to our neighbors and

was all confused,” says Mr. Dohrn, now an associate athletic director at Columbia

University in New York. Mr. and Mrs. Dohrn were taken to the hospital and diag-

nosed with carbon-monoxide poisoning. The cause: A mechanical malfunction

caused the air conditioner and the heat to be on simultaneously. The system didn’t

have proper ventilation either. And the Dohrns didn’t have a carbon-monoxide

monitor. (Petersen, 2002, p. D1)

6. Radon—a naturally occurring gaseous by-product of radioactive decay of uranium in

the earth—can enter a house through holes and cracks in the foundation, through cinder

blocks or through loose-fitting pipes, floor drains, or pumps. Concentrations are likely to

Water contamination limits choices.

(Source: © Elizabeth Goldsmith)

Managing Environmental Resources 389

be largest in the basements of buildings. The EPA estimates that between 10,000 and

40,000 lung cancer deaths a year in the United States are caused by radon (“Radon:

The Problem No One Wants to Face,” 1989). The U.S. Geological Survey has compiled a

series of geologic radon potential assessments for the United States in cooperation with

the EPA, so potential homeowners can go to the EPA Web site for maps showing where

radon is highest. Basically, it is highest in the Midwest, Pennsylvania, and mountainous

areas, and lowest in the Southeast and along the West Coast. State environmental pro-

tection departments provide lists of approved contractors able to make radon-reducing

modifications. A radon level of four picocuries per liter or more is considered dangerous.

Modifications can easily run to several thousand dollars per home, so it is wise to have

a home inspection made before home purchase so that the current owner or builder will

repair the home, and the cost of repair will not be passed on to the new buyer.

7. Volatile organic compounds (VOCs)—the “new smell” from carpets, wood cabinets,

plastics, etc. One of the most common VOCs is formaldehyde.

8. Pesticides.

9. Lead—found in paint and lead pipes. Before 1978, most homes used lead-based paint.

10. Asbestos—microscopic mineral fibers that are flexible, durable, and do not burn.

praCtiCal Ways to reduCe air pollution Air quality varies widely. The air quality index ranges from a low of 0 to a high of 500. Air quality

from 0 to 49 is considered good; 300 and above is hazardous (Carpenter, 1989). Runners,

construction workers, gardeners, children, and anyone else who is outdoors a lot need to be

especially mindful of changes in air quality. Elderly people or younger persons with certain

health conditions should beware also. These suggestions can help improve air quality:

• Use roll-on or solid deodorants; liquid or “spritz” pump sprays for deodorants or hair

sprays are recommended over the use of aerosols because chemicals from aerosols con-

tribute to smog.

• Keep the car engine tuned. Carpool and use public transportation and bicycles when

possible.

• Don’t smoke. Encourage the designation of smoking areas outside of businesses and

eliminate indoor smoking completely.

• Air out houses and workplaces. Open windows at least once a week.

• Clean heater and air conditioner filters regularly. Use an air conditioner or dehumidifier to

maintain an indoor relative humidity of below 65 percent.

• When building or remodeling a house, use safe building materials and installation meth-

ods. For example, paint with brushes and rollers instead of sprayers. Beware of asbestos

and mold.

• Put green plants in homes and workplaces. Certain types of green plants are particularly

effective in filtering out indoor air pollutants.

People who incorporate several of these suggestions into their daily life management are

practicing positive ecology. By shifting to less-harmful energy sources, thinking more holisti-

cally, and being a “green” consumer including using eco-friendly cleaning products, each individ-

ual can help create a healthier home environment. Individuals should ask themselves, “What can

I do to improve air quality, reduce pollution, and keep my family healthy?” “Health is the single

most important indicator of the overall well-being of a society” (Carr & Springer, 2010, p. 743).

390 chapter 12

questions 1. Discuss the impact of the Brundtland Report in terms of

sustainability.

2. Comment on the following statement by E. O. Wilson: “I suppose it will all come down to a decision of ethics—how we value the natural worlds in which we evolved and now, increasingly, how we regard our status as individuals.” Do you agree or disagree? Include an explanation of the term “ethics” in your answer.

3. The writer Pearl S. Buck said that “It is good to know our universe. What is new is only new to us.” Explain what she might have meant by this and include sustainability in your answer.

4. What is the 3-Rs solution to waste?

5. Near the end of the chapter, the term “positive ecology” was defined. Give an example of how you practice positive ecol- ogy or perhaps are inspired to after reading this chapter.

review questions

summarysummary Resource education is a subset of family resource management. This chapter discussed environmental issues such as the degree of ecological footprint, sustainability, and has given practical sug- gestions for specific environmental problems relating to air, water, waste, noise, and energy. Noise is any unwanted sound. Words of warning were given about carbon monoxide and radon.

Cities can be part of the environmental solution; they don’t have to be part of the problem. Urban populations are soaring, yet with centralized large groups of people come centralized services and regulations about water, energy, housing, and transportation. The trend of bringing agriculture to the neighborhood and com- munity level was discussed. More U.S. land is being conserved for family farms, gardens, and parks. “Green” building is about the relationship of a house and its occupants to the environment. It is a process of design and construction. More than half of the builders are incorporating “green” features such an energy-efficient appli- ances and eco-friendly finishes in the homes they build. Most of the average daily cost of energy in a home goes to heating and cooling. Energy audits are encouraged.

New systems make home automation easier, wireless and more reliable. South Korea is one of the countries leading the way in total home automation.

This chapter defined key environmental terms and practices such as life cycle assessments, discussed environmental issues, and suggested ways to conserve limited resources. Although peo- ple rely to a degree on government, environmental organizations, and universities for solutions, ultimately they must look within for answers. As the actor Beau Bridges has said, “All the talk about how the environment is being ruined means nothing unless you’re doing something about it in your own home.” Families need to consider the environmental messages and values they are passing down to their children. Family structure, transitions, and processes (including adapting to environmental change) within families of origin affect children’s health over the life course (Carr & Springer, 2010). If the days of limitless clean air and water, low-cost energy, and abundant peaceful, quiet environments are gone, what will be put in their place? Will future generations view the twenty-first century as a turning point toward more positive ecology?

termskey terms biodegradability 369 biological diversity 370 carbon footprint 363 carbon monoxide 388 conservation 368 decibels (dB) 384 deciduous trees 381 ecoconsciousness 368 ecological footprint 363 ecosystem 367 energy audit 378 environmentalism 367 ethics 370

fossil fuels 376 global warming 367 green building 372 habitat 367 integrated waste management 386 life cycle assessment (LCA) 365 municipal solid waste 385 natural capital 364 need recognition 369 opportunity recognition 369 orientation 381 physical environmental resources 367 pollution 373

positive ecology 389 problem recognition 368 radon 388 renewable resource 369 resource education 363 R-value 381 site 381 social environmental resources 367 source reduction 385 stewards (stewardship) 362 sustainability 362 sustainable development 363 waste stream 371

Managing Environmental Resources 391

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You’ll regret it. Maybe not today, maybe not tomorrow, but soon and for the rest of your life.

—from the film CasablanCa 13

Managing

Main Topics

Financial Management and Security Family Economics: Avoiding Economic Fallout,

Building Toward the Future the Business Cycle and inflation individuals and families as Producers and

Consumers Income, Taxes, Net Worth, Budgets, and Saving

managing Credit and reducing Debt Banking, investments, and insurance

Children, expenses, and financial literacy Saving for College College Students, Starting out

Retirement and Financial Planning financial Planning

Further Family Economic Issues the Gender Gap, earnings Gap, and the Glass

Ceiling Wealth and Poverty

DiD you know that . . .?

. . . One-quarter of middle-class Americans say they will need to work until at least age 80 to comfortably retire.

. . . The middle class in Asia will make up the majority of 2030 consumer spending.

Finances

394 chapter 13

T his chapter provides an overview of personal and family finance with an emphasis on the planning aspects. As the case study shows a family resource management prob-lem is the difficulty of finding and keeping employment. This frank and timely opening sets the pace for a discussion of how to manage the financial side of life. One way to do this is

to have a financial plan based on goals and objectives and the intricacies of your financial life,

needs, career, education, and retirement plans. Goals may include

• building a nest egg or emergency fund

• saving enough for your kids to go to college

• buying a house you can afford

• making sure you have health insurance and funds set aside for retirement

The purpose of this chapter is to get you thinking about your financial plans and to better

understand the goals, spending practices, and saving habits of others. It is important to study

because making informed decisions can pro-

vide stability and opportunity for individuals and

families across many generations.

The best way is to get started now. There

is a saying that if you wait until you can afford to

have children you will never have them. Starting

on financial management is much the same

way. There is no better time than the present. It

takes time and energy to get started, and peo-

ple close to you should be aware that you are

engaged in the process.

In married couples, both the husband and the wife should be actively involved in financial

planning. This chapter builds on the previous ones which indicate that today fewer people in

certain age groups are married and family size is smaller than in the past. For example,

Just over half of Americans age 55 to 64 live in married couple households, down

from two-thirds of 55- to 64-year-olds in 1980, according to a recent report from the

National Academy on an Aging Society. The report states: “Boomers’ higher rates of

divorce and separation, and lower rates of marriage, mean that fewer today belong to

Suggested Activity Have you, a friend, or a member of your family joined a gym, fitness center, or golf club and not used the facilities to the fullest extent? Discuss, in groups, the expense of joining and maintaining member- ships and services offered. What was worth or not worth the expense? Are recreational facilities on your campus or in your apartment complex free?

case study Kevin and John “Many young adults find themselves still tethered to the Bank of Mom and Dad, and that dependence is taking a toll. Kevin Davis moved back home last December after receiving a business finance degree from the University of North Carolina. He has yet to land a full-time job. The 25-year-old often commiserates with his father, John, an information-technology professional who was laid off as a project manager in October 2010 for the

second time since 2007. ‘At times, it’s hard for me to keep up my own spirits as well as Kevin’s,’ admits John Davis, a resident of Winston-Salem, N.C., who currently receives unemployment insurance’ . . . According to Census data, 5.9 million Americans between 25 and 34 years of age—nearly a quarter of whom have bachelor’s degrees—live with their parents, a significant increase from 4.7 million before the recession.”

source: Joann, L. (2011, November 10). The toll on parents when kids return home. The Wall street Journal, p. B6.

Managing Finances 395

married-couple households, and more may experience greater financial hardship as a

result.” (Ruffenach, 2008, p. R8)

Some research indicates that men are generally more financially literate than women (Lusardi &

Mitchell, 2008) and that men and women look at finances differently. Men are more focused on

the money itself (the numbers) and women, in the total picture of how it affects them and their

family. So, the expression “two heads are better than one” certainly fits when it comes to finan-

cial planning. The different approaches tend to balance themselves out. The education levels

of the husband and the wife also affect their risk tolerance. Gilliam, Goetz, and Hampton (2008)

found that wives who were university graduates had a higher tolerance for risk than did less

educated wives. Regarding financial literacy it has been shown that educational efforts definitely

increase the financial knowledge of both men and women (Goldsmith & Goldsmith, 2006).

Financial planning is not limited to marital partners; friends and whole families too can

become involved in planning. For example, in the Reddick family there are three sisters who

are going to hike down the Grand Canyon together a year from now. Reservations have to be

made that far in advance if a stay in the small lodge at the bottom of the Canyon is included.

Each sister is setting aside money for the expense of flying in and out of Arizona and for hiking/

lodging expenses. They are excited. It is a family plan that includes all three sisters getting into

better shape to make the hike.

Grand Canyon Would you save up for a year to hike down the Grand Canyon with family or friends?

source: Dorling Kindersley Media Library.

Critical Thinking

Is there something special you are saving for? If not now, can you envision something in the future you will be saving for? What is it? How much will money will you need? How are you saving the money? Will a gift take care of part or all of it?

396 chapter 13

Solutions and outcomes need to be factored in, at the same time realizing that in all

plans there needs to be flexibility. Assume that not everything will work out. Tumbling financial

markets in recent years made this readily apparent to investors, who saw their retirement

or college savings substantially and dramatically reduced. So another realization is that we

can plan, but we are part of a greater economic system that we cannot control. Controlling

finances is one of the most important and practical aspects of management. And, we do have

control over our personal finances at least to some extent. In a downturn or upturn, decisions

have to be made even if the decision is to stay put. Control is an important concept because

the rates of foreclosures are high and debt needs to be handled yet people are wasting money

on purchases, services, or memberships they do not use. Here is an example:

For more than a year, Rachel Hulin paid $90 a month for a gym membership. She

used it maybe four times in all—for a per-visit rate of roughly $315. “I felt sort of like an

idiot,” says the 24-year-old photographer. “I think I signed up for it to try to make myself

go.” Ms. Hulin later dropped her membership and joined another, less-expensive gym

at $55 a month. But she admits she hasn’t “gone in a while” there either. (Silverman,

2003, p. D1)

This particular area of consumption, gym membership, illustrates hope over reason. A three-

year study of about 8,000 members showed that the average user paid $17 per workout even

when a $10-per-use policy existed; most lost over $700 over the life of their gym contract

(Silverman, 2003, p. D1). Other areas where self-control is a particular problem include buying

over the Internet and from television shopping shows or infomercials.

Many industries, businesses, and the media take advantage of self-control issues. Can

you name a few businesses or industries doing this? Where do they advertise? They are

motivated to increase profits, whereas consumers want to fulfill needs at a reasonable price

and at the same time build and conserve wealth. If you have ever felt confused about a

purchase (should I or shouldn’t I?) this is why.

Although this chapter begins with theory and the state of the economy, it moves quickly

to the dollars-and-cents issues involved in money management. It covers poverty and wealth,

credit, the gender gap, and the glass ceiling.

This chapter is placed near the end of the book because it builds on many of the

principles discussed earlier, such as values, attitudes, goals, resources, and decision

making. To reiterate, values are principles that guide behavior, and goals are end results that

require action. Thrift, for example, is a value affecting financial management, and saving for a

car is an example of a financial goal. Signing contracts for gym membership but rarely going

to the gym or going to warehouse stores and later throwing out half of the fruits, vegetables,

and bakery products bought are examples of the gap that exists between values (ideals)

and behavior.

Attitudes are concepts that express feelings in regard to some idea, person, object,

event, situation, or relationship. They play an important role in consumption because individu-

als have innumerable consumer attitudes (e.g., preferring a particular brand, store, or product

over another). One attitude shift is that people in the United States are beginning retirement

planning at an earlier age, the average age being 32.

Decision making is choosing between two or more alternatives. All people must make

financial decisions, but their choices are limited by how much money they have. Money is a

material resource, but how a person chooses to spend it is a human resource. Financial plans

are an integral part of management information systems and decision support systems.

Managing Finances 397

Space limitations prevent an exhaustive examination of personal and family finance, a

topic to which whole courses and thousands of books are devoted. Instead, this chapter

provides an introduction to financial planning and related economic and lifestyle issues by

focusing on families as producers and consumers and examining such concerns as what

individuals and families do with their money and how they save for retirement.

Financial Management and Security Financial management is the science or practice of managing money or other assets.

Financial management requires systematic and disciplined thought and action. Saving money

rather than spending it, for instance, requires self-discipline and control, the ability to set goals,

and a willingness to put future needs before current needs.

In the time management chapter, we discussed asking the question, “Is this the best use

of my time right now?” A corollary appropriate to this chapter says, before buying anything,

ask, “Is this the best purchase for me at this moment?” This question alone will keep you away

from accumulating unnecessary debt. Being debt-free is a goal. Using cash and debit cards

for purchases will set a person in the right direction.

Security means freedom from risk, danger, anxiety, or doubt. Adding the word “security”

to “financial” provides another layer to the overarching concept of financial management.

“Financial security is the ability to meet day-to-day obligations while planning, saving, and

investing to achieve future financial goals such as education, retirement, home ownership,

and small business startup. By building assets and managing debt, households are better

able to contribute to the economic vitality of their communities” (Lawrence, Lyons, & Gorham,

2008, p. 61).

The procedures followed at each stage of financial management must be methodological,

sound, and planned for in advance to the maximum extent possible. Essentially, financial plans

are works in progress; they need to be revised when necessary. For example, an attorney said

that he thought estate plans and wills should be updated every five years because laws and

family circumstances change.

In systems terminology, financial management is a transformation process involving

the identification of financial goals; collection of information; analysis of resources; decisions

about whether to spend, invest, or save; and evaluation of decisions. Management takes the

perspective that money, like any other resource, can be controlled and used to achieve goals.

As Figure 13.1 shows, the financial management process can be divided into three phases:

planning, action, and postplanning.

Financial Management Model

Planning Action Postplanning

Identify financial goals

Analyze resources Decide

Spend, invest, save

Evaluate Collect information

Figure 13.1 Financial management model.

398 chapter 13

During the planning stage, individuals begin by defining their financial goals. They then

identify potential financial opportunities and determine what information and funds are needed

to take advantage of these opportunities. Once they have analyzed their resources and

decided how to use them, they can proceed to the action stage, where they save, invest, or

spend their money.

In this phase, a budget, or a spending plan or guide, can be helpful by providing a visible

means of controlling money. More coverage on budgets and examples are coming up. At the

end of the process, as in any other management process, the decisions and their outcomes

are evaluated. Throughout, money and other financial assets are treated as tools that can be

used to enhance life and provide for growth and security.

Family Economics: avoiding Economic Fallout, Building toward the Future Approaching finances as a family—married-couple or single-parent—may involve the following

questions:

Should I buy a new car or a used one?

Can I afford to go to graduate school?

What happens if I lose my job?

When will we be able to retire?

What do I do if the child support payments are late?

How will I pay off my student loans?

What will my daughter’s wedding cost?

All these questions are financial concerns. People who are financially pinched cut back in

several ways, and children add another layer to financial worry. One of the greatest fears is

losing a home and this fear became a reality recently for countless families when the rate of

foreclosures skyrocketed. Sometimes it was cheaper to walk away than to try and keep up

with the mortgage payments. In regard to foreclosures, each state has a different version of

the foreclosure process and usually courts and judges are involved and the result affects a

homeowner’s credit rating.

The Business Cycle and Inflation Since individuals and families live in an economic system they are not immune to the changes

in the economy. Some of the main indicators of the economy include

• Personal spending

• Home sales including new and existing homes

• The consumer price index

• Unemployment rate

• Gross domestic product

Each of these will be described in the following paragraphs.

Managing Finances 399

When the economy is down, corporations lay off thousands of workers, and governments

do not replace with new hires those who move or retire, making the job market tighter. If the

main or sole breadwinner is unemployed, the family suffers. When this book went to press, the

U.S. unemployment rate was hovering around 8 percent yet it was lower in certain states—in

Nebraska it was 4 percent. There were indications of the U.S. labor market edging forward

based on fewer signing up for unemployment according to the Department of Labor. Specific

industries were gaining or maintaining such as the retail, health, and technology industries

but more layoffs were taking place in the banking and financial industries following the bank-

ruptcies and mergers of several financial institutions. An unemployment rate of 10 percent

or more is considered an indicator of severe economic problems. A rate under 5 percent is

desirable. During boom times and in high-growth areas, the unemployment rate can be as low

as 2 percent. Describing a period of unemployment, a Northwestern University Kellogg School

of Management professor said:

The newspaper says the banking industry will lose 100,000 jobs this year. That’s

100,000 middle-class people who thought they were going to be in control of their

lives. Manhattan is filled with 40-year-olds out of work, deep in debt and overex-

tended on their apartments. They never thought it would happen to them. (Adler,

1992, p. 22)

The key phrases here are “people who thought they were going to be in control of their lives”

and “they never thought it would happen to them.” In 2012, another 100,000 from the bank-

ing industry were laid off and the response was the same—people don’t think it will be them.

A human resources officer of a university explained it this way: “A budget cut in labor means

that some people will be laid off even if they are doing a very good and dependable job. One

of the hardest things I ever had to do was call 52 employees in one by one and tell them they

were being laid off and over and over again they would ask ‘what have I done wrong’ and the

answer was nothing.”

The unexpectedness of unemployment makes it difficult to adjust to and manage. In an

analysis of activities that occupy household members’ time when they are unable to find work

as a result of an economic downturn the researchers found that roughly 30–40 percent of the

“extra” nonworking hours were spent in working in the home such as more cooking and more

Critical Thinking

When it comes to personal spending certain items are on the untouchable list such as a particular kind of cereal, hair color, Internet service, smart phones, toilet paper, or orange juice or a daily cup of gourmet coffee. In a survey by the National Retail Federation a specific type of coffee is on the untouchable list for one out of six consumers and it used to be for one out of seven. Do you have a particular brand of coffee or other drink that is not negotiable? If so, what is it?

400 chapter 13

home repair. Searching for another job took about one percent of the extra hours and the

unemployed used more than 20 percent of their lost work hours for extra sleep. Also, accord-

ing to this analysis of the American Time Use Survey from the Bureau of Labor Statistics some

six percent of the foregone work hours went to child care (Belsie, 2011). Being unemployed

definitely affects the work–family balance.

To illustrate the ups and downs of the economy, the business cycle is made up of three

main parts as shown in Figure 13.2.

1. Recession: A moderate and temporary decline in the economy.

2. Recovery: A hopeful stage when things are looking better, consumer buying and confi-

dence are up, production is up, employment is up, retail sales improve, and new homes

are being built.

3. Expansion: Prosperity, high growth, an active economy, and high employment rates.

In the twentieth century, the world struggled through several economic crises, most nota-

bly the Great Depression, which peaked in the United States in 1933. In the 1990s there were

boom times, called the “expansion phase.” In the early 2000s, economic hard times returned

in the form of a recession followed by a period of recovery and then another recession from

2007 to 2008 followed by ups and downs, signaling an uneven recovery. Worldwide eco-

nomic change is having a stronger impact on individual nation’s stock markets, trade, and

employment than what was usual in the past.

Many factors play into which part of the business cycle a nation’s economy can be char-

acterized as. One of the main factors is inflation, which means rising prices. U.S. inflation

has been around 2–3 percent in recent years which is considered a low inflation rate. During

times of economic uncertainty, people pull back on their discretionary spending including

using less gasoline and eating out less. Another factor is that middle-class global spending

is shifting. In 2009 most of the worldwide middle-class consumer spending was concen-

trated in North America, Europe, and Asia Pacific. In 2030 this is predicted to take a great

shift so that the middle class in Asia Pacific will make up the majority of consumer spending

High

Low Le

ve ls

o f E

m pl

oy m

en t,

P ro

du ct

io n,

a nd

C on

su m

pt io

n

Expansion Recession Recovery

Time

Figure 13.2 The business cycle. The economy goes through various stages over time. The stages are cyclical and affect the levels of employment, production, and consumption.

Managing Finances 401

according to the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OCED). This is

reflective of the estimated high growth in the size and spending power of the middle classes

in India and China.

Inflation indicates the general way prices are going, but individual categories of products

or services may be going up or down in a way significantly different from the general inflation

rate. For example, televisions have gone down significantly in price relative to other costs. Two

areas rising significantly in cost are college tuition and health care. The average college senior

is in debt to the tune of several thousand dollars at graduation.

That’s a problem Joe Palazzolo would love to have. Palazzolo, 25, graduated on

Mother’s Day from Rutgers University with a master’s degree in public policy and

student loans exceeding $116,000. His payment will average $800 a month. It could

have been worse: Because of his top grades, Rutgers paid Palazzolo’s tuition for his

final year of graduate school. At a time when his friends are thinking about buying their

first homes, he’s looking for roommates to share a three bedroom house so he can limit

his rent to $600 a month. (Block, 2006, p. A1)

Home sales were listed above as an economic indicator. Low mortgage rates stimulate

home building, the reselling of existing homes, and the refinancing of existing mortgages.

According to the National Association of Realtors, median resale price of single-family

homes went from $141,800 in 2001 to $172,600 in 2003 showing a steep rise. House

prices continued to climb until 2006 and then started back down. In 2011, the practice of

auctioning homes usually reserved for less expensive houses became common for luxury

homes. One of the reasons besides the decline in housing prices was the realization that

potential homeowners did not want to pay the high utilities and property taxes that go along

with high-end properties. When the housing market is up or down many side industries

are affected. Spin-offs include sales in insurance, appliances, swimming pools, cabinets,

furnishings, hardware, building supplies, and financial products.

Family meeting with financial advisor.

402 chapter 13

Critical Thinking

Do you have student loans? Do you know how much you will owe when you graduate? Do you know students with huge loan debt? What is their plan to pay it back?

The main measure of inflation in the United States is the consumer price index (CPI)

computed and reported each month by the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS). Economic assis-

tants gather price information from selected stores, supermarkets, doctors’ offices, rental

units, and the like. Each month, about 80,000 prices are recorded in 87 urban areas. By

collecting price data on a clearly defined market basket of products, the BLS can measure

changes in prices. The CPI is used in formulating fiscal and monetary policy and in adjusting

wages, salaries, and payments such as Social Security. For many retirees, the only raise they

get is when Congress votes to increase their monthly Social Security checks owing to inflation.

In 2009 the raise was 5.8 percent which was above the inflation rate and then there were no

annual raises until January 2012.

Individuals and Families as Producers and Consumers Within the movement of the general economy, individuals and families play important roles

as producers and consumers. Consumption choices include what food to eat, what clothes

to wear, where to shop, and where to bank. Consumption decisions affect the present and

future standard of living of an individual or family. An individual’s or family’s level of living is a

measure of the goods and services affordable by and available to them. Standard of living is

what an individual or a family aspires to. On the production side, families produce children and

transform raw products into finished products through such activities as gardening, cooking,

and sewing. In addition, families produce, process, manage, and provide a variety of other

goods and services (e.g., child care, elder care, home maintenance, transportation, health

care, and education for family members).

Households are both labor-intensive and highly productive. Household production is

not included in the gross domestic product (GDP), which is the total market value of all

goods and services produced by a nation during a specified period, usually a year. For exam-

ple, tomatoes canned at home, though used the same way as factory-canned tomatoes,

are not counted in the GDP. Similarly, an individual’s work in completing his or her income

tax forms is not counted in the GDP, whereas the services provided by an accounting firm

doing someone’s income taxes is included. Thus, although individuals and families are signifi-

cant producing units, their home-based production is not counted in the U.S. GDP. Several

reasons have been given for this omission; the most logical is that household production is

difficult to measure accurately. The GDP is reported quarterly and in the first quarter of 2011 it

was 1.9 percent. The value of this measure for the individual or consumer is not to memorize

the exact percentage but to have a perception of whether the GDP is going up or down at a

significant rate.

Managing Finances 403

income, taxes, net worth, Budgets, and Saving Just as GDP is a measure of a nation’s well-being, income is one of the main measures of a

family’s financial well-being. Income is the amount of money or its equivalent received during

a period of time. The main source of income for most people is their salary. Other sources are

dividends from investments and savings accounts, gifts, and so on. There are several different

kinds of income:

• Discretionary income: Income regulated by one’s own discretion or judgment.

• Disposable income: The amount of take-home pay left after all deductions are made

for benefits, taxes, contributions, and so on.

• Gross income: All income received that is not legally exempt from taxes.

• Psychic income: One’s perception or feelings about income; the satisfaction derived

from income.

• Real income: Income measured in prices at a certain time, reflecting the buying power

of current dollars.

Take special note of psychic income. When helping individuals and families formulate budgets

or financial plans, it is important to know not only how much money they have to work with,

but also how they feel about money in general. What one person regards as very little money,

another may consider a fortune. An accurate assessment of people’s income or lifestyle

requires some knowledge of not only their actual income, but also how they perceive money

and how strongly they feel the need to maintain an adequate level of living.

A personal tax levied on individuals or families on the basis of income received is called

income tax. In 1913, the Sixteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution was ratified, making

the personal income tax constitutional. On average, one-third of the typical U.S. family’s

income goes to paying federal, state, and local taxes. Taxes are compulsory levies that are an

important source of government revenue. Taxes help cover government expenses and, in the

case of income tax, help redistribute income and wealth. In 1789, Benjamin Franklin wrote that

“in this world nothing is certain but death and taxes.” After taxes, typically the remainder of a

family’s money goes first to housing, then transportation, then food, and then down the list

to health/personal care, recreation, clothing, insurance, and other needs. The distribution of

money varies greatly by the amount of income (e.g., the lower the income, the higher propor-

tion spent on food), savings, and other investments.

Financial records for income tax purposes should be kept for three years, occasionally for

five if there had been a problem in the past. Records to keep permanently include birth and

marriage certificates, divorce papers, military records, bankruptcy filings, adoption papers,

wills, and Social Security data.

Net worth is determined by subtracting what is owed (liabilities) from what is owned

(assets). To give historical perspective, household assets have increased seven times in the

last century. We may not feel better off, but we are. An estimation of net worth is considered the

best measure of one’s material wealth. It is important to estimate net worth because it shows

where a person stands financially. A net worth estimate should be made at least once a year.

Figure 13.3 provides a sample form that can be used for computing net worth. Notice

the wide variety of assets: actual cash on hand and money in checking and savings accounts;

investments such as certificates of deposit, stocks, bonds, and mutual funds; real estate,

404 chapter 13

which includes one’s house and any other real estate owned; pension benefits to which an

individual is entitled; retirement accounts, such as employer-sponsored 401(k) and 403(b)

plans and Individual Retirement Accounts (IRAs); the value of a business; personal property

such as jewelry, furniture, and appliances; and any automobiles owned. Liabilities include the

mortgage on one’s home, the balance owed on installment loans, such as on a car or refrig-

erator, the balance owed on credit cards, unpaid bills, and any taxes owed.

The net worth statement of Jacob Sawyer, a junior in college, appears in Table 13.1.

Jacob has some money in his checking and savings accounts, a car, and various items

of personal property, most notably a computer. Jacob also has a number of liabilities,

including his college loan, an outstanding balance on his credit card and parking tickets he

has not paid.

When Jacob’s liabilities are subtracted from his assets, the result is –$2,817.83. Jacob

has a negative net worth—he owes more than his assets are worth. A negative net worth is

not unusual for someone at Jaocb’s life stage. College students and new college graduates

often have college loans outstanding and might incur other financial obligations from moving

Assets

Total assets

Total liabilities

Net worth (total assets – total liabilities)

Liabilities

Cash on hand Checking accounts Savings accounts Money market funds Cash management accounts Certificates of deposits Stocks, bonds (market value)* Mutual funds Real estate (market value) Employer-sponsored retirement plans IRAs Vested company benefits Annuities (one-time investments paid upon retirement) Personal property** (market value) Automobiles (market value) Estate and trust values Cash value of whole life insurance Business venture values Debts owed to you Other

Loans (college, home, auto) Unpaid bills Personal debts (to friends, family) Other

* Market value means what the asset would be worth if it were sold immediately. ** This category includes nearly anything with a resale value, such as clothing, furniture, books, bicycles,

computers, jewelry, televisions, and appliances.

$ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $

$

$ $ $ $

$

$

Figure 13.3 net worth statement. net worth is calculated by subtracting liabilities (what is owed) from assets (what is owned).

Managing Finances 405

and setting up a new lifestyle. As they begin to work full-time and their earnings increase,

they are able to pay off their debts, and their negative net worth gradually declines; and then

they begin to accumulate assets. Specific advice on how college students can manage their

money is included in an upcoming section.

Whereas a net worth statement reveals current financial status, a budget helps individu-

als and families plan ahead and clarify their values and goals. As explained earlier, a budget

is a spending plan. a budget should serve as a guide—one that the budgeter controls. It

should be flexible and not put a straitjacket on spending. Many expenses, such as money

spent on food, clothing, and entertainment, are variable expenses, whereas others are fixed

expenses, such as rent and car payments.

If budgets are too rigid, they will not allow for unexpected or variable expenses, such as

medical or dental bills or the costs of home maintenance. For example, replacing a leaking

roof or a faulty furnace for $5,000 is an expense that must be met but cannot be budgeted for

in advance except in the most general way.

Typically, budgets are based on monthly average spending patterns. Income is com-

pared to outflow. The main source of income is wages and salaries. Housing expenditures

(including utilities) take away the largest share. so, begin each budget by looking first at rent

or home mortgage payments. Other large expenses include transportation (car payments and

gasoline/maintenance), student loan debt payment, food, and credit/store card payment. If

individuals are having a hard time meeting monthly expenses they can

• Make more money (increase income).

• Reduce expenses (outflow).

• Sell something, downsize.

• Do a combination of all three.

Jacob Sawyer’s Net Worth Statement

Assets

Cash on hand $ 40.00

Checking account 465.02

Savings account 807.15

Personal property

ipod 100.00

Bicycle 125.00

Computer 1,000.00

Clothes and books 250.00

Automobile (9-year-old car) 3,500.00

total assets $6,287.17

Liabilities

College loan $8,655.00

Unpaid bills

Balance on credit cards 300.00

Personal debts

loan from roommate 110.00

other (parking tickets) 40.00

total liabilities $9,105.00

Net worth −$2,817.83

Table 13.1

406 chapter 13

One way to prepare for unexpected expenses is to budget a certain amount to be saved

each month. The goal of saving is to build funds in a risk-free manner. Saving is what makes

future spending or investing possible. How much should an individual or family save? The

answer depends on their present lifestyle, responsibilities, and goals and on the lifestyle

they desire.

People in the United states and Canada save on average about 4 percent of their

income, a rate that is lower than that of most other industrialized nations, where 5–20 percent

in savings would be normal. The “4 percent” means they spend almost everything they make.

The “on average” means some people are spending more than they make (they are in debt)

and, of course, there are others who save consistently. To get ahead or to save for something,

such as the down payment on a house, individuals should strive to save 10–20 percent. Some

lenders require a 20 percent down payment. In dual-earner couples, some live on one salary

and save the other. Students may return home after graduation and live with their parents or

siblings (as in the opening case study) and save a considerable amount of money before they

launch out on their own.

One way to approach saving is to have a goal of building an emergency fund of three

to six months’ income. Opinions vary on the length of time. Author and television personal-

ity Suze Orman suggests eight months’ expenses in savings because job layoffs are more

prevalent and the time it takes to find another job is getting longer. Estimates by the Bureau of

Labor Statistics reveal that the average out-of-work person takes five to eight months to find a

job. An emergency fund is used to tide people over until income begins again, so the amount

should be enough to take care of life basics such as rent and food.

To build savings, young professionals should save regularly, even if in small amounts,

to enable them to accomplish short- and long-term goals such as the purchase of a home.

Figure 13.4 lists the goals of John, a recent college graduate, as a way to show how goals

Financial Goals

Medium Term

Long Term

Marry, start a family

*John is 23 years old. He recently graduated from a four-year university with a major in film studies. He plans to move to California and get into the film industry (behind the camera). He graduated debt-free, but has few possessions except a laptop, some furniture, and a used car. He has contacts in California for jobs and for roommates.

(0–3 years)

(3–7 years)

(7–10 years)

Move across country

Establish himself in film business

Start own production company

Goal 2:

Goal 2:

Goal 2:

Begin full-time job

Buy new car

Settle down, buy a house

Goal 3:

Goal 3:

Goal 3:

Find a roommate, rent an apartment

Save money

John’s Goals* Your Goals

Short Term

Goal 1:

Goal 1:

Goal 1:

Figure 13.4 Financial goals by time.

Managing Finances 407

and finances are linked. Spaces are provided for you to write in your own financial goals—

short-term, medium-term, and long-term.

Table 13.2 shows the budget of a young married couple, Matt and Samantha Kirby.

As a young couple starting out, their sources of income and types of expenses are fairly

limited. Their salaries are their biggest source of income, and their house and child care for

their two-year-old daughter are their largest expenses. Notice that Matt and Samantha’s

budget does not leave any money for emergencies. They say they’ll be able to start saving

more in six months when Samantha finishes her training program at the bank and receives

a substantial increase in salary and Matt finishes law school. In the meantime, they hope no

emergencies arise.

Monthly Budget for Matt and Samantha Kirby monthly savings (or losses) are determined by subtracting estimated monthly

expenses from monthly income.

Income

Salaries

Samantha (management trainee at bank) $ 2,102.74

matt (part-time job while attending law school) 850.00

Dividends 22.00

money gifts, scholarships (matt’s scholarship for

law school) 1000.00

other (Samantha writes a weekly column on financial

management for a newspaper) 100.00

total income $ 4,074.74

Expenses

mortgage payment on house $ 874.88

food 450.00

Child care (for Kristin, their daughter) 500.00

tuition/books 255.00

Gasoline/transportation

Bus fare for Samantha 26.00

Parking at the university for matt 30.00

Gasoline 75.00

Utilities (gas, electric, water, cable) 150.00

Cell phone 160.00

insurance (life, car, home—Samantha’s employer pays for

health insurance) 300.00

Clothing and personal care (haircuts, cosmetics) 150.00

Credit card payments 50.00

entertainment 40.00

loans

College (Samantha) 190.00

College (matt) 120.00

Automobile 239.85

Personal spending 120.00

miscellaneous 35.00

total expenses $ 3,765.73

total savings $ 309.01

Table 13.2

408 chapter 13

In drawing up your own budget, checking account and credit card statements can help

you obtain an accurate account of your money flow.

Because expenses fluctuate from month to month, averaging several months’ expenses

will help you obtain a more accurate picture of typical monthly expenditures. Once individu-

als or families figure out their net worth and their typical monthly expenditures, they can

create a six-month or one-year spending plan. By reviewing their net worth statement and

monthly expenditures, people may be able to find places where they can spend less and

save more.

Managing Credit and Reducing Debt The use of credit has plusses and minuses. An easy way to overspend is to use credit indis-

criminately. A high level of individual and family debt has a long-term impact on the family

economy and on that of nations. In recent years in the United States the debt rate has gone

down as people responded to the recession by saving more and spending less and paying

down existing debt. Credit, time allowed for payment, has been around for a long time. Credit

means that an individual owes a certain amount of money, at a certain time each month, to a

specific creditor at a certain rate. Failure to pay on time the recommended amount may result

in penalties or fees.

Debit cards also known as cash cards are computerized banking transactions, they

remove money directly from your account and are often used to pay for groceries and other

everyday items. You are spending your own funds rather than borrowing additional money

as you would when using a credit card. Prepaid debit cards are worth a certain amount

of money, for example, $500. The advantages are that they do not require a credit history

and it  is nearly impossible to incur an overdraft or rack up debt. The main disadvantages

as this photo shows, think enduring and long-range when it comes to financial planning.

source: PhotoEdit Inc.

Managing Finances 409

are the fees and lack of consumer protection. Younger people use debit cards more than

older people so debit cards are becoming more established as a normal part of the money

management process.

Many colleges have tightened rules on credit-card marketing on campus in order to

discourage students from racking up huge amounts of debt. Now another kind of card

is being pushed on campus—with its own set of issues. This fall, financial-services com-

panies are focusing more of their campus marketing on “pre-paid debit cards,” which

work like standard debit cards except that they aren’t linked to a traditional checking

account. Among the issuers aggressively marketing their cards this year: U.S. Bancorp

and Wal-Mart Stores Inc. The cards typically carry hefty fees and offer fewer consumer

protections than credit cards. Fees are often charged when the card is activated, when

it is used at an ATM and even when there’s a lack of activity. (Pilon, 2008, p. D1)

Some universities, as examples Tulane University, the University of South Carolina, and

Georgia Institute of Technology, forbid credit card companies from soliciting on-campus.

When Laura Palazzolo, of New Hyde Park, N.Y., entered New York University this fall,

she says she was bombarded with offers for debit cards from area banks handing out

fliers on campus. She hopes to avoid using plastic too much. “I’m really trying to be

careful,” says Ms. Palazzolo, 18. “It’s a little overwhelming when [companies] target you

because you’re a freshman.” For now, she’s using a student checking account she set

up through her parents’ bank that comes with a debit card. (Pilon, 2008, p. D2)

Debt follows a person through life. If you packed up your car in Virginia and drove across the

country nonstop to Seattle, your credit rating and any information about outstanding parking

or traffic tickets would get there before you arrive: with the Internet, financial records and

status are instantaneous.

Critical Thinking

Does your campus allow credit card or prepaid debit card solicitation on campus? Is it done during orientation or at student events or through the mail?

A credit card authorizes the holder to buy something in advance of paying for it. Using

credit instead of cash makes shopping more convenient and reduces the risk of loss or theft

associated with carrying large amounts of cash.

Credit card confidence varies by life stage. One study found that 20–24 year olds were

less confident about their abilities to resist temptations and therefore had more trouble

managing credit. Those in later adulthood and old age (61–85) were less worried about their

debt and more easily resisted the temptation to overspend (Thums, Newman, & Xiao, 2008).

410 chapter 13

Managing credit is one of the biggest management problems individuals and families have.

From a financial point of view, one of the problems is that interest on credit card payments is

usually higher than what individuals earn on their investments. The following suggestions can

help reduce the chances of credit mismanagement:

• Have only one or two cards, at most three. The typical bankrupt individual has 20 or

more cards.

• Pay off credit cards on time in full each month to avoid interest charges. Only 36 percent

of cardholders do this.

• Know what the agreement says; seek cards with the lowest annual percentage rate (APR)

and no additional fees. The average yearly rate of interest paid over the life of credit or a

loan is called the annual percentage rate.

• If a card has a teaser rate (a very low introductory level APR), use it but get rid of it when

the rate goes up. Teaser rates are offered to college students; and when they graduate,

the rates go up. The companies know from experience that most students will continue

using the cards.

• Check credit card statements carefully against receipts. Do not allow the unauthorized

use of a credit card number.

• Keep a list of credit card purchases as they occur, similar to the check stubs in a

checkbook.

• Keep a list of credit card numbers in a safe place, lest they are lost or stolen, along with a

list of toll-free numbers of credit card companies to notify in case cards are lost.

• If you are in debt, get out. First, pay off the credit cards with the highest APR.

Psychologically, it may help to pay off the card with the smallest amount owed first or

to consolidate several small debts into one. Most people can handle 10–15 percent of take-

home pay being used up for monthly consumer credit obligations; 20 percent or more puts

consumers in a danger zone.

• Inform creditors if bills cannot be paid. Most will work with consumers to arrange pay

back plans.

• Contact a credit counseling service such as the National Foundation for Credit

Counseling (nfcc.org) or the Consolidated Credit Counseling Services if debt is out of

control. They can help negotiate a lower rate or repayment schedule.

• Delete all spam e-mail regarding getting you out of debt.

Under the Fair Credit Reporting Act, you have the right to receive a copy of your credit

report. Credit bureaus, reporting agencies that collect, store, and sell financial information,

offer credit reports to consumers for free. The three main credit reporting centers are

• Equifax, econsumer.equifax.com

• Trans Union Corporation, transunion.com

• Experian, experian.com

Credit reports are used by institutions to determine your creditworthiness before they offer

you a loan, a mortgage, a credit card, or a job. The institution (e.g., bank, store, or employer)

pays a fee for the credit report. If a prospective consumer has a high FICO score, a numeric

value assigned to credit habits and credit history by Fair, Isaac and Company (the range

Managing Finances 411

is 300–850), a lender may offer a lower mortgage rate. A consumer in the high range can

also ask for a lower interest rate on credit cards. As an example, a credit score of 720 may

qualify you for a credit card rate of 9.6 percent versus 18 percent for someone with a score

of 600. The person with the 720 score could save $86 in annual interest for every $1,000 in

the balance. A score below 500 puts a consumer in the sub-lender or sub-prime category.

A median score is 623. A score of 750 or above is considered very high.

How do potential employers find out about your credit score? The way it starts is that

on job application forms there is a box to mark off, giving employers the right to conduct

background checks. Applicants can refuse to mark it, but the interview process might stop

right there. Would you hire someone who did not check that box when dozens of other

applicants checked it? Potential employers associate a good credit report with trustwor-

thiness and reliability, and they value these characteristics whether or not the job involves

handling money. What they are looking for in a prospective employee is not necessarily that

he or she is debt-free, but that his or her debt is managed properly (i.e., show a record of

steady payments).

A good FICO score can be established in a number of ways, including opening checking

and savings accounts; paying bills, including rent, promptly; and opening a charge account

with a store and promptly remitting the monthly balance due. Potential lenders who are

considering whether to extend credit or not also look at several factors, including residential

and job stability, education, income, and home ownership. Regardless of the criteria used,

the Equal Credit Opportunity Act prevents a lender from discriminating against a person

in any aspect of credit transaction because of race, sex, age, color, marital status, or other

related factors.

Deciding how much credit to use and when to pay cash is part of the overall management

problem of controlling money. The first step toward solving this problem is to define an attain-

able goal. Examples of specific financial goals include saving for a down payment on a house,

or for college expenses, remodeling, a vacation, or additional investments and retirement.

Once a financial goal is established and a plan drawn up, progress toward the goal should be

reviewed to evaluate how well the financial planning is working.

Bills paid on time

35%

Ratio of debt to credit limit

30%

Length of credit history 15%

Variety of loans 10%

Credit applications*

10%

Figure 13.5 Factors influencing FICO scores. *Open and close accounts with care.

412 chapter 13

Banking, Investments, and Insurance Saving and investing can take many forms. For example, cash can be put in interest-bearing

checking accounts, savings accounts, money market accounts, and low-risk, longer-term

savings instruments. Regardless of the type of account, the goal is to maximize the earnings

from the investment of cash and to avoid fees, payments, and extra charges. Liquidity, the

speed and ease of retrieving cash or turning another type of investment into cash, is another

important consideration.

Checking accounts from banks and share accounts from credit unions allow the holder to

transfer funds from the account to pay for goods and services. Banks commonly charge a fee

for this convenience in per-check charges or monthly service fees, but they may also pay inter-

est on the money in the account. A savings account, also called a passbook account, typically

pays higher interest than a checking account. A money market account pays an even higher

rate of interest, and some offer check-writing privileges. These accounts are commonly called

“NOW” (negotiable order of withdrawal) accounts and cash management accounts. Other low-

risk possibilities for cash include government savings bonds and certificates of deposit (CDs).

These typically pay higher interest than checking, savings, and money market accounts.

Investment is the commitment of capital to the achievement of long-term goals or

objectives. Most people invest to build wealth and to secure a comfortable future. It is important

to invest because of rising prices; and because people are living longer, their money has to

stretch further. Investing is a process that involves planning, money, information, time, and an

understanding of risk, the possibility of experiencing suffering, loss, danger, or harm. In financial

risk it is the chance of loss of money or opportunity.

Investment and insurance decisions rest not only on economic conditions, personal

income, and life stage, but also on one’s ability to handle risk. Some investors are more

conservative (less likely to take risks) than others. As one ages, usually one gravitates to

more conservative, dividend-paying investments because if money is lost, the person does

not have as much time to earn the income to bounce back again as does a younger person.

However, even in retirement some growth should be built in to keep up with inflation.

Diversification means having a mix of investments as a way to spread risk across

several categories. Another basic principle is that the earlier an individual starts to invest, the

longer time period the investment will have to grow. Youth is on the investor’s side.

Several chapters would be needed to discuss the pros and cons of the different kinds

of investments available. For the purposes of this chapter, the focus will be on the subject of

investing and the most common types of investments.

• stocks represent ownership in a company (e.g., Microsoft, IBM, Coca-Cola, Apple).

There are thousands of stocks from which to choose. Usually the best strategy is to buy

good stocks and hold on to them.

“People want to do something, which is why they tend to over-trade,” says Clifford

Asness, managing principal of New York hedge-fund manager AQR Capital

Management. “But the object of the market is not to entertain us. You should stay

diversified, pay low fees, relax and get on with the rest of your life.” (Clements,

2003, October 8, p. D1)

• bonds are investments in which a person lends money to an organization such as the

government or a corporation. Examples of U.S. Treasury Department bonds are I Bonds

Managing Finances 413

and Series EE Bonds. Information about them can be obtained from savingsbonds.gov.

Generally, bonds are considered more conservative (safer) investments than stocks,

but less liquid. Maturity dates run from a month to 30 years. Interest or dividends are

distributions of money that government or corporations pay to bondholders (some stocks

also pay dividends). Usually, dividends on bonds are paid twice a year and are a source

of income.

• Mutual funds are groups of stocks, bonds, or other securities managed by an investment

company. Their chief benefits are diversification and professional management.

• Real estate includes real estate directly (such as a primary residence or a lot owned) or

indirectly owned (such as in a partnership or a Real Estate Investment Trust, commonly

known as a REIT).

• Other forms of investment include Individual Retirement Accounts (IRAs), employer-

sponsored retirement plans, precious metals (i.e., gold, silver), gems, and

collectibles.

Before starting to invest, a person should have ample cash for daily and monthly expenses,

an emergency fund set aside, paid-off credit cards, and insurance. Usually people start with

secure investments such as money market funds, certificates of deposit, U.S. Savings Bonds,

retirement plans at work, U.S. Treasury Securities, and savings accounts. Then, after some

of these are owned, they move up the investment ladder to other categories offering more

income and growth. The last category to consider is speculative investment where more risk

is prevalent.

The purpose of insurance is to protect people and financial assets. It provides peace of

mind. A sound financial plan includes protection from major risks (e.g., auto accidents, natural

disasters, health problems) that can threaten financial security. Insurance is a financial

arrangement in which people pay premiums (payments) to an insurance company that reim-

burses them in the event of loss or injury. Usually, the most costly and the most important

form of insurance is health insurance. Most employers offer health insurance as part of their

benefits package. This may change if government policy changes.

Other types of insurance include property, liability, automobile, disability, life, and long-

term care insurance. Usually, group policies (insurance company contracts sold through

organizations such as professional associations or alumni groups) are less expensive than

individual policies. Decisions about insurance depend on how much protection is needed,

how much you can afford, and how much is given by employers. Insurance coverage should

be appropriate to an individual’s or a family’s life stage, needs, and goals.

A full course in personal finance or family financial analysis will cover many of the terms

and concepts introduced in this chapter at a deeper level. Financial well-being is critical to

a person’s overall sense of well-being and success. Learning to manage money is a life-

long process, which begins in childhood. People between the ages of 45 and 54 have the

highest median income of any age group, but they also have the highest expenses, because

they may have children in college while they are also saving for their own retirement. Over

their life span, individuals and couples have to re-evaluate, update, and renegotiate their

goals and spending and investing plans many times. For example, experts suggest that

financial plans, in general, and, specifically, insurance policies and retirement accounts

should be examined each year to determine whether they still meet the individual’s and

family’s needs.

414 chapter 13

Children, Expenses, and Financial Literacy “Financial literacy is a national, state, and local concern these days. At one time, the

financial unit in high school family and consumer sciences (FCS) classes was as simple

as looking at budgets and doing checkbook exercises” (Franklin, 2007, p. 17). Current

financial units in FCS and economics classes go way beyond this to build financial literacy

skills. Unfortunately not every high school has FCS and economics classes. In a Texas

study parents said they would be willing to pay extra property taxes for the implementation

of financial literacy education (Davis & Durband, 2008). The U.S. Department of Treasury

is leading financial education efforts and promoting financial literacy testing nationwide.

There is not only interest in improving the financial literacy of children but also that of adults

(Eccles, Ward, & Goldsmith, 2010; Eccles, Ward, & Goldsmith, 2011; Hanna, 2011; Mayer,

Zick, & Glaittli, 2011).

As adolescence is a time of significant change, it is a good time to establish values

and skills about money management. A study of middle schoolers found they were highly

status conscious, which was linked to self-image and identity, but they had little under-

standing of how much effort, financial outlay, and cost to family relationships earning a

lot of money might take (Beutler, Beutler, & McCoy, 2008). The word “relationships” has

been explored in innumerable family relations and family economics studies. Relationship

satisfaction refers to an individual’s feelings and thoughts about another person in a

marriage or partnership. Research shows that a partner’s spending behavior does indeed

influence relationships (Britt, Grable, Goff, & White, 2008). Students, at various levels, are

interested in this social side of finances as well as in the changes economics brings to

family finance.

“For too long we have thought that economics is what they do at MIT and not what

you do when you make day-to-day decisions,” says Robert Duvall, president and chief

executive of the National Council on Economic Education, a New York-based organiza-

tion that provides training and educational resources for teachers. “Every high-school

graduate should have a course in economics because you need that skill set in this

complicated world.” Today’s teens need financial education more than their parents

did at their same age, says Carrie Schwab Pomerantz, senior vice president and chief

strategist for consumer education at Charles Schwab Corp. That’s because kids today

are less likely than previous generations to ever receive a pension and more likely to

graduate with credit-card debt and student loans. (Mincer, 2007, p. R7)

Raising children is costly too, one of the most expensive things anyone does. The estimate

by the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) is about $280,000 to raise a child from birth

through age 17 for middle-income families. Lower-income families on average spend less. It is

more expensive to raise urban rather than rural children. The outlay per child is reduced with

each additional child, perhaps out of necessity, perhaps because bedrooms can be shared,

clothes and toys handed down, and so on. Without a doubt, the costs of rearing and educat-

ing children add to the financial strain on families. Child-raising expenses can be divided into

seven main categories (Wuorio, 2003):

• Housing (about 33–37 percent)

• Food (about 15–20 percent)

• Transportation (about 13–14 percent)

Managing Finances 415

• Clothing (about 6–8 percent)

• Health care (about 5–7 percent)

• Education/child care (about 7–11 percent)

• Miscellaneous (about 10–13 percent)

The miscellaneous category can drive total costs. Consider this:

In San Diego, Jacqueline Jones recently rang in her fifth year with a $1,000 mermaid-

theme party. The fete, held at a community pool, included a piñata, pizza, cake, juice

boxes, customized goodie bags for 20 and a former beauty queen who arrived dressed

head to toe as Ariel, the Disney princess. Jacqueline’s mom, Laura, says, it’s worth

it. “A lot of my friends said I’m crazy, but I mean, it’s a memory she’ll have forever.”

(Daspin & Gamerman, 2007, p. P1)

Those first five years of life are particularly expensive; it is estimated that the highest cost then

is usually child care, followed by furniture and food. Overall, in raising a child to age 18, hous-

ing is the most costly item, followed by education and transportation. The USDA assumes

that when people have children they will move into larger homes. Their calculations assume

that for each child, a family adds 100–150 square feet of living space (the size of a typical

bedroom). A way to save here is to go against the tide, that is, to not increase housing size

or to live in a less expensive place, or at least to get a refinance at a lower mortgage rate.

As food comes next, there are thousands of ways to save money. A simple trick is to use

search engines on the Internet and type in the word “discount” and see what happens. For

large families, other ideas are to join warehouse clubs or to shop in supercenters or to buy

in bulk at sales.

Transportation includes the purchase and finance charges of vehicles, repair and fuel

expenses and insurance. The value of new cars drops by as much as 40 percent in the first

two years of ownership, so the advice is to avoid buying a new car, consider a relatively new

model coming off a one to three year lease, and use the Internet to comparison shop prices

of vehicles and insurance. Much of the expense of health care comes from health insurance

premiums, so it pays to shop around.

Child-rearing expenses are highest in the urban West, followed by the urban Northeast,

the urban South, and the urban Midwest. Housing costs contribute greatly to differences

between regions, as do costs of child care and education.

The study of children and money involves more than estimating how much it costs to

raise them. Children are not passive consumers. From the first time they spit out strained

peas, they are letting their parents know their preferences.

Parents respond by buying what their children like, and later the children themselves

collectively spend billions of dollars a year on cosmetics, toys, snacks, candy, gifts, athletic

events and equipment, musical recordings and instruments, and other goods and services.

They also influence their parents’ expenditures on nearly all family-related purchases, includ-

ing housing, cars, computers, vacations, breakfast cereals, pets, and restaurant meals. Half

of all U.S. households have pets and spend an average of over $500 a year on pet care. The

cost depends on the type, number, age, and health status of the animal. It is not unusual to

spend over a $1,000 a year in veterinary bills for an aging dog. Pet insurance is available.

As part of the socialization process, children learn much of their spending behavior

from their parents. For example, a study of elementary schoolchildren found that mothers

who were restrictive and warm in relationships with their children were also more likely to

416 chapter 13

use communication messages that promoted monitoring and control of children’s con-

sumption activities.

Most children are ready to receive an allowance or handle a small amount of money as

soon as they understand the concept of time. Readiness to handle money varies greatly from

child to child, but usually comes around the age of 7 or 8. Understanding time is important,

because it enables children to wait for Saturday (a traditional day for handing out allowances).

If they can wait for Saturday, then they will understand about waiting for money and parceling

it out after they receive it. One method of training children for the responsibilities of adulthood

is to encourage them to save part of their allowance, but again children’s ability to do this

varies with age and maturity. The younger the child, the more likely he or she will spend money

quickly rather than save it for bigger items. The average 9-year-old will probably not be inter-

ested in saving for college—it is too far away.

Children need to learn that money is a tool—something they can use to get what they

want. Along the way to disciplined money management, children will make mistakes, such

as buying toys that fall apart or fail to live up to their expectations. Making dissatisfying

or disappointing expenditures is part of the learning process. Both the mistakes and the

successes of money management experiences in childhood will prepare children for the

bigger expenses ahead.

Saving for College There are many ways to save for college and options, programs, and tax deductions are

changing all the time. Tax-advantaged college savings vehicles include Roth IRAs, 529 plans,

and Coverdell Education Savings Accounts. There are also state savings plans for college

education and federal financial-aid programs and university offerings such as scholarships.

Another alternative is setting up a trust fund or investing dollars in children’s names. The

income will be taxed to them at a lower rate than it is to parents. The rate changes at age 14.

Scholarships are available—from state and private sources—based on need, grades, and

other merit-based achievements. While a student is in college, the HOPE Scholarship, Bright

Futures, and the Lifetime Credit programs reduce taxes. Each state names its state-based

program differently. The HOPE scholarship is available to college students in Georgia. A study

Family looking at the townhouse they bought.

Managing Finances 417

of students who had had the scholarship and lost it (because their Grade Point Average

dropped below 3.0) found that the students were particularly financially vulnerable and sub-

ject to higher levels of debt and maladaptive financial management practices (Goetz, Mimura,

Desai, & Cude, 2008). A conclusion was that students who struggle academically may also

struggle with financial management.

Students nearing graduation and owing loans should talk to college financial-aid experts,

accountants, or financial planners about the best way to pay back the loans. Many students

set up a payment program whereby they are loan-free in 10 years. Research studies reveal

that people often regret that they did not get more education. A college education is one of the

best investments anyone can make.

College Students, Starting Out The college years are critical for developing financial skills. The bottom line is to stay out of

debt and save and invest as much as you can. One of your most valuable assets is your

earning power and going to college will increase that earning power. Anything you can do to

increase your salary early in your career is a booster too. While in school or soon after gradua-

tion look for internships, certifications, and improving skills and credentials.

Young professionals and college students today are managing far more money,

possessions, and credit than their parents did at a similar age. College students have favorable

attitudes toward credit cards as useful tools for managing money (Xiao, Noring, & Anderson,

1995). Starting out may be hampered by credit card debt and student loans. Most graduates

expect to be comfortably well-off in time. Earning a Master’s degree will bump up pay by an

average of 19 percent and an M.B.A. will bring even more in prosperous times.

Critical Thinking

Do you expect to be a millionaire? At what age? Since the main determinant will be income/salary, what is the usual yearly salary in the profession you are training for?

A multiyear study at the University of Arizona revealed that as seniors more students

declared themselves financially independent or at least less dependent on their parents

than during their freshmen year. Regardless of year in school their parents provide valuable

influence through an ongoing conversation about finances. The study found that there are

three main financial styles of college students:

• Drifters (30 percent in this category) characterized as the least accepting of parents’

styles; exploring, but not committed to a personal style, average in knowledge, worst

behaviors.

• Followers (39 percent in this category) characterized as most accepting of parents’ styles,

most unconcerned about developing personal style, had better knowledge and behaviors

than drifters.

418 chapter 13

Being in college brings with it new levels of freedom. Students should beware of falling

into a habit of debt that can follow them for years. As mentioned earlier, a bad credit record

can hurt when searching for a job. After graduation, build a nest egg or emergency fund and

keep it in a totally safe place like a bank account.

Many of the money management principles already covered in this chapter apply to

college students, but, to reiterate, here are some tips for setting up a budget and maintaining

a good credit record:

• Make a list of predictable monthly expenses and income. Ask yourself, how much money

do I really need?

• Set aside money for savings and emergencies.

• Keep track of everything you spend. It helps you stick to your budget. Save receipts.

• Pay all bills on time—from the cell phone to your credit card bill. Immediately open bills

on arrival. They usually arrive about 15 days before they are due. Use automatic payment

systems and direct deposit whenever possible.

• If you are in financial trouble, address it immediately; call creditors, and contact parents. If

services are turned off or creditors are calling, consider contacting the counseling center

at your university. The counseling center can provide access to free or reduced-fee credit

assistance.

Critical Thinking

Which of these three styles describes you the best? Explain why.

30%

Financial Management Styles of College Students

39%

31%

Drifters: Least accepting of parents’ styles. Exploring, but not yet committed to, personal style. Average knowledge, worst behaviors

Followers: Most accepting of parents’ styles. Most unconcerned about developing personal style. Better knowledge and behaviors than Drifters

Pathfinders: Low accepting of parents’ styles. Most commited to personal style. Best knowledge and behaviors

Figure 13.6 Financial management styles of college students. Adapted from National Endowment for Financial Education Digest, November/December 2011, page 2.

• Pathfinders (31 percent in this category) characterized as low in accepting parents’

styles, most committed to personal style, and best in knowledge and behaviors (see

Figure 13.6)

Managing Finances 419

Students can increase their financial literacy and economize by

• Taking personal finance courses. Studies show that formal instruction in personal finance

increases men’s and women’s investment knowledge and closes the knowledge gap

between genders on this subject (Goldsmith & Goldsmith, 2006).

• Living on less (e.g., sharing an apartment or house, eating out less).

• Working more hours. While in college, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, most

students work.

• Joining co-op programs or getting paid internships.

• Applying for financial aid and loans. A popular option is the federally sponsored lending

program known as Stafford loans.

• Living at home while going to school or after graduation, and during the summers

between semesters, thereby reducing living expenses.

• Attending cost-effective community colleges and state universities and regardless

of college or university type, applying for scholarships, fellowships, and work–study

opportunities.

Given the high cost of a college education, many parents and students might ques-

tion whether it is worth it. From a financial perspective, the answer is yes. According to

U.S. Department of Commerce data, education does provide an economic return in that

most degrees beyond high school will result in substantially higher income in a lifetime

for individuals.

Retirement and Financial Planning When a person retires, everything changes. So, one of the biggest decisions anyone ever

makes is when to retire and once retired, how to manage daily life and finances. The time,

psychological, sociological, and financial effects are enormous. One woman said she couldn’t

stop working because she would miss the office atmosphere so much—someone to talk with

on a daily basis. The critical planning years are five years before retirement when a realistic

estimation can be made of how much it will cost to live and how much income per month from

various sources is likely. Retirement planning advice comes in many forms and takes on the

form of rules of thumb or steps to follow. The rules are usually about how much to save and

when to start, how to allocate retirement investments, and how to safely draw down retire-

ment savings. The accuracy of the steps to follow and the rules of thumb are debatable and

the main problem is that one size does not fit all. A lower income person would need to save

much more proportionate to income than a higher income person if getting by is the goal. In a

study of university employees, the researchers found that male respondents with higher levels

of education were more aware of retirement rules of thumb than females or men with lower

levels of education (Mayer, Zick, & Glaitti, 2011).

Until recently, North Americans were retiring progressively earlier. However, that trend

has flattened out; some say it’s poised to reverse, leaving many working later in life. A recent

Wells Fargo survey found that one-quarter of middle-class Americans say they will work until

at least age 80 to live comfortably in retirement. With the massive baby boom generation

entering retirement, the question of how long they’ll stay at their jobs is looming ever larger.

According to Catherine Collinson of the Transamerica Center “Planning not to retire is simply

not a viable retirement strategy. Planning to work past age 65 is an important opportunity to

420 chapter 13

continue earning income, save more and help alleviate a retirement savings shortfall, however,

it’s important that workers be proactive in setting a retirement savings goal, saving and invest-

ing for retirement, and having a backup plan if they are forced to retire sooner than expected”

(Mont, 2011).

More and more retirees are choosing to work part time rather than bow out of the labor

force altogether. In a survey, 71 percent of those approaching retirement said they planned to

work in some fashion later in life, preferring the idea of alternating between work and leisure

(Ruffenach, 2008). A main reason to continue working is to afford big health care bills, which

is a concern for many.

A factor affecting when to retire is the availability and affordability of health care and health

insurance. In the United States, government-sponsored health insurance program known as

Medicare starts at age 65. Only one-third of the surveyed baby boomers could correctly

identify that Medicare eligibility starts at age 65 (Ruffenach, 2008). So, a planning issue is

gathering all the information necessary to make informed decisions. For example, in rare

situations medicare can start earlier.

Another decision is whether to buy long-term-care insurance, policies that provide

benefits for a range of services not covered by regular health insurance or Medicare. Typical

coverage includes extended stays in long-term care facilities and the costs of assisted living in

one’s own home. The younger the person, the more affordable the rates are. Most people look

into long-term-care insurance in their 50s or 60s. As premiums for long-term-care insurance

are high, not everyone can afford them.

People in their 60s realize that retirement can last 20 or more years, so investment growth

is still important. Retirement assets should earn above the inflation rate. It is also the time to

create an estate plan and make sure wills are current. Another thing to think about is how

much income will be needed in retirement. Options should be explored with financial profes-

sionals. The kinds of mistakes that potential retirees make include

• Guessing, not knowing how much money they have

• Thinking they will work forever

• Taking a loan against their 401(k) or 403(b) retirement plans

• Not getting full benefits, in particular, not providing for health insurance

• Not knowing tax advantages and strategies

• Underestimating how much money they will need

The potential solutions include

• Talking with friends, family, and financial professionals about plans

• Formulating a plan and investing time and energy in it

• Learning more about finances

• Considering retirement benefits besides salary

• Joining employer retirement plans; it is rarely too late

• Getting vested where you work (meaning putting in enough years to qualify for employer-

sponsored retirement plans)

• Creating a backup plan of where to work and live

• Saving as much as possible and investing securely

Financially strapped retirees may turn to their children for help. Often what happens is that

their children are getting older too but can’t retire because they are helping out mom or dad.

Managing Finances 421

Rae Mauro, a 66-year-old research analyst from Valencia, Calif., opted not to retire

because she needed the salary to pay for a nursing attendant for her 87-year-old

mother, who suffers from Alzheimer’s. Ms. Mauro says she gets little help from her

siblings. (Higgins, 2003, p. D1)

If children are called on to help aging parents, there are a number of strategies to consider,

including

• Buying something from parents (i.e., jewelry, real estate) or helping them to sell something

such as a piece of property or a car.

• Taking a tax deduction. If a person is paying more than half of a parent’s support, he or

she can claim the parent as a dependent on tax returns (see a tax consultant or accoun-

tant about this because rules change depending on parent’s income).

• Keeping separate accounts. Have parents sign a power of attorney form that gives the

child power to handle their finances if they become ill or incapacitated.

• Taking advantage of reverse mortgages, which allow homeowners aged 62 or older to

receive a loan against their home, which is repaid with interest when the borrower sells

the house, moves, or dies. This results in a smaller inheritance for children, which some

retirees will resist.

In all these strategies sensitivity should be used because, as the beginning of the chapter

showed, control is very much an issue when it comes to financial management; and this is a

lifelong concept. It is difficult for parents to give up financial control or to trust that their children

know what is best; and, as the previous example of Rae Mauro shows, siblings may not agree

on what is best.

Convincing parents also takes patience. Stephen George Rozich of Laguna Niquel,

Calif., says it took years to persuade his mother to do a reverse mortgage on her

$80,000 Colorado home. . . . The one Mr. Rozich arranged for his mother paid her about

$300 a month in extra cash and gave her a credit line of roughly $14,000. (Higgins,

2003, p. D2)

Financial planning for retirement can begin at any age, but many individuals wait until they

are in their 40s to become serious about it. A study of current financial planning research in

Australia, Canada, the United Kingdom, and the United States showed that most of it was

on estate distribution analysis, pension alternatives, and tax optimization (Fagan & Brayman,

2011). Although people tend to think of retirement planning as being for themselves and

their spouse, it can also involve providing for the financial needs of dependent aging parents.

Individuals who provide or anticipate providing financial assistance to their parent or parents

while also providing financial support to children are known as the sandwich generation.

As mentioned earlier, types of investments include employer-sponsored retirement plans

and Individual Retirement Accounts (IRAs). Before investing elsewhere, individuals should con-

sider putting available funds into tax-sheltered plans to the maximum allowed. In so doing,

income tax will be reduced and wealth grows tax-free. For example,

• Most employers offer 401(k) or 403(b) plans. If $200 a month is put into a tax-sheltered

account at 9 percent interest, the return is $73,327 in 15 years.

• If an employer does not offer such a plan, alternatives are to open an Individual

Retirement Account, or SEP or Keogh if self-employed. If $2,000 a year at 9 percent is

invested in these types of accounts, the end result is $102,320 in 20 years.

422 chapter 13

Money can be automatically deducted from every paycheck toward a retirement plan,

or monthly payments can be arranged from a bank account. As the examples show, the

growth of a retirement fund depends on the amount invested, how often, and for how long.

It also depends on how the fund is invested. More and more, individuals are having to make

decisions about how their particular retirement fund is invested.

To determine retirement needs, financial planners or financial planning programs can

run financial information through a computer. The information needed includes a person’s

age,  salary, employer-sponsored retirement plans or IRAs, SEPs or Keoghs, other invest-

ments, number of years employed, the percentage of salary being saved, projected retirement

age, and the future income the person would like to have. Based on the analysis of this

information, a person may choose to save more, change investments, or work longer. There

are many variables, including the ups and downs in the economy and one’s health, that will

affect final retirement income; and calculations are at best estimates. The farther the person is

away from actual retirement, the less accurate are the estimates.

Once someone has reached age 65, there is a 49 percent chance of reaching age 86 for

men and age 89 for women. On average, at age 65 a man can expect to live to be 82 and a

woman, 85. People tend to underestimate how long they will live. Part of retirement planning

is estimating Social Security income, the subject to be discussed next.

Personal retirement savings may run out, but Social Security continues (hence, the name).

Since the Social Security Act became law in the United States in 1935, Social Security has

been one of the main sources of expected income for those reaching their retirement. Other

sources of income include employer-sponsored retirement plans, savings and investments,

and money from part-time jobs and various types of IRAs. As might be expected, the higher

the income of the retiree, the lower his or her reliance on Social Security. Although Social

Security was designed to be a supplement to the retired person’s savings and pensions, for

many it is the sole or main source of income.

Figure 13.7 shows what age a person has to be to receive full Social Security. The earliest

age to receive a partial benefit is 62. Once a person begins receiving early benefits, the reduc-

tion is permanent in terms of the person’s own benefit as well as those of spouse and children.

This is especially important if a person’s spouse is considerably younger and will depend on

the benefits of the person who is retiring.

Year of Birth Full Retirement Age

65

65 and 2 months

65 and 4 months

65 and 6 months

65 and 8 months

65 and 10 months

66 and 2 months

66 and 4 months

66 and 6 months

66 and 8 months

66 and 10 months

67

66

1937 or earlier 1938

1939

1940

1941

1942

1943–1954

1955

1956

1957

1958

1959

1960 and later

Figure 13.7 Retirement ages for full social security.

Managing Finances 423

What do most people do? almost 70 percent of retirees take social security before age

65 (Clements, 2003, April 23, p. D1). Women have a greater life expectancy, yet they are more

likely than men to opt for early retirement.

“I think they’re making a mistake,” says Henry Hebeler, author of “J. K. Lasser’s Your

Winning Retirement Plan” and founder of a Web site devoted to retirement issues

(analyzenow.com). “When you talk to people who are in their 80s, they’d give anything

to have a bigger Social Security check.” (Clements, 2003, April 23, p. D1).

To find out how your Social Security is adding up go to ssa.gov, visit the Social Security

Office locally, or call (800) 772-1213. The website provides a calculator to estimate potential

benefits, given different retirement ages.

People become eligible for a reduced level of Social Security retirement benefits at age

62. In certain cases, Social Security benefits can begin earlier for disabled employees and

survivors. So, an important decision people in their 60s must make is whether to retire early

at 62 or keep working to obtain full benefits. Affecting this decision is Medicare, the United

States’ basic health insurance program for people 65 or older. Medicare has two main parts:

hospital insurance and medical insurance, which helps pay for doctor visits and home health

visits. In the United States the Social Security and Medicare programs are closely linked, but

each has its own rules. People who retire at 62 will have to get health insurance on their own;

this is commonly referred to as Medigap insur-

ance—filling the gap until age 65 when Medicare

starts. In some cases, a former employer will

extend health insurance until age 65 or offer it

at a reduced rate to encourage employees to

retire early. The Medicare drug benefit started in

2006 and offers extra help to people on limited

incomes.

Financial Planning Retirement planning is only one aspect of the broader category called financial planning. It

should be emphasized that starting financial planning early in life will give you a head start. It

should not be done in isolation as mentioned previously involve others in the process includ-

ing trained financial advisors. Diversify investments. A survey of Consumer Finances datasets

showed that a greater proportion of households are using financial planners (Hanna, 2011).

This chapter has provided basic information on the economy and financial management.

Although the terms do not change rapidly, the figures and policies are subject to change owing

to inflation and such other things as tax codes and federal college loan programs. Individuals

and families have to stay alert and find the latest information. An avalanche of material is avail-

able to help investors track the status of their funds. Some information may come regularly

through the mail, such as bank statements, stockbroker reports, mutual-fund statements, IRA

updates, and credit card statements. Additional free information on financial management is

available from banks, the Internet, and the federal government.

Financial advice for a price is also readily available through magazines, newspapers, and

in-person services. According to a study by the Roper organization, when U.S. residents want

financial advice, they are most likely to turn to friends and relatives, then to their bank officer,

lawyer and accountant, financial planner, real estate broker, and stockbroker.

Suggested Activity See Figure 13.6 and look up at what age you can retire for a full Social Security benefit. In the total class or in groups discuss the fairness of the sliding scale. Also discuss the pros and cons of retiring with partial benefits at age 62.

424 chapter 13

During the last 30 years there has been a gradual change away from face-to-face

consumer–adviser interaction toward more technology-based information exchange. A study

by Jinkook Lee (2002) found that phone, mail, and computer technology were all used.

Depending on the demographic and on the product and service, there were different consumer

preferences. For example, face-to-face interaction was preferred when obtaining mortgages

but it was far less important when obtaining credit cards. Generally speaking, younger, more

educated and affluent consumers are more open to using technology to gain answers and

less insistent on face-to-face interactions.

Before investing in the services of a financial planner or other finance professional, a

potential customer should check credentials and see whether any complaints are on file

with the Better Business Bureau or the state Office of Consumer Affairs. Under the National

Securities Markets Improvement Act of 1996, the Securities and Exchange Commission regu-

lates financial advisers managing more than $25 million in assets.

With corporate scandals and other exposés of financial mismanagement in the housing

and banking industries, closer scrutiny of mortgage lenders, and investment managers and

advisers is in place. However, given the wide range of services offered, it is difficult for any

government agency to keep on top of fraud and quasi-legal doings.

A financial planner looks at an individual’s or a family’s total financial picture and helps

that person or family develop a plan to achieve goals. Over 500,000 people in the United States

are call themselves financial planners, so it is important to choose a financial planner wisely.

To do this ask friends and family members for recommendations and find out the planner’s

credentials. Table 13.3 lists a few questions you might ask a financial planner. The best-known

credential is Certified Financial Planner (CFP). A person with a CFP has passed rigorous

examinations and been approved by the International Board of Standards and Practices for

Certified Financial Planners. Financial planners may be fee-only (so much per hour to set up a

a successful retirement requires careful financial planning.

Managing Finances 425

budget, develop financial plans, or give advice), commission-only, or based on a combination

of fee and commission. The choice depends on consumers’ needs and circumstances, such

as whether they want a long-term relationship or a one-time consultation.

Successful financial planning requires a conscious effort. Joseph Coughlin, founder and

director of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology AgeLab, was interviewed about working

with financial planners toward retirement:

A financial plan is only a means to an end, Coughlin says, and that end is a retirement

filled with vitality and independence. A good plan will provide you with the ability to

execute on your retirement plans, not just save for them. (Myers, 2008, p. S5)

Further Family Economic issues This last section of the chapter explores various economic issues impacting on the family,

ending with wealth and poverty.

The Gender Gap, Earnings Gap, and the Glass Ceiling The gender gap is the difference in earnings between men and women employed full-time

outside the home. In the 1970s women earned approximately 60 percent of what men earned.

By 2012, the gender gap had narrowed considerably. There is less of a gender gap between

men and women at younger ages than there is for older generations.

An earnings gap exists because of the gender gap and also because women, on aver-

age, work fewer years than men. This affects their lifelong earnings and retirement savings.

Women, on average, work 32 years compared to 44 years for men before retiring. Women’s

caregiving responsibilities are the primary reason why they work fewer years. At retirement,

women’s median income is only 58 percent of that of men’s (Ruffenach, 2008).

As women move up the corporate or government ladder, they often hit an invisible barrier

that stops them from moving further. They can see the positions at the top that they want, but

Questions to Ask Before Engaging a Financial Planner* 1. What experience do you have?

2. What are your qualifications?

3. What services do you offer?

4. What is your approach to financial planning?

5. Will i be working with you or with a team? Who are the others?

6. how will i pay for services?

7. how much do you usually charge?

8. have you ever been publicly disciplined for unlawful or unethical action in your profes-

sional career?

9. Can you put everything agreed upon in writing? (this would be a written agreement that

outlines the services and fees.)

*This list of questions was adapted from a presentation made by Bruce Ogier, CFP, on October 23, 2008 in the Family Financial Analysis class at Florida State University.

Table 13.3

426 chapter 13

they cannot reach them. This phenomenon is known as the glass ceiling. Studies are being

conducted to determine why gender barriers exist and where they tend to be found. Generally

it is assumed that women want to move ahead and that corporations and other employers, for

a variety of reasons, have imposed barriers impeding their advance.

However, the glass ceiling may be caused by more than the barriers imposed by

employers. One study found that the barriers might be at least partially imposed by the

women themselves in that they have lower salary expectations even before they enter the

job market.

Researchers have found that parents, especially fathers, have a strong positive impact on

their daughters’ career expectations (Hoffman, Goldsmith, & Hofacker, 1992). Other studies

indicate that schools may not provide as many opportunities for success for girls as they do

for boys. Thus, supportive families and schools are important to the goal setting and potential

career success of women students. Because the gender gap is closing and the glass ceiling

appears to be shattering (i.e., more women are moving up and commanding higher salaries),

women’s employment issues are rapidly changing. More studies will clarify the values, atti-

tudes, and behaviors involved with these issues.

Wealth and Poverty Wealth is the state of being rich and having a high net worth. The way to wealth is to be

debt-free by practicing frugality and owning assets such as businesses, houses, cars, and

investments outright. Examples of frugality include going without extras, living in a less

expensive house than one can afford, and driving a less expensive car. In short, the way to

becoming wealthy is to live as if you are not wealthy, according to Thomas Standley and

William Danko (1998), authors of The Millionaire next Door. Their research on millionaires

revealed a more modest lifestyle than one would expect. They found that wealth takes

sacrifice, discipline, and hard work. Many of the wealthy are in what may be consid-

ered unglamorous enterprises such as wall-board manufacturing and they drive modest

family-style vehicles. They are usually married with children and own stocks, bonds, and

real estate, and have other financial assets. The authors’ main point is that to be wealthy

means living within one’s means, choosing an occupation well, being satisfied, building

net worth, and keeping aware of changes worldwide. In the United States the wealthiest

5 percent earn 21.7 percent of the nation’s income but spend proportionately less of it than

the middle class.

Most people, of course, are not wealthy, and they are not living debt-free. As Chapter 8

explained, poverty is the state of being poor and lacking adequate means to provide for basic

material needs and comforts. In the United States, about 20 percent of American children

live in families with annual incomes below the federal poverty line. Poor children are at risk for

physical, cognitive, and socioeconomic problems.

The United Nations Department of Public Information keeps statistics on the world’s poor

people. The greatest concentration is in only 10 countries: Bangladesh, Brazil, central and

western China, Ethiopia, India, Indonesia, Nigeria, Pakistan, the Philippines, and Vietnam.

According to the World Bank more than a billion people still live on less than a $1 a day, and

the majority are women and children residing in rural areas. Changes in wealth affect eating

patterns. For example, wealthier consumers in China and India are eating more meat. The

Managing Finances 427

average American consumes 250 pounds of meat per year and in India it is 10 pounds and in

China it is 100 pounds.

Although the U.S. economy is generally better off than most countries, poverty is still wide-

spread, especially in manufacturing and rural areas where the economic engine has broken

down. The poorest city in the United States in November 2011 was Reading, Pennsylvania, a

former manufacturing center. Poverty is a serious problem because poverty in childhood can

have lifelong repercussions:

Poverty is the roadblock to educational progress of many disadvantaged youth. . . . Poor

teenagers are four times more likely than nonpoor teens to have below average basic

academic skills. More than half of the 15- to 18-year-olds from families with incomes

below poverty had reading and math skills that placed them in the bottom 20 percent of

all teens. (Leidenfrost, 1993, p. 5)

Poverty can be either a temporary or a chronic state of living. If people are unemployed

for a few months, they will experience a temporary decline in income, but if they have

saved for a rainy day, their lifestyle will not be severely affected immediately. Likewise,

college students may live at or below the poverty level, but this is a temporary state that

will be remedied when they get their first full-time job. The mind-set of a person who is

experiencing temporary poverty is different from that of a person or family immersed in

permanent poverty.

Because the study of management focuses on control and planning, educators and family

facilitators need to be sensitized to the fact that not everyone has equal access to resources or

the equal ability to use them. According to Rettig, Rossman, and Hogan (1992),

People who are poor must devote their financial resources to meet basic needs. They

have minimal freedom to allocate money, time, or human energy for other than immedi-

ate uses and have little to give toward planning for future needs. Families and individuals

with lower levels of living have less freedom to decide, little control over resource access,

fewer opportunities for human resource development, and their use of material resources

is significantly diminished. Families can be “poor,” not only in material resources, but

also in human resources of imagination, initiative, self-discipline, and the ability to seek

alternatives. (p. 35)

Most people in the United states, 70 percent, are in the middle class and derive their

income largely from earnings—that is, wages or salaries from occupations. Wealthier people

generally derive a considerable proportion of their income from investments; the higher the

income, the higher the portion from investments tends to be. So wealth is not the same as

income. A person who earns a great deal of money but spends it all each year is not wealthy;

he or she is just living high, according to Standley and Danko.

From a management standpoint, the goals of a middle-class family may be to educate

the children and have a secure lifestyle rather than to accumulate vast wealth. The very

wealthy, who have an abundance of money, property, and investments, spend a great deal

of time trying to retain their fortunes so that they can pass on their money to their descen-

dants. With the exception of highly successful athletes, business tycoons, entrepreneurs, and

actors, most of the very wealthy have acquired their fortunes over a long period of time or

through inheritance.

428 chapter 13

summarysummary Since adjusting to economic realities is an ongoing process with confidence as a key factor, most families are responding by pay- ing off debt, saving more, readjusting their financial plans, and spending and investing more carefully. They are consulting with tax advisors and financial planners more than in the past. More college graduates are returning home to live with their parents. The financial management styles of college students in one study were categorized as drifters, followers, or pathfinders.

Self-control and knowledge are keys to successful financial management, which is a transformation process involving three phases: planning, action, and postplanning. Handling money is one of the most common management skills, but also one of the most difficult. Setting up a budget and determining net worth are two ways to get an idea of a person’s financial status.

The goal of financial management is to maximize net worth and life satisfaction.

Values and goals influence the way finances are man- aged, and a gap exists between values (ideals) and actual

behavior. Savings and investments are important aspects of financial management. Saving for children’s college education is an example of a long-range goal of many families. Not everyone has the luxury of planning for the future, however; low-income families must devote their financial resources to meeting basic daily needs. Taxes make up the largest expenditure for the typi- cal family in the United States—it spends about one-third of its income on taxes—followed by housing and household expenses, and transportation.

Many families, especially those with children, struggle to stay ahead. Individuals and families operate within the greater economy of the nation and the world. Consequently, individu- als need to understand how expansion, recession, recovery, inflation, and mortgage rates affect them. The last chapter of this book focuses on projected changes in demographics, the economy, the environment, and technology and summarizes the subjects of rational choice, managerial judgment, values, and decision making.

termskey terms annual percentage rate (APR) 410 assets 403 budget 398 consumer price index (CPI) 402 credit 408 credit bureaus 410 debit cards 408 discretionary income 403 disposable income 403 diversification 412 emergency fund 406 Equal Credit Opportunity Act 411 Fair Credit Reporting Act 410 FICO score 410

financial management 397 financial planners 424 financial security 397 fixed expenses 405 gender gap 425 glass ceiling 426 gross domestic product (GDP) 402 gross income 403 income 403 income tax 403 inflation 400 insurance 413 investment 412 level of living 402

liabilities 403 liquidity 412 long-term-care insurance 420 Medicare 420 net worth 403 psychic income 403 real income 403 recession 400 sandwich generation 421 Social Security Act 422 standard of living 402 taxes 403 variable expenses 405 wealth 426

questions 1. What is a FICO score? What is its range, and what is a good

one? How does a FICO score affect a person’s future finan- cial decisions?

2. Authors Standley and Danko say that to be wealthy means living within one’s means and choosing an occupation well. What do you think of this advice?

3. What are some of your fixed and variable expenses? Do you have a monthly budget or estimation of income and outflow?

4. Why do nearly 70 percent of retirees take Social Security before age 65? What are the pros and cons of this decision?

5. Why do you think more people turn first to friends and relatives for financial advice, and then to profes- sional financial advisers such as bankers, lawyers, and accountants?

review questions

Managing Finances 429

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Belsie, L. (2011, November). Time use during recessions. Cambridge, MA: The NBER Digest.

Beutler, I., Beutler, L., & McCoy, J. K. (2008). Money aspirations about living well: Middle school student perceptions. Financial Counseling and Planning, 19(1), 44–60.

Block, S. (2006, June 12). In debt before you start. Usa TODaY, p. A1.

Britt, S., Grable, J., Goff, B., & White, M. (2008). The influence of perceived spending behaviors on relationship satisfaction. Financial Counseling and Planning, 19(1), 31–43.

Clements, J. (2003, April 23). Why it pays to delay: Too many retirees start collecting Social Security early. The Wall street Journal, p. D1.

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431

In the mistake is the next success.

—Designer eileen Fisher 14

Managing

Main Topics

Technology and Innovation Visionary leadership and Managerial Judgment household innovations Adopting innovations and Applying Technology The 5s Management Concept information and innovation Overload

Family, Home, and Global Change Quality of life and Well-Being Multiculturalism sustainability, environment, and Consumption health Care and the Food supply

DiD you know that . . .?

. . . Most Americans believe that working hard is still the most important element in getting ahead.

. . . We may be on Mars in 2030 or before.

ToMorrow

432 chapter 14

T his final chapter is about preparing yourself and your family for the changes that lie ahead. We’ll cover the latest leadership and management practices necessary for maintaining a competitive edge and a better functioning planet. The chapter builds on the previous ones and offers a window into the future. Noted Harvard professor E. O. Wilson

said, “It is exquisitely human to search for wholeness and richness of experience.” What future

richness is in store for all of us? Probably greater mobility and more use of technology to ease

our lives and communication. But, we can also expect a more crowded planet. The present

worldwide population is over 7 billion and is expected to rise to 9 billion by 2050.

Here are some projections for newborns. Four million babies are born in the United States

each year and 16 million in China. Life expectancy for a baby born in the United States in

2012 is 81.3 for girls and 76.2 for boys. Marital age will be around age 30 for those who finish

college and 26 for those who don’t. There is a 41 percent chance that an American born

today will never marry and a 23 percent chance that the marriage will end in divorce. Women

born in the United States will likely give birth to two babies, 2.09 to be precise. College tuition

should range between $150,000 for in-state at a public U.S. college and $500,000 at a private

college for four years.

technology and innovation Before proceeding further, it should be cautioned that speculating about the future is not

without its risks especially when it comes to health and social issues like marriage, divorce,

and childbirth. In his 1899 novel When the Sleeper Wakes, H. G. Wells predicted color

television and supersonic aircraft, but he made the less-than-successful prediction that

hypnotism would replace conventional anesthetics in medicine. Likewise, Jules Verne, in

Twenty Thousand Leagues under the Sea, published in 1870, was visionary regarding the

development of submarines, but missed on his prediction that automated baby-feeding

machines would take care of the rising world population. The human touch is irreplaceable.

As we proceed through the 21st century we will and closely experience

• Increasing urbanization.

• Increasing globalization and education levels.

• The continued rising and falling of national economies.

• Increasing strain on natural resources and the creation of new solutions.

The greatest leaps in energy and consumption demands will come from India and China where

populations are expected to grow by 25 percent in the next two decades. Consider this:

While housing bubbles around the world have burst, China’s market has been seen as

different because its surge in home building has been driven less by financial leverage

than by real demand from a rapidly urbanizing population. Anywhere from 15 million to

20 million people move to Chinese cities each year. (Batson, 2008, p. A6)

Currently more than 80 percent of the world’s people live in developing countries and nearly

40 percent of them are children or teenagers. Population growth has slowed in the richest

countries. More rapid growth is happening in low to middle income per capita countries, and

these economies will supply needed workers and demand for products and services.

Poverty is a relative term: what is considered poverty in Australia, Western Europe,

Japan, South Korea, the United States, and Canada would not be considered poverty in a

Managing Tomorrow 433

developing country. As we proceed, the concept of proper living standards will be redefined.

People’s expectations of what constitutes “the good life” will undergo vast change in the

21st century. How do you compare city and national economies where $10 an hour is the

minimum wage in San Francisco, California, compared to $2 a day in Haiti—both in North

America. Certainly cost of living varies greatly in these two locations but does it merit that

difference in wages?

The challenge will be in meeting everyone’s needs while preserving the environment and

being mindful of policies that affect future generations within and across borders. The con-

cern over climate change was addressed at the Kyoto Summit held in Japan in 1997. An

outcome was the Kyoto Protocol, which was ratified in 2008 by many countries around the

world. Nearly everyone agrees that something has to be done about global warming, but the

concern countries have is about how much it will cost to implement the suggested steps to

reduce greenhouse gas emissions. As countries prosper and share resources, the need for

international cooperation expands.

Where people once burned wood and oil for heating and cooking, they now turn to

electricity to run their refrigerators and heat pumps. Bicycles are being replaced by motor

scooters and cars, which bring with them not only more mobility and

employment opportunities but also more pollution and congestion.

Therefore, more fuel-efficient and less-polluting cars and mass trans-

portation are needed.

As economies develop, homes increase in size and technology.

The United States has 4 percent of the world’s population, but uses

about 25 percent of the world’s energy.

Soaring business activity and increased urbanization strain energy

systems and water supplies. Less-developed countries are urban-

izing at a faster rate as compared to wealthier areas; so, although

the whole world is becoming more urban, the transformation is not

experienced evenly across the world. More thought is being given to

increasing conservation, expanding and diversifying energy and water

supplies, and improving home and workplace energy efficiency.

Besides environmental issues, what else can we expect to

come? For one thing, people are demanding more transparency,

which means openness in revealing information about the operations

of companies, organizations, institutions, and governments. As econ-

omies develop, people live longer, work longer, become more literate,

and want to know more.

Expect more emphasis in higher education on providing experi-

ences that develop students’ knowledge of leadership and ability to

demonstrate leadership skills in their campus, career, and worldwide

communities. Also expect a growth in literacy worldwide with the

sharpest leaps in the world literacy rate of women. Reading docu-

ments is still problematic even in developed countries, including in the

United States where about one-third of the population has below-basic

or basic document literacy, which can cause problems personally

and in the workplace. There is still a long way to go when it comes to

literacy—financial or otherwise. According to the United Nations, glob-

ally about 800 million adults are illiterate, meaning they cannot read. Improved health and technology will lead to a better life for us all.

Source: Phototake NYC.

434 chapter 14

Regarding everyday life, we will continue to see advances in food, apparel, and housing

(Sullivan, Collier, & Goldsmith, 2011). New institutions will emerge. The family will endure as it

always has, but its form will continue to alter.

Critical Thinking

How do you think families will change? Describe different family forms that you know.

Case Study Mike’s Determination on the Field and off “Mike McEnany knew from a very early age that he could over- come pretty much any obstacle through sheer determination. He was a standout lineman for his high school football team, but at 180 pounds he was considered far too small for a major college program. Undaunted, McEnany drove from his home in Florida to Mississippi State University seeking, against formidable odds, to

make the team on the basis of a walk-on tryout. He graduated as one of the team’s leading tacklers. It was the same kind of passion that drove McEnany to build his own roofing company, based in Tampa, while still in his mid-twenties. Today he heads one of Florida’s largest contractors, with more than 100 employees.”

Source: Slack, C. (2011). Real needs: Real solutions. Merrill Lunch Advisor, p. 17.

Families will engage in more management activities than ever before, because the increas-

ingly complex world in which they live will offer them so many choices such as an explosion of

choices in health care, education and other services. Other predictions include

• More personalized electronics

• More use of social online networks

• New forms of financial transactions

• More smart sensors in homes, in schools and other buildings, on bridges, streets, and in

harbors.

Visionary Leadership and Managerial Judgment Values, decision making, goals, and resources work together to form the basis of a holis-

tic construct called managerial judgment. Managerial judgment, defined as the ability to

make decisions and accept change for the betterment of self and humankind, is this chapter’s

theme. Individuals, families, communities, and countries are encouraged to think about what

may happen in future so they can better prepare themselves and make smarter choices. The

ultimate goal of the manager today is the creation of a better tomorrow. As explained through-

out this book, management takes a proactive approach, meaning that through reasoning,

determination, and decision making, worthwhile changes can be implemented.

Managing Tomorrow 435

As the case study shows, one’s basic personality translates from one domain to another.

Management needs more leaders (experts, authorities, facilitators, and guides) who partici-

pate in communities, as contributors to scientific, social, or economic advances, and by so

doing employ others and improve human lives. “Leadership is not about personality; it’s about

practice” (Kouzes & Posner, 2002, p. 13). It involves making a difference for the public good

in an active, purposeful, diverse, team-oriented, broad-based, and ethical way. Leaders in the

newest sense operate in a connective way. They bring resources together and get information

flowing, rather than operate in a hierarchical fashion (top-down management). They don’t take

“no” for an answer.

Visionary leaders look to the future by:

1. Supporting global trade and the exchange of ideas,

2. Facilitating the dissemination of new technologies and sound management and environ-

mental practices, and

3. Contributing to safety in the workplace and in schools, to the development of useful

products and services, and to advances in health care, transportation, and education.

Building leadership potential is a goal of family resource management. Leaders

recognize problems and seek to solve them. Visionary leaders also understand that they

themselves and those they lead may have different decision-making styles. In Chapter 2

we discussed that satisficing refers to picking the first good alternative that presents itself

so that a satisficer tends to make a decision and sticks with it. An alternative to this is a

maximizer, a person who wants to be certain they have made the right choice and there-

fore is less likely to fully commit to a decision and in so doing may be less happy in their

everyday lives (Sparks, Ehrlinger, & Eibach, 2011). Maximizers spend a lot of time searching

for information and confirmation and may fret or obsess about choices. There are low-level

maximizers and high-level maximizers who may cause themselves a lot of worry and grief.

Finding the right choice or making the right decision can be a never-ending process and

for those leaders facing deadlines, the maximizers in the group can cause a lot of frustra-

tion. Research is underway to understand better how satisficers and maximizers operate in

groups including within families.

Critical Thinking

Are you primarily a satisficer or a maximizer? Can you give an example of both types of decision-making style in your own life or that of a friend?

The chapter now turns to the specifics of household innovations and then moves to a

discussion of the challenges involved in managing information and innovation overload. It con-

cludes with an examination of possible changes in family life and the global community, with

an emphasis on demographic shifts and environmentalism.

436 chapter 14

Household Innovations Certainly, life was poorer and harder before the arrival of many of the technological advances

of the late 19th and 20th century. One innovator was 27-year-old Alexander Graham Bell

who set out to invent a “talking telegraph” in 1875. His telephone is light-years away from

the smart phones of today but he set the pace. An invention underway is “smart” slippers for

seniors with the idea that the slippers could read and report a medical problem or accident.

It was found that slippers are more likely to be worn around the house than jewelry such as

medical alert bracelets or necklaces, but more importantly than the slippers per se is this

notion of several monitors or options instead of just one. A re-thinking of the function of

households is taking place. Households include everything that exists or takes place within a

house or apartment.

To go back in time again, consider the state of the American home before 1940. Most of

the U.S. population still lived on farms, less than one-third of the homes had electric lights, and

only one-tenth had a flush toilet. A sample of home economics alumnae from 1939 to 1959

who lived in home management houses on college campuses revealed what it was like to live

in a congregate situation during those years. The alumane concluded that communication,

cooperation, and tolerance were necessary for group living and management (Tifft, Fletcher, &

Junk, 2011).

Case Study Then and now Today’s students in family resource management come from a wide variety of backgrounds and most likely take lecture and discussion courses either online or in-person. It is enlightening to read how their predecessors experienced living in home manage- ment houses from 1939 to 1959:

“Two residents moved into the house from family farms. They felt the residence course was likely more fun for these girls than it was for students who had already experienced living on campus. Another, reared on a farm, reported she was not used to buying so much food. Her self-sufficient family raised their vegetables and butchered their own chickens and cattle. One of the resi- dents who came from a family farm felt others had more social

experiences than she did because of being isolated on the farm. Living in the house did not interfere with relationships outside the house. Boyfriends were welcome, visiting often. One interviewee remembers that her future husband was a good potato peeler. ‘It seems to me, Bud spent lots of time on a stool on the back porch, peeling potatoes’ . . . [During World War II] Social interactions increased when soldiers and sailors arrived for training courses in radio and engineering and moved into residence halls adjacent to the home management houses. While planning a pheasant hunt, several soliders made a deal with house residents that if they were successful, the women would cook the dinner. Both hunting and dining were successful.”

Source: Tifft, K., Fletcher, J., & Junk, V. W. (2011). Home management house: Reflections of alumnae. Journal of Family and Consumer Sciences, 103(2), 18.

Current households rely so much more on food bought and prepared outside the

home that it is difficult to picture the home and campus life depicted in the case study.

Today’s homes function at such a higher level. As has been stated many times in this

book, the number of households is growing but the number of inhabitants per house-

hold is decreasing. There are more singles living alone or single-parent families, which

Managing Tomorrow 437

is affecting the needs of the households and, in turn, the demand

for household innovations. But, interestingly enough there is a return

to back to the farm, back to farmer’s markets, and buying produce

grown locally. It could be said that in reality, things haven’t changed

all that much except that they have accelerated and involve advanced

technologies.

Given that people’s housing needs change and that products try to

keep pace, what can be predicted for future homes? Undeniably there

will be more connectivity. Today, toddlers have computer toys. Whereas

some current college students remember when their families got their

first home computer, others will not remember a time when computers

were not part of their home life. A study indicated that attitudinal beliefs

are extremely important in determining the use of a home computer

(Brown, Venkatesh, & Bala, 2006). The researchers found that if com-

puter use is considered so natural as to be a habit, then the decision

to have one at home would be consciously made. Today, more college

students are taking online classes and whole degree programs online.

Conventional classroom lectures typically include Internet-based learn-

ing experiences.

Regarding home products with microprocessors, there will be

more handheld devices for various functions beyond the remote devices

already commonplace. Because handheld devices are easily mislaid

and clutter up homes, the trend will be to consolidate devices and func-

tions into multipurpose devices or central controllers such as smart

phones. The push is on to make them more multi-functional, smaller,

and affordable.

More fun to exercise with someone else.

Case Study Tammy Lam “Tammy Lam, 26, a p.r. executive in San Francisco, uses her T-Mobile HTC my/Touch phone to pay for just about everything. ‘I ordered dinner from my local Thai on GrubHub while sitting on the bus on the way home from work last night. I brought all my Christmas presents on my phone. When friends and I are out,

we use Groupon to buy a meal,’ says Lam, who uses her phone instead of her computer for shopping even when she’s at home. And she prefers it to cards or bills when she’s out. ‘I hate cash,’ says Lam. Lam is an early adopter, but there are enough people like her to set off a mobile-wallet war that will escalate . . . ”

Source: van Dyke, D. (2012, January 2). The end of cash. TIME, p. 48.

Inside homes, lighting and temperature controls will be particularly sophisticated. Houses

can be divided into temperature zones that can be individually programmed to deliver heat-

ing and cooling during the times of day when the zones are used. Homeowners can set the

temperatures for the zones using touch-screen computers or handheld voice controls that

438 chapter 14

are linked to a central computer and to sensors in each zone. Temperatures will be held

within a smaller range than with the old-fashioned thermostats, which conventionally allowed

temperatures to vary within a six-degree range. You have probably experienced lighting in

public bathrooms or classrooms that go on when you enter and off when you leave. We will

see more of this technology in homes.

The most effective home automation systems will support both central and distributed

control and communication standards. An example is Mealtime, an experimental project

supported by many major appliance manufacturers and retailers, which test-marketed remote-

controlled appliances: In the morning, a family member could start a meal in a range, for

example, that goes from a refrigerator function to a range function over the course of the day.

A casserole could be refrigerated until the timer says to begin cooking at 4 p.m. so that when

the family gathers at home at 6 p.m. the casserole is cooked and ready in the same appliance.

If the family is late, the appliance will return to the refrigerating function and hold the casserole

until the family is ready. Twenty families in the Boston area tested the new appliances in their

homes to see how the systems worked—the main ideas are to save time, build in more family

support, and provide better nutrition. The household would still have a conventional refrigera-

tor/freezer albeit with more functions than usual and would also have this multifeature range

allowing for new ways of cooking and timing meals.

Critical Thinking

Would you be interested in having more remote controlled appliances and electronics? Why or why not? Is it more likely someone would forego the homemade casserole to warm up a store-bought frozen meal or pizza in the microwave oven?

Appliances, cars, televisions, telephones, and computers will continue to get smarter.

The electronics industry is challenged to keep products simple enough to operate and to

figure out how to provide for repairs, replacements, and recycling.

These developments in home automation are linked to consumers, who have to decide

which innovations to adopt and which to turn down. Consumers will also have to shop around

for the best prices and decide how to install a system. They may have to adapt their schedules

to incorporate the technology, especially in the initial phases.

This section has focused on home automation, but automation is already all around us

in stores, workplaces, and financial institutions. Printers, copy machines, and fax machines

revolutionized the kind of work that could be done from home, and this trend will continue.

Wireless connections have made it easier not to be tied to a desk. The trend toward shopping,

working, and conducting business from the home raises several questions. One of them is

how to remember all the passwords and codes. In the future, there will be one code for every-

thing, making it far easier than it is presently.

Researchers continue to study how working from home affects family relations and time

management; they are concerned that as people stay at home more, they will feel isolated.

Managing Tomorrow 439

As an earlier chapter indicated, human contact is desirable. People

seek out others and want face-to-face contact and experience the sights

and sounds of life. Major sporting events sell out even though they can

be watched for free on television or smart phones.

In the home, other developments will include the more efficient use of

energy. For example, better insulation materials will create a thermal shell

so tightly closed that buildings can be heated or cooled with a smaller-

capacity pump. Insulated ducts and improved insulation for windows will

reduce air leakage by as much as 50 percent. The supply of electricity

will also be more efficient owing to advances in superconductivity—the

conduction of electricity with almost no power loss. Electricity will also be

conserved by the use of compact fluorescent lights (CFLs) and E-lamps

that will last far longer than present models.

All in all, tomorrow’s homes will be more energy-efficient, adapt-

able, affordable, and supportive of individuals’ and families’ lifestyles. The

race is on between companies to be the top suppliers of the new home

systems and products.

Adopting Innovations and Applying Technology General definitions and concepts are helpful as we delve further.

Technology is defined as the application of the scientific method and

materials to achieve objectives; another definition is knowledge system-

atically applied to useful purposes. In Innovation Explosion, several terms

and definitions are included (Quinn, Baruch, & Zien, 1997):

• Invention or discovery involves the initial observation of a new

phenomenon (discovery) or provides the initial verification that a

problem can be solved (invention).

• Innovation consists of the social and managerial processes through which solutions are

first translated into social use in a given culture. “Technological innovation involves a novel

combination of art, science, or craft employed to create the goods or services used by

society” (p. 3).

• “Diffusion spreads approved innovations more broadly within an enterprise or society”

(p. 3). In the Tammy Lam case study, she is an early adopter of innovations.

• System understanding, basically “know-how,” involves understanding the interrelation-

ship and rates of influences among key variables. “Some people may possess advanced

skills but lack system understanding. They can perform selected tasks well but do not

fully understand how their actions affect other elements of the organization or how to

improve the total entity’s effectiveness” (p. 2).

• Intellect means knowing or understanding, the capacity to create knowledge, the

capability for rational or highly developed use of intelligence. “It includes (1) cognitive

knowledge (or know what), (2) advanced skills, (3) system understanding, (4) motivated

creativity, discovery or invention, and (5) intuition and synthesis” (perception and

the ability to put information together), and the capacity to understand or predict

relationships (p. 3).

Have you seen one of these?

440 chapter 14

Individuals considering a new technology or product will first become

aware that it is available; then they will search for information, evaluate

the information, and perhaps try out the product (e.g., test-driving a

new car) to decide whether they like it or not. Once consumers decide

to adopt a new product, they move into the application phase, when

they actually use the product. Even when consumers adopt a new

technology, however, they do not necessarily use it to the fullest extent

possible. For example, even though modern kitchens are more tech-

nologically advanced than they were ever before and meal preparation

is easier, more meals are eaten out today than in the past. It is easier

to eat out or pick something up than to make something and clean up

afterward.

Not everyone can be an innovator even if they want to because

the latest thing may not be available or affordable. According to William

Gibson, science fiction writer, “The future is already here—it’s just

unevenly distributed.” For example, broadband Internet access first took

off in South Korea, then in Canada, and then in the United States. Also,

computer adoption depends on having high levels of education in the

labor force.

In general, rich countries are on the technology frontier and rely

on research and development to achieve further improvements in

technical efficiency. Low-income countries, in contrast, have the

option of adopting technologies already developed elsewhere. Yet

not much is known about the process by which new technologies

spread from one country to the others. (Watson, 2001, p. 1)

Government, industry, universities, and individual inventors contribute to the development of

technology. Novel approaches to problem solving are necessary. Increasing observational

skills is one direction this is taking. A paradigm shift refers to a situation where an indi-

vidual or a team tackles a problem with radically innovative solutions rather than taking a

gradual step-by-step approach. As the pace of change accelerates, more paradigm shifts will

be needed.

Accompanying these rapid advances in technology is a counterbalancing concern for the

quality of the environment. As described in Chapter 12, a growing concept in global industry

is clean technologies, including processes and products that preserve the environment and

do not pollute. Several countries, most notably Japan, the United States, Australia, Canada,

and many European countries, have given priority to the development of such technologies.

The 5S Management Concept As noted near the beginning of the book, family resource management borrows heavily from

other disciplines especially from business management with a focus on streamlining tasks also

known as work simplification. And, as you know, this book focuses a great deal on organiza-

tion. To add to the mix of theory and practice already presented, there is a managerial concept

called 5S. It is derived from a list of five Japanese words which when loosely translated into

English become five words beginning with the letter “S.” The 5S concept has emerged in

Decision making in the marketplace.

Managing Tomorrow 441

the business management and manufacturing world as an organizational tool applied to the

appearance and function of everything from plant floors to cubicles.

The 5S principles can be applied to individual and family life and the home. The five Ss

refer to

Sort: Order items and activities

Straighten: Arrange

Shine: After the task is done, clean and restore areas

Standardize: Consistent methods save time

Sustain: Maintain, reduce waste, evaluate

The idea is that less clutter enhances productivity and that aesthetics matter. Designated

places for things eliminate the need to hunt, thus saving time. As an example, in reconfigured

hospitals, doctors and nurses put stethoscopes in a drawer marked “stethoscope” rather than

placing them on hooks or leaving them on desk tops. In the media world with 24-hour news

networks, shared desks have made this concept important too; each person is expected to

keep his or her desk neat because someone on the next shift will be using it. Jay Scovie, an

employee of a company that makes solar panels and copy machines, was subject to the 5S

mandate at his workplace as explained below:

That means companies like Kyocera Corp., Mr. Scovie’s employer, are patrolling to

make sure that workers don’t, for example, put knickknacks on file cabinets. To impress

visitors, the company wants everything to be clean and neat. Meanwhile, doctors in

Seattle are relearning where to stick their stethoscopes. And output from the printer

at Toro Co., a Bloomington, Minn., lawn mower maker, is sorted daily and tossed

weekly. . . . Sweaters can’t hang on the backs of chairs, personal items can’t be stowed

underneath desks and the only decorations allowed on cabinets are official company

plaques or certificates. (Jargon, 2008, pp. A1, A15)

The 5S philosophy spills over into the home by providing a way to organize and utilize spaces

so that everything has its place. It also implies a need for more storage such as closets and

drawers and organizing systems with the intent to improve efficiency by eliminating waste and

improving flow. Since homes are shared spaces, the 5S method makes sense as a way to

upgrade efficiency and provide a more pleasing sleek appearance. In reformatting a home,

some of the organizing questions are

• What should be kept?

• Where should it be kept? Tools and materials should be kept at the point of use.

• How often is it used? Is it daily, weekly, seasonal, or annual use?

• Is it in good working condition or does it need to be replaced?

Answering these questions is the beginning of a decision-making process about the use and

appearance of homes. In many homes, the least used objects are on the highest shelves of

kitchen cabinets or stuck in the back of cabinets or on the top shelves of closets or in garages,

basements, or attics. As the world becomes more crowded, updating and the efficient use of

space will become more and more critical.

With 5S the emphasis is on how we live and work now versus how we used to live

and work. A lot of clutter in homes is from our past lives (some reassuring and deserving a

place) rather than from our current lives and needs. Families are dynamic and changing. The

442 chapter 14

following quote is another example of the crossover between workplace- and home-based

methods of organizing:

John Boze, coordinator of the hospital’s spine clinic and a professed clutterbug, said it

took a while to get the hang of organizing the piles of paperwork on his desk and sort-

ing them into bins. His work space has improved, he says, but he can’t seem to make

those skills portable. “My girlfriend says I need to 5S my desk at home. She says it looks

like I’m building a nest.” (Jargon, 2008, p. A15)

Critical Thinking

Do you have a space in your home that looks like you are building a nest? What do you think of the 5S concept? Do you notice a trend toward more streamlined homes or toward more clutter? What makes it easier to keep homes organized? Can some individu- ality be lost in the 5S concept, whether at home or at the workplace?

Information and Innovation Overload “Humanity is the species forced by its basic nature to make moral choices and seek fulfill-

ment in a changing world by any means it devises” (Wilson, 2002, p. xxii). As families master

new technologies, they must cope with a host of new data, moral dilemmas, and infor-

mation. As someone becomes more skilled in a task it requires less thought and energy.

“Studies of the brain have shown that the pattern of activity associated with an action

changes as skill increases, with fewer brain regions involved. Talent has similar effects.

Highly intelligent individuals need less effort to solve the same problems, as indicated by

both pupil and brain activity. A general ‘law of least effort’ applies to cognitive as well

as physical exertion. The law asserts that if there are several ways of achieving the same

goal, people will eventually gravitate to the least demanding course of action” (Kahneman,

2011, p. 35).

When consumers are bombarded with too much data and information, they may not be

able to process all of it or they may employ the law of least effort. They may also, as described

in Chapter 7, experience overload.

The information superhighway that is envisioned for the near future may contribute to

information overload. Among other things, the information superhighway is expected to

include more television channels. How many television channels can an individual care about?

Will more variety lead to more creative programming or will the slots be given over to endless

rebroadcasts of a handful of movies and TV shows?

Rapid advances in technology are also leading to innovation overload. One of the ways

to reduce innovation overload is to reduce the amount of risk the individual perceives. As

noted earlier in this text, information is one way to reduce a person’s perception of risk. The

more one knows about a product or service, the less risk is involved. Another way to reduce

overload is to accept that the phenomenon exists. Consumers need to decide how much

Managing Tomorrow 443

overload they can successfully handle and adopt new products at a pace that feels comfort-

able to them. Why go to five different coffee shops if the one near your house feels comfort-

able and familiar?

Innovations should provide clear-cut benefits to consumers. Before adopting an inno-

vation, potential consumers should ask themselves, “Will this product or service make my

life better?”

Family, home, and Global Change One might wonder what will happen to individuals and families in the midst of all these changes.

What does the future hold for families? The good news is that people are living longer and

healthier lives. Chapter 8, on managing human needs gave many statistics along these lines.

To review, the greatest concentration of people is in Asia. China is the most populous country,

followed by India and the United States.

In the last several years the marriage rate has declined in the United States As they

become more prevalent, singles and nontraditional families are more accepted as the norm.

Ethnic minority families have a strong presence in the United States and will probably com-

prise over 50 percent of the population in 2050. Recent economic difficulties in the United

States have brought attention to the conservation of resources including finances especially

for ethnic minority families (Behnke et al., 2010). This type of research finding falls under the

broader category of conservation of resources theory. During tough times, economic or

otherwise, people become more resourceful. By conserving what they have and becoming

self-enterprising, people feel more in control. They say “this is something I can do.” An exam-

ple is that more companies were started including 565,000 a month in 2010 in the United

States than had started in the previous 15 years according to the Kauffman Foundation, the

largest foundation devoted to entrepreneurism (Slomski, 2011).

Most of the world’s population resides in cities (straining natural resources such as clean

air and water), and the trend is toward increased urbanization. Perhaps the only concrete thing

one can say about the future is that change is inevitable. From an individual’s standpoint, a

change may be welcome, as in a pay raise, or threatening, as in a job loss. Change upsets

the status quo, disturbing those who are wedded to the known and experienced. Here is

an example. Theme parks, such as Disneyland in Anaheim, California and DisneyWorld in

Orlando, Florida, have to decide what rides and decorations to keep and which ones to retire

and replace. Purists who have visited the parks often since their youth dislike any change or

alteration, whereas newcomers do not have these preconceived notions of how the theme

park should look and function. The parks have to balance the needs of returning customers

with the needs of newcomers. So does the world.

Similarly, families have to decide which holiday traditions to uphold and which ones to

change. Martha, an 80 year-old great grandmother, said as a holiday season approached,

“You know, with the economy as tight as it is, I think this year I might not send checks to all

the relatives, especially those I don’t see, who never write or call.” After the holiday season her

daughter donated her old artificial tree to Goodwill with the notion that she would get a real

tree or do something else in the coming year.

Changing holiday traditions are one symbol of families moving on, another is actually

physically moving. Moving can be a source of stimulation, adventure or stress or all of these

combined. About 15 percent of the U.S. population moves each year according to Census

444 chapter 14

data. The pluses and minuses are described by a corporate spouse, who says, after living in

four states,

I admit that I haven’t always given Amy’s considerations as much thought as they

deserve, nor did we talk about her concerns as much as we should have. For me, self-

ishly, a job transfer is the start of a new adventure, something exciting and fresh after

so many years seeing the same old sights and driving the same old roads. (Opdyke,

2004, p. D1)

In the United States in recent years, newer homes have more bathrooms and bedrooms

and fewer decks and basements according to the National Home Builders (NHB) “The Home

of the Future” report. They also say that gas is the predominant heating fuel, followed by elec-

tricity and oil. Vinyl used to be the main exterior wall material but that is being replaced by fiber

cement. Preference of wall materials and interiors vary considerably by area of the country

and around the world. In the United States in 2006, 95 percent of all new homes had two

bathrooms and 26 percent had three. The percentage of new homes without fireplaces has

grown. In 2015, most experts believe nine-foot-high ceilings will be the norm versus previous

generations when eight-foot-high ceilings were the norm. Other preferences are emerging,

including more demand for planned communities with sidewalks, jogging trails, and more

shared outdoor space.

The NHB report differentiates between demands in average homes versus those in

upscale homes. The demand among both the groups is high in the category of “green,” mean-

ing more desire for energy-efficient appliances and mechanical equipment and water and

energy conservation features. Homeowners are interested in protecting natural capital and in

seeking reliable and affordable energy.

Pride in shared accomplishment.

Managing Tomorrow 445

Quality of Life and Well-Being Updating home design and function is just part of a very large concept called quality of life and

well-being. Urbanization, crowding, economic growth, environmentalism, and the accelerated

pace of living are transforming where and how we live. Accelerated pace is part of a larger

concept called the acceleration effect, which means that each unit of saved time is more

valuable than the last unit. Thus, time and privacy are becoming more valuable.

Critical Thinking

Do you agree or disagree that time and privacy are becoming more valued? Explain your answer by giving an example.

Technology allows families to make better use of their time. For example, instant

messaging requires far less time and fewer physical steps than mailing a letter. When one

looks nationwide and worldwide, access to technology (telephones, computers, databases,

publications) is not distributed evenly; moreover, nor will it be in the near future. The large gap

between the haves and the have-nots is related to the quality of life, defined as the level of

satisfaction with one’s relationships and surroundings. Another definition of quality of life is

simply one’s well-being. One of the goals of management is to provide the ways and means to

improve the quality of life for individuals and families.

A commonly used measure of quality of life is a country’s gross domestic product

(GDP), a measure of a nation’s total output of goods and services, which was discussed

earlier in the book. It was introduced in the 1930s and quickly became the standard-

bearer of statistical indicators. The United Nations ranks countries by GDP. Realizing that

economic data provide only one measure of quality of life, the United Nations and other

organizations assembled another indicator, the human development index (HDI), which

measures overall progress, in 174 countries, based on the following dimensions: life expec-

tancy, adult literacy rate, education level, and GDP per capita. See Table 14.1 for the top

ranked HDI countries.

Well-being refers to the health and happiness of the total person, involving body, mind,

and spirit and includes measures of life expectancy, health, and education. There are many

dimensions to the concept of well-being. The four conventionally discussed dimensions are

economic well-being, physical well-being, social well-being, and emotional well-being:

• Economic well-being has to do with the degree of economic adequacy or security

individuals and families have.

• Physical well-being has to do with the body and its needs. Keeping healthy and safe,

eating right, getting enough sleep, and managing stress are all subtopics within this

category.

• “Social well-being is the social space of the family as a group, whereas psychologi-

cal well-being is the emotional space of an individual in the family. It is concerned with

446 chapter 14

the social needs of the family played out in daily interactions in interpersonal relation-

ships within the family groups and with the larger community, including the workplace”

(McGregor & Goldsmith, 1998, p. 4).

• Emotional well-being has to do with the emotions (feelings) of an individual.

Although well-being sounds like a pleasant-enough topic, problems arise when the different

types of well-being come into conflict within the individual and between individuals.

We all start off with dreams for our life—what we want to be, what we want to do, where

we want to do it. But in marriage, the dreams of two partners collide and sometimes

they ricochet in random directions. (Opdyke, 2004, p. D1)

Recently, three other dimensions of well-being have emerged as topics in the literature and in

everyday life. They are

• Environmental well-being. This has to do with the level of environmental quality.

• Political well-being. This has to do with a person’s internal sense of power, autonomy, and

freedom, not necessarily involvement in politics.

• Spiritual well-being. Broadly and individually defined, spiritual well-being may include

hope, faith, peace, joy in living, enlightenment, connectedness, and purpose. A poll sum-

marized that “Findings suggest that a majority of Americans consistently reported that the

American Dream (for themselves and their family) is more about spiritual happiness than

material goods. However the size of this majority is decreasing. Most Americans contin-

ued to believe that working hard is the most important element for getting ahead in the

United States” (Hanson & Zogby, 2011, p. 570).

HDi RanK Human Development

index (HDi) value* 2010 Life expectancy at birth (years) 2010

VerY high hUMAn DeVelOPMenT

1. norway 0.938 81.0

2. Australia 0.937 81.9

3. new Zealand 0.907 80.6

4. United states 0.902 79.6

5. ireland 0.895 80.3

6. liechtenstein 0.891 79.6

7. netherlands 0.890 80.3

8. Canada 0.888 81.0

9. sweden 0.885 81.3

10. germany 0.885 80.2

11. Japan 0.884 83.2

12. Korea, republic of 0.877 79.8

13 .switzerland 0.874 82.2

14. France 0.872 81.6

15. israel 0.872 81.2

16. Finland 0.871 80.1

17. iceland 0.869 82.1

18. Belgium 0.867 80.3

19. Denmark 0.866 78.7

20. spain 0.863 81.3

Source: The United Nations

Table 14.1

Managing Tomorrow 447

A fundamental question to be addressed is which dimensions are most critical to a spe-

cific person’s sense of well-being? For example, a person may value economic well-being

over social well-being. He or she may take the raise and promotion, and move the family far

away from other family members and friends. Regarding economic well-being, it is evident

that some people are content with very little of a material nature, whereas others need all the

trappings of success.

Multiculturalism A more expansive worldview has helped to foster a movement or philosophy called multicul-

turalism, which means the expression by cultural and ethnic groups of their heritage. It refers

to a society that allows for and, in fact, encourages a combination of several distinct cultures.

Some countries have formal multiculturalism policies and government offices designated to

advocate for the preservation of cultures usually within the larger society. Examples of coun-

tries with official multiculturalism policies are Canada and Australia.

Multiculturalism is about attitudes and attempts to retain the uniqueness of different

groups rather than letting them be subsumed into the greater society. It is a move away from

the homogenization of the world, an attempt to hang on to the past and to take the best parts

of it into the future. A related concept is empowerment, encouraging individuals to express

themselves, their ethnicity, and culture.

Some advocates of multiculturalism see it purely as tolerance. Others want to go beyond

the theoretical and apply multiculturalism to government programs, schools, universities,

churches, other institutions. The basic idea is that each ethnic group’s culture should be

acknowledged and preserved.

In the United States in languages, Spanish is second to English so that if one answers

a survey online or on the phone often one is asked if they want to respond in English or

Spanish. This would vary by region in the United States reflecting the composition of the local

population.

Because Canada has two official languages (French and English), it is one of the world

leaders in multicultural research and government policy. As more nations embrace a model

of multiculturalism, programs involving sociocultural integration and cultural retention will

become more important. The main goals of such programs are to bolster cultural identity and

self-esteem while promoting intergroup respect. Rather than being divisive, multiculturalism

and ethnic diversity can be a source of national strength and identity. Ethnicity is a part of a

society’s cultural environment. Recognition of the differences as well as the commonalities

among groups of people is part of the more complex view of the world that we have today.

Sustainability, Environment, and Consumption This chapter has already introduced the concept of environment within the context of

technological advances. The crowding of our planet and its misuse has led to many environ-

mental problems, but it has also led to new paths in sustainability education and cooperation

(Dewhurst & Pendergast, 2011).

“The central problem of the 21st century is how to raise the poor to a decent stan-

dard of living worldwide while preserving as much of the rest of life as possible” (Wilson,

448 chapter 14

2002). Government, the private sector (including individuals and families), and science and

technology have to come together to find solutions. What is particularly interesting about envi-

ronmental problems is that they are not confined to national borders. Birds, bats, and insects

fly over invisible national boundaries all the time, so nations have to cooperate when it comes

to fostering biological diversity.

Also, one has to take into account the different philosophical approaches to life regard-

ing what matters. For example, many people have the idea that more is better. As a result of

this outlook, store shelves in some countries are crowded with essentially duplicate products,

confusing consumers and making it difficult to shop in the store. At the same time, in other

parts of the world, people are starving. It is estimated that about 500 million people in the

world live without proper sanitation, clean water, and adequate food. The overcrowding of

store shelves is not just a North American, Australian, or Western European phenomenon. To

even talk about consumption in terms of countries is becoming outmoded because in food

markets around the world, consumers can find bok choy from Shanghai, tuna from Portugal,

pasta from Italy, bananas from Costa Rica, and vanilla beans from Madagascar.

Lifestyle was defined earlier in the book as a sense of a style or a pattern of living that

reflects the attitudes, values, and resources of individuals and families. To add to this concept

is the term lifestylist which refers to someone who helps create a particular lifestyle, such

as someone who designs the interior of a home or an advertisement that would appeal to

a young family or a 40-year-old bachelor or a retired couple with a dog. Products, art, and

accessories can contribute to this vision of a lifestyle.

The desire to accumulate material things is giving way to a redefined quality of life in

which better does not necessarily mean more. Smaller, well-designed energy-efficient homes

with recycling features are in vogue in many communities and nations. Social influence theory

indicates that what others think and say has a tremendous effect on whether one chooses to

be “green” or not (Goldsmith & Goldsmith, 2011).

Family — what fundamentally matters.

Managing Tomorrow 449

The state of family finance and time will continue to be contributing factors in consumption

decisions. “Consumers these days are on a mission. They want to quickly locate a product,

evaluate it, pay and get out” (Yin, 2004, p. 13). The change from wanting to own all to owning

only what is needed is an example of a paradigm shift.

Technology has been blamed for many environmental ills, but it also holds the key to

solutions. Technology can be used to achieve long-term ecological balance. “Education

for sustainability requires an understanding of the interconnections and interdependence

of humans and the environment. Opportunities to teach in this way must be revisited . . . ”

(Dewhurst & Pendergast, 201l, p. 575). Many more examples of human impact on the environ-

ment could be cited but now the chapter turns the focus to the subject of technology’s ability

to increase the world’s food supply.

Health Care and the Food Supply Going forward, we need better food supplies, cleaner water, and better health care. Infant and

maternal health care concerns persist as well as concerns about elder care. A few trends or

innovations to watch for include

• Home health monitors (the Japanese already have toilets that take readings of urine

content and send the readings indicating illness directly to the family’s doctor).

• Further understanding of weight control and aging.

• Increased food supply, fewer acres needed to produce more abundant crops.

• Continued improvement in technology and an increased understanding of the human

genetic code.

• Accelerated medical advances.

In the 18th century, Thomas Malthus predicted that the world’s population would outgrow

the food supply. Malthus, however, did not anticipate the advances in agriculture that have

enabled the world population to reach its current level.

Scientific research may someday ensure an expanded food supply by allowing foods to

be grown in space stations and on other planets. In the 21st century, people may live on a

self-sustaining moon base. consequently, when discussing future management problems and

possibilities for individuals and families, one should keep in mind that soon there will be life not

only on earth, but also, possibly, in outer space. it is anticipated that in 2030 we’ll put humans

on Mars, maybe even sooner. Indoor plumbing, electric lights, and computers have shown

that anything is possible. Ideas and inventions become everyday realities.

summarysummary This chapter examined conservation of resources theory and trends and research in technology, families, households, con- sumption, leadership, lifestyles, and the environment. Each change presents its own challenges and opportunities for mana- gerial judgment. Change starts with the individual clarifying goals, continues with making decisions, and culminates when using resources to reach solutions. Decision makers include those who are primarily satisficers (tending to make quick decisions and

live with them) or maximizers (those who want to be certain and have trouble committing to courses of action). Sometimes people follow the “law of least effort” meaning taking the least demanding path and others are stretching their imaginations to find the most cooperative and sustainable life courses. Time and effort are costs that have to be figured into the balance of benefits and costs of decisions. Regardless of decision-making style, planning and self- responsibility are the hallmarks of forward-looking management.

450 chapter 14

referencesreferences Batson, A. (2008, October 24). China aids home buyers to curb

impact of slump. The Wall Street Journal, p. A6.

Behnke, A., MacDermid, S., Anderson, J., & Weiss, H. (2010). Ethnic variations in the connection between work-induced separation and turnover intent. Journal of Family Issues, 31(5), 626–655.

Brown, S., Venkatesh, V., & Bala, H. (2006). Household tech- nology use: Integrating household life cycle and the model of adoption of technology in households. The Information Society, 22, 205–218.

Dewhurst, Y., & Pendergast, D. (2011). Teacher perceptions of the contribution of home economics to sustainable develop- ment education: A cross-cultural view. International Journal of Consumer Studies, 35, 569–577.

Goldsmith, E., & Goldsmith, R. (2011). Social influence and sustainability in households. International Journal of Consumer Studies, 35, 117–121.

Hanson, S., & Zogby, J. (2011). The polls-trends: Attitudes about the American dream. Public Opinion Quarterly, 74(3), 570–584.

questionsreview questions 1. What attributes or characteristics do visionary leaders have?

2. What does the science fiction writer William Gibson mean when he says, “the future is already here—it’s just unevenly distributed”? Explain your answer and give an example.

3. How can individuals and families cope with information and innovation overloads?

4. What does conservation of resources theory mean?

5. What is an example of determination in this chapter? Why is determination an important personality trait in times of con- strained resources?

termskey terms acceleration effects 445 conservation of resources theory 443 diffusion 439 discovery 439 innovation (overload) 442 intellect 439 invention 439

law of least effort 442 leaders 435 lifestylist 448 managerial judgment 434 maximizers 435 multiculturalism 447 paradigm shift 440

quality of life 445 satisficers 435 superconductivity 439 system understanding 439 technology 439 transparency 433 well-being 445

Information and innovation overload and the acceleration of life present challenges that management can help with. This chap- ter introduced the 5S management concept which was derived from business management and manufacturing and applied to individual, family, and home life where organization is needed. The five Ss stands for sort, straighten, shine, standardize, and sustain.

Like any academic discipline, resource management has a history, a present, and a future. This chapter on the future con- cludes this book, which started with an overview of management, including its theoretical bases and history, progressed through chapters on specific concepts, and then applied those concepts to households and managing human resources, time, stress and

fatigue, the environment, and finances. Given this coverage, it is fitting to end this chapter and the book with a look back and a look forward.

The past century was extraordinarily rich in innovation and scientific progress. There has never been a century like it, and we might worry that there can never be another. With the future, any- thing is possible. Human innovation has no limits. This book has introduced various human problems related to individuals, families, and their micro-environments. Through planning, using technology wisely, and managing resources and outcomes much can be done to resolve issues and dilemmas. A key concept is that the ultimate goal of the manager today is a better tomorrow.

Managing Tomorrow 451

Halvorson, H. (2011). Succeed: How we can reach our goals. New York: Hudson Street Press.

Jargon, J. (2008, October 27). Neatness counts at Kyocera and at others in the 5S club. The Wall Street Journal, pp. A1, A15.

Kahneman, D. (2011). Thinking, fast and slow. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux.

Kouzes, J., & Posner, B. (2002). The leadership challenge (3rd ed.). San Francisco: Jossey-Bass.

McGregor, S., & Goldsmith, E. (1998). Expanding our under- standing of quality of life, standard of living, and well-being. Journal of Family and Consumer Sciences, 90(2), 2–6, 22.

Opdyke, J. (2004, January 7). The cost of a mobile marriage. The Wall Street Journal, p. D1.

Quinn, J. B., Baruch, J., & Zien, K. (1997). Innovation explosion. New York: Simon & Schuster.

Slomski, A. (2011, Winter). Investing in themselves. Merrill Lynch Advisor, 14–17.

Sparks, E., Ehrlinger, J., & Eibach, R. (2011). Failing to commit: Maximizers avoid commitment in a way that contributes to reduced satisfaction. Personality and Individual Differences, 52, 72–77.

Sullivan, P., Collier, B., & Goldsmith, E. (2011). Merchandising’s evolving role in family and consumer sciences. Journal of Family and Consumer Sciences, 103(2), 59–64.

Tifft, K., Fletcher, J., & Junk, V. (2011). Home management house: Reflections of alumnae. Journal of Family and Consumer Sciences, 103(2), 17–22.

UNESCO. (2011). Education for sustainable development: An expert review of processes and learning [online].

Watson, N. (2001, July). How technology spreads. The NBER Digest. Retrieved March 21, 2004, from http://www.nber.org/ digest/jul01/w8130.html

Wilson, E. O. (2002). The future of life. New York: Vintage.

Yin, S. (2004, January). Chronic shoppers. American Demographics, p. 13.

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Absolute values— Extreme, definitive values that are inflexible. Abstract symbols—Ideas rather than objects, unseen.

Acceleration effect—Quickening of life’s pace so that each unit of time saved is more valuable than the last unit. Accommodation—An agreement reached by accepting the point of view of another person. Actively acquired information—Information the individual actively looks for, such as fashion coverage in magazines, or news on television or the Internet. Actuating—Putting plans into effect, action, or motion. Adaptability (adaptive)—The ability to cope with change, to make the necessary adjustments. Adjusting—Checking a plan or an activity and making appropriate changes. Advocate or expert channels—Experts in a field or people with a cause who are likely to contact receivers through letters, speeches, television, or the Internet. They have a message. Affective domain—Value meanings derived from feelings. Annual Percentage Rate (APR)—Rate of interest paid over the life of credit or a loan. Artifacts—Type, placement, or rearrangement of objects around a person. Assessment—The gathering of information about results. Assets—What a person owns, as examples a house, car, or investments. Attitudes—Concepts that may express values, serve as a means of evaluation, or demonstrate feeling in regard to some idea, person, object, event, situation, or relationship. Autonomic—Family decision-making style in which an equal number of decisions are made by each spouse.

Behavior—What people actually do, how they act. Biodegradability—The capability of material to

decompose over time as a result of biological activity. More specifically, it can be a substance’s ability to be broken down into microorganisms. Biological diversity or Biodiversity—The vari- ety and variability among living organisms and the ecological complexities in which they occur. Blended families—Families that include children from previous relationships or marriages, also

called stepfamilies, or reconstituted or combined families. Boomeranging—Adult children returning to live in their parents’ homes. Boundaries—Limits or borders between systems. Boundary ambiguity—Uncertainty about where the lines are, how daily life or work life should be arranged, and who should be invited to family and holiday events or meetings. Brainstorming—Group communication tech- nique in which members suggest many ideas no matter how seemingly ridiculous or strange. Afterward, the group examines each idea separately to see whether it has merit. Brownout—In brownout, fatigue and irritability appear; eating and sleeping patterns may be disturbed; cynicism and indecision may set in; and all this may lead to burnout. Budget—A spending plan or guide. Burnout—Emotional or physical exhaustion brought on by unrelieved stress.

Carbon footprint—The impact of consumption and transportation on carbon emissions such as fuel used to transport goods or used in personal travel.

Carbon monoxide—An odorless, colorless gas that can cause death from accidental poisoning. Change—To cause to be different, to alter, or to transform. Channel—The medium or route through which a message travels from sender to receiver. Checking—Determining whether actions are in compliance with standards and sequencing. Choice—The act of selecting among alternatives. Chronic fatigue syndrome—An affliction or dis- ease exhibiting a variety of symptoms, including extreme long-lasting exhaustion. Circadian rhythms—Daily rhythmic activity cycles, based on 24-hour intervals, that humans experience. Clarification—The process of making clear, making easier to understand, or elaborating. Cocooning—Remaining at home as a place of coziness, control, peace, insulation, and protection. Cognition—The mental process or faculty by which knowledge is acquired. Cognitive domain—Value meanings derived from thinking about events, situations, people, and things.

Comfort zone—A combination of habit and everyday expectations mixed with an appropri- ate amount of adventure and novelty, what feels comfortable to the individual. Commitment—The degree to which an individ- ual identifies with and is involved in a particular activity or organization. Communication—The process of transmitting a message from a sender to a receiver. Communication multitasking—Behavior of individuals and media companies when they engage in a variety of communication channels or forms at the same time, can lead to overload. Comparative advantage—A theory that individuals, families, or companies do best when they focus on activities in which they can add the most value and outsource or delegate other activities. Compromise—Process of resolving conflicts in which each person makes concessions, giving in a little to gain a valued settlement or outcome. Conflict—A state of disagreement or disharmony. Conflict resolution—Negotiations to remedy the conflict. Consensual decision making—Process of reaching a mutual agreement equally acceptable to all individuals involved. Conservation—The act or process of preserv- ing and protecting natural environments from loss or depletion. Constructive conflict—A form of conflict or disagreement that focuses on the issue or the problem rather than on the other person’s deficits. Consume—To destroy, use, or expend. Consumer Price Index (CPI)—A measure of price changes, which are collected by and reported by the Bureau of Labor Statistics. The CPI is the main measure of inflation in the United States. Contingency plans—Backup or secondary plans to be used in case the first plan does not work out. Controlling—Acting to check one’s course of action. Creativity goals—Productive of new things or new original or atypical ideas, striving, innovation. Credit—Time allowed for repayment of money or goods that are borrowed; also refers to the amount of money borrowed. Credit bureau—A reporting agency that col- lects, stores, and sells financial information. Crises—Events that require changes in normal patterns of behavior.

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Critical listening—Act of evaluating or challeng- ing what is heard. Cultural values—Generally held conceptualiza- tions of what is right or wrong in a culture or what is preferred. Culture—The sum of all socially transmitted behavior patterns, beliefs, arts, expectations, institutions, and all other products of human work and thought characteristic of a group, community, or population.

Debit cards—(or cash cards) Provide computerized banking transactions straight from accounts.

Decibel (dB)—A measure of the loudness of sound. Decidophobia—The fear of making decisions. Deciduous trees—Trees that lose their leaves in winter. Decision making—Choosing between two or more alternatives. Decision-making style—The characteristic way that a person makes decisions. Decision plan—A long, complicated decision process that includes a sequence of intentions. Decision rules—Principles that guide decision making. Decisions—Conclusions or judgments about some issue or matter. Decoding—The process by which the receiver assigns meaning to the symbols sent by the sender, to convert from code into a plain memory. De facto decision making—Process whereby decisions are made by a lack of dissent rather than by active assent. Demands—Events or goals that require action. Demographics—Data used to describe popula- tions or subgroups. Demography—The study of the characteristics of human populations—that is, their size, growth, distribution, density, movement, and other vital statistics. Destination—The receiver or audience in the process of communication. Destructive conflicts—Interpersonal con- flicts involving direct verbal attacks on another individual. Diffusion—Spreading of innovations includ- ing new ideas, products, services, and ways of doing things within an enterprise, organization, or society. Directional plans—Progress along a linear path to a long-term goal fulfillment. Disability—A long-term or chronic condition medically defined as a physiological, anatomical, mental, or emotional impairment resulting from disease or illness, inherited or congenital defect, or traumas or other insults (including environmental) to mind or body. Discovery—The initial observation of a new phenomenon. Discretionary income—Income regulated by one’s own discretion or judgment. Discretionary time—The free time an individual can use any way she or he wants.

Disposable income—The amount of take-home pay left after all deductions are withheld for benefits, taxes, contributions, and so on. Distress—Harmful stress. Diversification—Having a mix of investments across several categories thus spreading risk and the opportunities for growth. Domino effect—The passage of stress from one source to another. Dovetailing (multitasking)—Situation occurring when two or more activities take place at the same time. Downshifting—Opting for a simpler life—usually less pay, less stress, and more time—in a more personally satisfying occupation or lifestyle. Drift time—Enjoyable, unscheduled time. Dual-career households—Households in which spouses or partners have a long-term commit- ment to a planned series of jobs leading to desired career goals. Dual-income or dual-earner households— Households in which spouses or partners have income-producing jobs.

Ecoconsciousness—Thoughts and actions given to protecting and sustaining the environment. Ecological footprint—Impact of the consumption and produc-

tion of goods and services on the environment. The amount of biologically productive land and sea area required for the support of individuals or specific populations. Ecology—The study of how living things relate to their natural environment. Economic well-being—The degree to which individuals or families have economic or financial adequacy. Ecosystem—The subsystem of human ecology that emphasizes the relationship between organ- isms and their environment. Effort—Exertion or the use of energy to do something. Emergency fund—Savings equal to three to six months’ income. Empathetic listening—Listening for feelings. Empathy—The ability to recognize and identify another’s feelings by putting oneself in that person’s place. Encoding—The process of putting thought into symbolic form. Energy audit—Assessment of a home’s energy efficiency Entrepreneur—Person who organizes, operates, and successfully manages a new enterprise. Entrepreneurship—Process of creating value or a business by bringing together a unique package of resources to exploit, develop, or make use of an opportunity. Entropy—A tendency toward disorder or randomness. Environment—External conditions influencing the life of an organism or population. Environmentalism—Concern for the environment. Equal Credit Opportunity Act—Legislation that prohibits discrimination in any aspect of

credit transaction against a person because of race, sex, age, color, marital status, or related factors. Equifinality—The phenomenon in which different circumstances and opportunities may lead to similar outcomes. Ethics—A system of morals, principles, values, or good conduct. Values underlie ethics. Eustress—Beneficial stress. Evaluation—The process of judging or examin- ing the cost, value, or worth of a plan or decision based on such criteria as standards, demands, or goals. Expertise—The ability to perform tasks success- fully and dependably. External change—A kind of change fostered by society or the outer environment. External noise—Noise from the environment. External search—The process of looking for new information from sources outside oneself. External stress—Situations in which stress is brought on from outside the individual. Extreme work—Describes jobs that require 60+ hours per week as well as jobs that require significant travel and a 24/7 call schedule. Extrinsic motivation—Outside rewards or motivation. Extrinsic values—Values that derive their worth or meaning from someone or something else. Extroverts—Overall types of character and response in which individuals are less interested in themselves and more interested in others, out- going, fueled by being around other people.

Fair Credit Reporting Act— Legislation mandating that individuals who are denied credit, insurance, or employ-

ment because of their credit report have the right to obtain a free copy of their report. Family—Several definitions exist about families. The U.S. Census Bureau definition is a group of two or more persons (one of whom is a house- holder) who are related by birth, marriage, or adoption and reside together. A more open defini- tion is two or more people who self-identify as a family and share resources. Family demography—Study of the characteris- tics and numbers of families, noting changes in families and households. Family ecosystem—A subsystem of human ecology that emphasizes the interactions between families and environments. Fatalism—The feeling or acknowledgment that all events are shaped by fate. Fatigue—Not having sufficient energy to carry on and the strong desire to stop, rest, or sleep. Feedback—Information that returns to the system. Fertility rate—Yearly number of births per 1,000 women of childbearing age. FICO score—Numeric value assigned to credit habits such as bill paying on time and credit history. Fight or flight syndrome—Alerted condition of the body as it quickly prepares for physical battle or energetic flight to escape the situation.

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Financial management—The science or practice of managing money or other assets. Financial planners—Professionals who help clients plan and manage their financial resources, including investments, based on goals. They provide a total financial picture. Financial security—The ability to meet daily obligations while planning, saving, and investing to achieve future goals. Fixed expenses—Expenses in a budget for which the same amount is allocated each month, such as for rent or car payments. Focus groups—Selected groups of people who are questioned by a discussion leader or modera- tor about their views on different topics or products. Fossil fuels—Remains of dead vegetation, such as coal, oil, and natural gases that can be burned to release energy. Functional limitation—Hindrance or negative effect in the performance of household tasks or work activities.

Gender gap—The difference in earnings between employed men and women. Genealogy—An account of the descent of a person or family from

an ancestor or ancestors. Genome maps—Blueprints that researchers use to investigate the development of an individual animal or plant from fertilization to maturity. Gerontology—The scientific study of the aging process. Green building—The relationship of a house and its occupants with the greater environment, includes eco-friendly design and processes, concepts of sustainability. Glass ceiling—Situation in which as women move up the career ladder they hit an invisible barrier that stops them from moving further. Global warming—Occurs when carbon dioxide and other gases collect in the air and trap solar heat reflected from the earth. Goal disengagement—The letting go of goals or the redefinition of goals or end states. Goals—End results that require action; the pur- pose toward which much behavior is directed. Gresham’s law of planning—Short-term concerns create priorities and deadlines that take managerial attention away from long-range concerns. Gross domestic product (GDP)—The total market value of all goods and services produced by a nation during a specified period, usually a year. Gross income—All income received that is not legally exempt from taxes.

Habitat—The place where an organism lives. Habits—Repetitive, often unconscious, patterns of behavior.

Habitual decision making—Process of making choices out of habit without any additional infor- mation search.

Handicap—A disadvantage, interference, or barrier to what one wants to do, can be permanent or temporary. Happiness—The degree to which one judges the overall quality of his or her life as favorable. Hatching—Local area nesting, finding other places outside of the workplace or the home to spend time in. Homeostasis—The tendency to maintain balance. Household—All persons who occupy a housing unit such as a house, apartment, or single room. Householder—The person (or one of the persons) who owns the home or in whose name it is rented. Human capital—The sum total of human resources; all the capabilities, traits, and other resources that people use to achieve goals. Human ecology—The study of how humans interact with their environment. Human resources—The skills, talents, and abili- ties that people possess. Hypotheses—Predictions about future occurrences.

I-messages—Statements of fact about how an individual feels or thinks. Immigration—The process in which people enter and settle in a

country where they are not native. Implementing—Putting decisions or plans into action. Income—The amount of money or its equivalent received during a period of time. Income tax—A personal tax levied on individuals or families on the basis of income received, in the United States there are state and federal income taxes. Independent activities—Activities that take place one at a time. Indirect channels—Message communication forms such as radio, television, magazines, news- papers, and signs. Inflation—Rising prices. Information anxiety—The gap between what individuals think they understand and what they actually do understand. Information overload—The uncomfortable state when individuals are exposed to too much infor- mation in too short a time. Innovation overload—Consumer response to the accelerated pace of information, knowledge, and innovations. Inputs—Whatever is brought into the system. Insomnia—The perception or complaint of inad- equate, interrupted, or poor-quality sleep. Insurance—A financial arrangement in which people pay premiums to an insurance company that reimburses them in the event of loss or injury. Intangible resources—Resources incapable of being touched, unseen, an example is intelligence. Integrated waste management—A combina- tion of methods used to reduce environmental pollution. Intellect—Knowing or understanding; the capac- ity to create knowledge; the capability for rational or highly developed use of intelligence.

Interdependent activities—Relationship between activities where one activity must be completed before another can take place. Interface—The place or point where independent systems or diverse groups interact. Interference—Anything that distorts or interrupts messages. Internal change—Type of change that originates within the individual or the family and includes events or decisions that primarily affect family members. Internal noise—Noise occurring in the sender’s and receiver’s minds, an example would be doubt. Internal search—The process of looking within oneself for information for decisions. Internal stress—Type of stress that originates in one’s own mind and body. Interpersonal conflicts—Actions by one person that interfere with the actions of another. Intrinsic motivation—The underlying causes of and the internal need for competence and self- determination. The pleasure or value a person derives from the content of work or activity. Intrinsic values—Values classified as ends in themselves, having internal meanings. Introverts—Overall types of character or response in which individuals tend to think of themselves first and rely on inner-directed thoughts. Intuition—The sense or feeling of knowing what to do without going through the rational process. Invention—Process that provides the initial verifi- cation that a problem can be solved. Investment—Commitment of capital to the achievement of long-term goals or objectives. Involvement balance—If a person is heavily involved in one domain (work, school, or family), he or she may be less available, psychologically or physically, for another domain.

Job stress—The harmful physical and emotional responses that occur when the requirements of the job do not match the capabilities, resources, goals, or needs of the worker.

Karoshi—Japanese term referring to death by overwork.

Law of least effort—If there are several ways of achieving the same goal, people will gravitate to the least demand- ing course of action.

Leaders—Authorities, experts, facilitators, and guides who participate in community action pro- grams, families, and as contributors to scientific, social, or economic advances and in so doing improve human lives. Learning goals—Emphasize the gaining of comprehension, taking steps to know more.

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Leisure—Freedom from time-consuming activities, tasks, duties, or responsibilities. Level of living—The measure of the goods and services affordable by and available to individuals or families. Leveraging—Doing more with less, stretching resources. Liabilities—Sum total of what a person owes. Life cycle assessment—Process of determin- ing the life cycle of household products including not only materialresources in their manufacture, distribution, and disposal, including energy use, and the human resources involved. Life management—All decisions a person or family makes and the way their values, goals, and resource use affects their decision making, includes all the goals, events, situations, and decisions that constitute a lifestyle. Lifestyle—The characteristic way or pattern in which an individual conducts his or her life. Life stylist—Someone who creates or re-creates a particular lifestyle such as found in advertise- ments or in real estate open houses or model homes. Liquidity—The speed and ease of retrieving cash or turning another type of investment into cash. Listening—Hearing what is said and observing the actions communicated. Long-term-care insurance—Policies that provide benefits for a range of services not covered by regular health insurance or Medicare, mostly obtained to help in the elder years. Low involvement—Information that does not necessitate much thinking about or attention.

Macroenvironment—The environment that surrounds and encompasses the microenvironment.

Management—The process of using resources to achieve goals. It involves thinking, action, and results. Management process—The procedures involved in management—thinking, action, and results. Management style—A characteristic way of making decisions and acting. Management tools—Measuring devices, tech- niques, or instruments that are used to arrive at decisions and plans of action. Managerial judgment—The ability to accept and work with change for the betterment of self and humankind. Material resources—Tangible resources; natural phenomena, such as fertile soil, petroleum, and rivers, and human-made items, such as buildings, money, and computers. Maximizers—Individuals who want to be certain they have made the right choices and therefore are less likely to fully commit to decisions. Medicare—The United States basic health insur- ance for people 65 or older. Message—The total communication that is sent, listened to, and received. Message construction—Structure of a message that determines where information should be placed in a message to have maximum impact, includes how often information should be repeated in a message.

Message content—What a message says; strategies or information that may be used to communicate an idea or policy to receivers. Microenvironment—The environment that closely surrounds individuals and families. Mobility—Technical term for changing residences. Monochronic—Preference to focus on one activ- ity at a time. Morphogenic systems—Systems adaptive to change and relatively open. Morphostatic systems—Systems resistant to change, stable, and relatively closed. Mortality—The technical term for death. Motivation—Movement toward goals or other desired outcomes. Multiculturalism—The mix of ethnic and cultural groups in which each is recognized and respected. Multifinality—The phenomenon in which the same initial circumstances or conditions may lead to different conclusions or outcomes. Multitasking—Doing several activities at once, same as dovetailing. Municipal waste—Trash and garbage collected in a community or city.

Natural capital—A good (something worthy) humans have to protect, such as the environment.

Need recognition—Realization of how much an individual needs a certain product, service, or condition. Needs—Things that are required or necessary. Negative feedback—Information put into the system that indicates that the system is deviating from its normal course and that corrective mea- sures may be necessary if the desired steady state is to be maintained. Net worth—Amount determined by subtracting liabilities from assets. Noise—Any interference in the communication process that prevents the message from being heard correctly; unwanted sound. Nondiscretionary time—The time that an indi- vidual cannot control totally. Nonnormative stressor events—Unanticipated experiences that place a person or a family in a state of instability and require creative effort to remedy. Nonverbal symbols—Anything other than words that is used in communication. Normative stressor events—Anticipated, predictable developmental changes that occur at certain life intervals. Norms—Rules that specify, delineate, encourage, and prohibit certain behaviors in certain situations. NREM (non-rapid eye movement) sleep—Kind of sleep that occurs when the sleeper is in an inactive, deep slumber.

Opportunity cost—The highest- valued alternative that must be sacrificed to satisfy a want or attain something.

Opportunity recognition—Realization by an individual that she or he may have limited or no access to a product, service, or condition.

Optimism—A tendency or a disposition to expect the best outcome or to think hopefully about a situation. Optimization—Process of obtaining the best result. Orientation—The location or situation of a house relative to points on a compass. Ostrich effect—Avoiding painful or disagreeable news or information. For example, not wanting to know what is in a letter or some other form of communication. Outputs—End results or products, leftovers, and waste. Outsourcing—Paying someone else to do one’s work. Overlapping activities—Situation in which one gives intermittent attention to two or more activi- ties until they are completed.

Pace—Speed at which a person speaks or communi- cates, also can refer to speed of performance in other activities.

Paradigm shift—The process in which an individual or a team tackles a problem by jumping ahead to radically innovative solutions rather than taking a gradual step-by-step approach. Pareto’s principle—The principle stating that 20 percent of the time expended usually produces 80 percent of the results, whereas 80 percent of the time expended produces only 20 percent of the results. Parkinson’s law—The idea that a job expands to fill the time available to accomplish the task. Passively acquired information—Information that one hears or sees but does not necessarily seek, such as billboard advertisements or broad- casted announcements in a store. Perception—The process whereby sensory stimulation is translated into organized experience. Performance goals—Emphasize outcomes or actions, usually external things that can be seen or measured such as sporting events performance. Persistence—A person’s staying power; the personality trait of not giving up when faced with adversity. Personality—The range of consistent characteristics or traits influencing behavior and cognition. Peter Principle—Idea or concept that people are promoted beyond their level of competence. Physical environmental resources—Natural surroundings. Plan—A detailed schema, program, strategy, or method worked out beforehand for the accom- plishment of a desired end result. Planning—A series of decisions leading to action or to need or goal fulfillment. Pollution—Undesirable changes in physical, chemical, or biological characteristics of air, land, or water that can harm the health, activities, or survival of living organisms. Polychronic—Liking to do several things at once.

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Positive ecology—Practice of thinking and acting in such a way as to reduce waste and pollution. Positive feedback—Information put into the system that anticipates and promotes change. Postpurchase dissonance—Situation in which after a purchasing decision, the buyer is likely to seek some reinforcement for the decision to reduce doubt or anxiety. Poverty—The state of being poor and unable to provide for basic needs on a consistent basis. Prepurchase expectations—Beliefs about the anticipated performance of a product or service. Private resources—Those resources owned and/ or controlled by an individual, family, or group. Proactive—Characteristic of taking responsibility for one’s own life. Proactive people accept respon- sibility for their own actions; they do not blame others or circumstances for their behavior. Probability—The likelihood of a certain outcome. Problem recognition—Perception by an individual or family of a significant difference between their lifestyle and some desired or ideal lifestyle. Problems—Questions, dilemmas, or situations that need solving. Problem solving—Making many decisions that lead to the resolution of a problem. Process—A system of operations that work together to produce an end result. Procrastinator—Someone who puts off work and postpones and delays decisions. Proxemics—Distance between speakers. Psychic income—One’s perception or feelings about income; the satisfaction derived from income. Psychological hardiness—The characteristic way of people who have a sense of control over their lives; they are committed to self, work, relationships, and other values and do not fear change. Public resources—Those resources that are owned and used by all the people in a locality or country.

Qualitative time measurement— Investigation into the meaning or significance of time use; that is, the satisfaction it generates.

Quality of life—The level of satisfaction with one’s relationships and surroundings. Quantitative time measures—The number, kind, and duration (e.g., minutes, hours, days) of activi- ties that occur at specific points in time.

Radon—A naturally occur- ring gaseous by-product of radioactive decay of uranium in the earth.

Reactive—Characteristic of being overly affected by outside forces or things said. Real income—Income measured in prices at a certain time, reflecting the buying power of current dollars.

Real-options thinking—Process of staying open, waiting and watching for the right opportunity. Receiving—Listening to the verbal messages and observing the nonverbal messages. Recession—A moderate and temporary decline in the economy. Reference groups—The people who influence an individual or provide guidance or advice. Reflective listening—Listening for feelings. Relative values—Values that are interpreted based on context. REM (rapid eye movement) sleep—Kind of sleep that occurs when the sleeper is in a light sleep; most dreams happen during REM. Renewable resources—Resources that are essentially unlimited, can be replaced. Resilience—The ability to overcome obstacles and to achieve positive outcomes after experienc- ing extreme difficulties. Resource education—Bringing current and potential sustainability problems to the forefront for discussion and resolution. Resource stock—The sum of readily available resources an individual possesses. Resourcefulness—The ability to recognize and use resources effectively. Resources—Whatever is available to be used. Responses—The individual reactions that follow a message. Risk—The possibility of pain, suffering, danger, harm, or loss from a decision; uncertainty. Risk aversion—Avoidance of risk. Routine—A habitual way of doing things such as accomplishing basic tasks that saves time and energy for other activities. R-value—The level of resistance in insulation materials.

Sandwich generation—Individuals who provide or anticipate providing financial support and caring for their parents while also providing

financial support and caring for their children. Satisficers—People who make decisions and stick with them. Satisficing—Selecting the first acceptable alternative. Scanning—An action in which individuals or families read the world searching for signals or clues that have strategic implications. Scarcity—A shortage or insufficient amount of supply. Scheduling—Sets of time-bounded activities to be done in the future based on work to be done or goals. Self-monitoring—Individuals noticing and altering their own actions, language, and reactions based on people around them includes being attuned to others before speaking or reacting. Sending—Saying what one means to say, with agreement between verbal and nonverbal messages. Sequence—A following of one thing after another in a series or an arrangement. Sequencing—Ordering of activities or events so that one follows another.

Setting—The physical surroundings where messages are communicated. Site—The location or situation of a house. Sleep hygiene—The promotion of regular and improved sleep. Social channels—Communication between people, such as between friends, neighbors, and family members. Social environmental resources—People united in a common cause through an array of societies, economic and political groups, and community organizations. Social networks—Broad term referring to com- munication connections between individuals and groups, some contain visible profiles or the exchange of personal information online. Social Security Act—Under this legislation, retired persons and selected others receive monthly stipends from the government. Socialization—The process by which people learn the rules of society or groups. Source—The sender or communicator. Source reduction—Any change in the design, manufacture, purchase or use of materials or prod- ucts, including packaging, to reduce the amount of toxicity before they become municipal solid waste. Spam—Unsolicited unwanted messages or junk mail on the Internet. Standard of living—What an individual or family aspires to. Standards—The quantitative and/or qualitative criteria reconciling resources with demands. Stepfamilies—Also called blended families, refer to families that include children from previous marriages or relationships, a joining together. Stewardship—Responsibility to preserve the earth. Storyboarding—A planning technique used by advertisers and screenwriters to show the main scenes (in comic-strip style) of a commercial, news program, television show, or movie. Strategic plans—Type of plans using a directional approach including a search for information and a consideration of the best way to proceed. Strategy—A plan of action, a way of conducting and following through on operations. Stress—Response of the body to demands made on it. Stress overload or pileup—The cumulative effect of many stresses building up at one time. Stressors—Situations or events that cause stress. Subsystem—A part of a larger system. Success—Achievement of something desirable, can also elicit a feeling of achievement. Superconductivity—The conducting of electricity with almost no power loss. Sustainability—The conscious design and the consideration of impacts consumption choices make on the environment given finite resources. Also refers to what endures, what will last. Sustainable development—A form of growth wherein societal needs, present and future, are met. Symbols—Things that suggest something else through association. Syncratic—Families in which the husband and wife share equally in making most of the decisions. Synergize—To produce a third alternative, a product of group thinking. System—An integrated set of parts that function together for some end purpose or result.

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Systems theory—A theory that emphasizes the interconnectedness and the interactions among different systems. System understanding—Know-how. The under- standing of the interrelationship and pacing rates of influences among key variables.

Tangible resources— Resources that are real, touchable, or capable of being appraised.

Task saturation—Situation in which people are doing so much that they cannot plan or lead effectively. Taxes—Compulsory levies that are an important source of government revenue. Technology—The application of the scientific method and materials to achieve objectives. Tempo—A time patterning or pace that feels comfortable. Theory—An organized system of ideas or beliefs that can be measured; a system of assumptions or principles. Throughputs—The processing of inputs. Time—A measured or measurable period. Time displacement—Time spent in one activity takes away from time spent in another activity. Time management—The conscious control of time to fulfill needs and achieve goals. Time perception—The awareness of the passage of time. Time-tagging—How one estimates sequencing, the approximate amount of time required for each activity in a sequence, and the starting and ending times for each activity. Transfer payments—Monies or services given for which the recipient does not directly pay.

Transformations—Transitions from one state to another. Transparency—Openness in revealing information about the operations of companies, organizations, institutions, and government. Type A persons—People characterized by excessively striving behavior, high job involvement, impatience, competitiveness, desire for control and power, aggressiveness, and hostility. Type B persons—People characterized by relaxed, easygoing, reflective, and cooperative behavior.

Uncertainty—The state or feel- ing of being in doubt. Unemployment—Being out of work.

Utility—Value, work, applicability, productiveness, or, simply, usefulness of a resource.

Value chains—In busi- ness, value chains are the glue that holds a busi- ness together, likewise value chains are the glue

that holds a family together. Examples of links in the value chains would be traditions and holiday celebrations, certain ways of doing things, shared goals and identity. Value orientation—An internally integrated value system. Values—Principles that guide behavior. Variable expenses—Expenses in a budget for which money can be spent in a range of amounts, for such goods or services as food, entertainment, or apparel.

Verbal symbols—Words people use. Visible symbols—Symbols that can be seen. Volunteer work—Kind of work that does not gen- erate pay, usually performed outside the home.

Wants—Things that are desired or wished for. Waste stream—All gar- bage or trash produced. Wealth—The state of

being rich and having an abundance of material possessions and resources. Well-being—A state of existence in which the individual, family, or society has a sense of security and physical, emotional, and financial health. “All is well.” Work—Effort expended to produce or accomplish something, or activity that is rewarded, usually with pay. Workaholism—The inability to stop thinking about work and doing work and the feeling that work is always the most pleasurable part of life. Work ethic—The degree of dedication or commit- ment to work. Work simplification—Improved, more efficient work methods in the home or in other settings.

You-messages—Statements that often ascribe blame or judge others.

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ABC method of time control, 270–272 degree of importance, 271f

Absolute values, 72 Abstract symbol, 202 Acceleration effect, 445–446 Accommodation, 148 Achievement, 89 Actively acquired information, 218 Actuating, 186 Adaptability, 232 Adjusting, 186 Advocate or expert channel, 206 Affective domain, 69, 227 Air quality, 387–389 American life style, comparison, 41–42 American Red Cross, 25–26 Annual percentage rate, 410 Anthropology, 17–18, 19 Apathy, 94 Artifacts, 203–204 Assets, 403–404, 405–406, 413 Attitudes, 70–71, 80–81

vs behavior, 81 role of environment, 80–81 working behavior, 81

Autonomic, 148

Baby boom and boomlet, 229 Behavior, 69–70 Biodegradability, 369

Biological diversity, 370 Blended families, 249–250 Boomeranging, 239 Boundaries, 47 Brainstorming, 215 Budgets, 398, 405–406

example, 407t Bungalow, 39 Bureau of Labor Statistics, 55, 73, 131,

145, 258, 264, 304, 310, 351, 357, 400, 402, 406, 419

Burnout, 342

Carbon monoxide, 387–388 Careers, 20–22, 71, 85, 88, 106, 182, 236–238, 347–348, 433

Caring, 226, 241, 250, 259, 325, 343 Caregiving/caregivers, 239–242

statistics, 241f ways to help, 242t

Central-satellite model, 138, 139f Cell phones, 16, 40, 119, 167, 169, 179,

267, 269, 310, 383 Census Bureau, 8, 24–26, 131, 231, 232,

239, 433 Chain model, 139, 161

decision situation, 139f Challenge (importance of), 87–88 Change

definition of, 232 managing, 443–444 nature of, 232–233

Channels, 197, 205–206 Checking, 186 Children and child care

at home, 39 home mother vs housewife, 39 money and, 414–416 number of, 26–27, 228, 239 time and, 265

China consumerism in 123–125 vs U.S., 124

Choices, 5 Chronic fatigue syndrome, 356 Circadian rhythms, 277 Clarification, 11 Cocooning, 151, 220 Cognition, 121 Cognitive domain, 69, 227 Cohabitation, 24 College students

with family and friends, 93ill money, work, 417–419

reference group, 141f stress and, 347–350 values and goals, 92–94

Comfort zone, 330–331

Commitment, 81f, 82, 88, 132, 142, 183, 241, 250, 305, 314, 344, 387, 412

Communication cross-cultural, 214–215 definition, 195 families and, 207–211 vs feedback, 195f gender and, 209–211 as part of management, 195–197 process, 197f social networks/networking sites, 216–217 small groups and, 215–216

Comparative advantage, 329 Compromise, 297 Computers/Internet, 17, 436–443

information technology, 219, 270 Conflict, 207

interpersonal, 209ill resolution, 207

Consensual decision making, 148 Conservation, 368 Conservation of resources theory, 125 Constructive conflicts, 209 Consume, 123–125, 150t Consumer Price Index (CPI), 402 Consumption, 447–449

children and, 151–152 newlyweds and, 149

Contingency plans, 182 Controlling, 46, 49f, 186, 396, 411 Credit, 408–411 Credit Reporting Bureau, 262, 410 Crises, 326

resource management model, 328f Critical listening, 201 Cultural values, 76 Culture, 17–18, 19t, 77–79, 120–122, 150,

212–215, 274 distance zones, 213f

De facto decision making, 148 Decibels, 384 Decidophobia, 143

Deciduous trees, 381

index

Note: The letters ‘f,’ ‘ill,’ and ‘t,’followed by the locators refer to figures, illustrations and tables cited in the text.

A

B

C

D

460 index

Decision/decisions (making) acronym DECIDE, 143 avoidance of, 142 children and, 150–151, 158–159 criteria of, 138–139, 139f definition of, 12, 135 as part of management, 133–152 style, 134 tree, 139f

Decision plan, 135 Decision tree, 139f Decoding, 197 Demands, 48–49, 280–281 Demographics/demography, 7, 23, 176,

228, 239, 250 Destination, 200 Destructive conflicts, 209 Diffusion, 439 Directional plans, 182 Disability/disabilities, 246–248 Discretionary income, 403 Discretionary time, 264 Disposable income, 403 Distress, 331 Diversification, 412–413 Division of housework, 144–147 Domino effect, 330 Dovetailing, 179–181. See also Multitasking Downshifting, 311 Drift time, 268 Dual-career (earner), 236

Ecoconsciousness, 368 Ecology, 55 Ecological footprint, 363

Ec onomics (theory), 19–20, 19t, 57, 60, 111, 140, 315

Ecosystem, 366–368 Elbing model, 147 Elder care, 239–242 Emergency fund, 406 Empathetic listening, 201 Empathy, 201 Encoding, 197f, 200 Energy, 351, 355, 376–383

environmental framework, 377f guide label, 383f socioeconomic framework, 378f

Entropy, 50–51 Environment, 10f, 33f, 47–48, 49f, 50f, 56,

67f, 96, 104f, 124–125, 147, 147f, 168f, 170f, 195f, 246–248, 305, 323, 328f, 366f, 367, 373–389

Environmentalism, 366–368 activism, 368f incorporating agriculture into communities,

371–372 process, 366f

Equal Credit Opportunity Act, 411 Equifinality, 51–52 Ethics, 370 Eustress, 331

Evaluation, 187 vs assessment, 187 definition, 187 final, 187

Expansion, 400, 400f Expertise, 175 External change, 232 External noise, 198 External search, 155 External stress, 330–331 Extrinsic motivation, 96–97 Extrinsic values, 72 Extroverts, 174

Facilitating, 49 Fa ilure, 142, 161, 239, 308, 340,

342, 408 Fair Credit Reporting Act, 262, 410 Family/families

alternative decisions (Elbingmodel), 147f changes in, 22–27, 232, 443–444 definitions of, 24 eight roles of decision making, 150t humble beginning, 34ill

Family and Medical Leave Act, 123, 153, 301–302

essence of, 303t Family ecosystem, 56 Fatalism, 252 Fatigue, 350–356 Feedback, 12, 49–50

loop, 50f Fertility rate, 228 FICO score, 410–411

influencing factors, 411f Fight or flight syndrome, 334 Financial management, 397–425

family plan (visiting GrandCanyon), 395ill long-range, 408ill planner, 425t process, 397f

Five ‘S’ concept, 440–442 Foa and Foa model, 116

resource exchange, 116f Focus groups, 273 Food, 10, 33, 37t, 38t, 56, 77, 104, 109,

139f, 149, 178f, 234, 244, 252, 273–275, 284, 335, 385, 449

Fossil fuels, 376 Friends, 46, 89, 115, 205, 238, 327t,

329, 394 Functional limitations, 247 Future of individuals/families and house-

holds, 436–449

Gallup polls, 52, 267 Garages, 41–42 Generic product, 58

Gender gap, 425 Gerontology, 242

Glass ceiling, 425 Goals

achievement of, 68 attributes of, 82 college students and, 92–94 creativity, 85 definition of, 10 disengagement, 90–91

types, 91 interactive values, 81f learning, 85 lifestyles and, 92–94 motivation and, 95–97 obstacles to, 89–90 performance, 84–85 plans to attain, 88–89 roles and, 85 setting, 86 striving for, 83ill time and, 84 types of, 83

GO model, 159 pedagogical, 160f

Green building, 372 Gresham’s law of planning, 171 Gross Domestic Product (GDP), 398,

402, 445 Gross income, 403

Habitat, 367 for Humanity, 252 Habits, 82

Habitual decision making, 218–219 Handicap, 246 Happiness, 7, 66, 102, 126, 156, 174, 202,

203t, 285, 306, 445 Home-based businesses, 311–314 Homeless, 244–246 Home management houses, 35 Homeostasis, 51 Homes/housing. See Household/

households/householders Household/households/householders

Asian American family, 25ill changes in, 9, 26–27, 54–55, 122–123,

232, 436–440 definitions of, 24, 26 history of, 37t–38t home as a resource, 105 production and consumption,

37t–38t, 147 premodern (early 1900s), 38–39 modern (1950s to 1990s), 40 postmodern (early 21st century),

40–42 work time, 111–112

Human capital, 107 Human Development Index, 445

top ranked countries, 446t Human ecology, 55 Human resources, 106 Hypotheses, 45

E

F

G

H

index 461

Immigration, 228–230 Implementing, 12, 28, 49f, 167,

170f, 185 Imposter phenomenon, 137 Income, 403

networth statement, example, 404f, 405t Income tax, 403 Independent activities, 179 Indirect channels, 205–206 Inflation, 398–402

business cycle, 400f Information anxiety, 219 Information overload, 219 Innovation overload, 443 Innovations, 439–440

first aviator, 67ill Inputs, 48 Insomnia, 353 Insurance, 412–413 Intangible resources, 106 Integrated waste management, 386 Intellect, 439 Interdependent, 181 Interface, 47 Internal change, 232 Internal noise, 198 Internal search, 155 Internal stress, 331 Interpersonal conflicts, 209 Intrinsic motivation, 96–97 Intrinsic values, 72 Introverts, 174 Inventions, 16, 115, 119, 439 Investment, 412–413

Job market, 94, 239, 298, 399, 426 Job stress, 340–342

Kitchens, 35, 40, 41–42, 44, 112, 169, 440 Knowable facts, 3, 31, 65, 129,

165, 257, 321, 361, 431

Law of least effort, 442, 449 Leisure, 264–265, 303–304 Level of living, 402

Leveraging, 117 Liabilities, 403 Life changes, 9, 149, 150, 154, 243, 327t, 347 Life management, 20–22, 159, 195,

355, 361, 389 Lifestyle, 18, 22–23, 75, 91, 244, 403,

426, 439 general goals, 271f

Life cycle assessment 365, 390

Lifestylist, 448 Liquidity, 412 Listening, 200–202 Long term care insurance, 420 Low involvement, 218–219

Macroenvironment, 55 Management definition of, 9

five S concept, 440–442 history of, 33–45 interdisciplinary foundationof, 17–20 legislation and research, 43–45 process, 9–13, 10f, 33f second half of life, 20–22 study of, 4–9, 14 style, 15–16 theory, 47–55 tools, 12

Managerial judgment, 434 healthy life, 433ill

Marriage, 22–26, 149, 187, 226, 232, 248–251, 327t, 403, 414, 447

Material resources, 108 Maximizers, 435 Mealtime, 53, 208, 438

sharing, 80ill Medicare, 420 Messages, 204–205 Microenvironment, 55 Mobility, 233 Monochrome, 283 Morphogenic systems, 47 Morphostatic systems, 47 Mortality, 228 Motivation, 95–97, 155, 177–178, 299–300,

349, 350 planning behavior, 178f

Multiculturalism, 447 Multifinality, 51–52 Multitasking, 179–181, 282, 313 Murphy’s Law, 51 Municipal Solid Waste, 385

Natural capital, 364 Need recognition, 369 Need/needs, 10–13, 14, 90, 153,

171, 235–236, 242 Maslow’s hierarchy, 16f

Negative feedback, 49–50 Net worth, 403–405, 404f, 405t Noise, 197–199, 384–385 Nondiscretionary time, 264–265 Nonnormative stressor event, 333 Nonverbal symbols, 202

communication, 203t Normative stressor event, 333 Norms, 121 NREM sleep, 353, 353f

Opportunity costs, 111 Opportunity recognition, 369 Optimism, 86–87

Optimization, 57–59 Orientation, 381 Ostrich effect, 202, 203ill Outsourcing, 329 Outputs, 48–49 Overlapping activities, 181

Pace, 196 Paradigm shift, 440 Pareto principle, 309

Parkinson’s Law, 309 Passively acquired information, 222 Perception, 120–121, 272, 274–277 Persistence, 177 Personality, 175, 208 Peter Principle, 142 Physical environmental resources, 367 Plan/plans/planning

process, 168f, 170f strategies of, 13, 155–156, 165–190,

328–329, 419–425 Polychronic, 283 Pollution, 389 Population

age and composition, 8–9, 22–26, 230–231, 244–246, 432–434

Census, U.S., 24 world, 123, 365, 432, 449

Positive ecology, 389 Postpurchase dissonance, 136 Post World War II

impact of technology, 40 home design, 40 consumption changes, 40

Poverty and low income, 251–252, 426–427

Prepurchase expectations, 136 Proactive, 183–185

vs reactive language, 184t Probability, 156 Problem solving, 152–160

decision making, 133f Problem/problems, 10f, 11–13, 33f, 67f,

104f, 168f, 195f Procrastination, 96, 142, 185, 308–309 Proxemics, 204 Psychic income, 403 Psychological hardiness, 333 Psychology, 18, 19t

Qualitative time measurement, 277–280 Quality of life, 445–447

Quantitative time measurement, 277–280

K J

I

L

M

N

O

P

Q

462 index

R-value, 381 Race/ethnicity, 230–231 Radon, 388–389

Reactive, 183–185 vs proactive language, 184t

Real income, 403 Real-options thinking, 154 Receiving, 200 Recession, 298, 400, 400f Recovery, 400 Reference groups, 140–141, 141f Reflective listening, 201 Relative values, 72 REM sleep, 353, 353f, 354 Renewable resources, 80, 369 Resiliency, 89, 322 Resource advantage theory, 116–119 Resource stock, 108 Resource education, 363 Resourcefulness, 105–106 Resource/resources

allocation of, 113 attributes and models, 115–116 capacity, 103 conservation theory, 125 decision making and, 120–122 definition of, 11, 104–106 interdisciplinary foundation, 19t process, 104f regulation of, 114

Responses, 200 Retirement, 20–22, 243–244, 327t, 404f,

419–423 age for full social security, 422f

Risk, 4, 60–61, 156–159 Roper polls, 339–340, 423 Routine, 283

Sandwich generation, 240, 421 Satisficer, 435 Satisficing, 57–59

Scanning, 185 Scarcity, 19, 109–110, 112 Scheduling, 179–181 Self actualization, 16, 177 Self doubt

vs decision making, 137–138 Sending, 199–200 Sequencing, 49, 179, 281–283 Setting, 86, 178–179, 197–199 Singles/single-parent families, 22–24, 42,

112, 176, 248–251, 436–437, 443 Site, 381 Sleep, 351–354 Smith-Hughes Act, 43 Smith-Lever Act, 43 Social channels, 206 Social environmental resources, 367 Social network sites (SNSs), 216

Social Security Act, 422 Socialization, 78–79, 141, 283, 415 Solitude, 23, 73, 279, 307, 339 Source, 200 Spam, 4 Spam walls, 270 Standard of living, 146, 235,

402, 447 Standards, 11, 178–179,

283–284 Stewards, 362 Storyboarding, 187

sample, 188f, 189f Strategic plans, 182, 183 Strategy, 125

definition, 125 incorporating, 125

Stress adjusting to change, 327t body’s response to, 334–335 definition of, 324–325 management of, 336–337 model, 328f parents and children, 345–347 techniques to reduce, 338–340

Stress overload, 326 Stressors, 325 Subsystems, 48 Success, 156–157 Suggested activity

chain model, 138 changing life, 151 decision making process, 121 eco consciousness, 369 family values, 78 GO model, 159 goals achievement, 89 non adaptability, 234 personal values, 74 resource stock, 108 retirement planning, 423 schooling system, 239 setting goals, 272 sleeping pattern, 353 standard of life comparison, 284 student activities, 252 success tips, 159 terminal value vs instrumental

value, 75 time log, 268 time vs money, 284 value affecting (financial

management), 394 Supply and demand, 112–113

curve, 113f Sustainable development, 362 Symbols, 202 Syncratic, 148 Synergize, 183 Systems and Systems theory

definition and description, 47–56 family, 52–54

household applications, 54–55 management action, 49f personal, 52

Tangible resources, 106 Task saturation, 173 Taxes, 403–404

Technology definition of, 439–440 household and, 16, 436–439 stress/stress relief, 324ill visionary leadership, 434 White House and, 17–18, 18ill

Television, 283, 369, 371, 382–385 Tempo, 280 Theory, 45–46 Theory of adaptive range, 334 Thinking exercises

boundary ambiguity, 53 campus spending, 409 changing families, 434 childhood memories, 237 choice of living, 226 college student (s)

campus vs environmental problems, 364 helping, 194 life outcomes and values, 93 loans, 402 salary expectation, 417 and stress, 348

complex message, 205 conversing time, 211 decision making

vs jobless student, 14 and stress, 324 style, 134

5s concept, 441 household innovations, 439 hygiene, changing standards, 34 individual planning, 168 kitchens, category, 44 motivation, 95 nonevent, 345 pit stop/refueling, 295 planning for unplannable, 153 resilience, 89 savings, 395 school uniform vs parents, 11 seasonal sales, 199 sibling jealousy, 221 singles vs families, 124 spirit of invention, 67 store bags, cost, 365 stress, suggestion, 322 time vs privacy, 445 traveling jobs, 341 urbanization vs family, 8 vacation timing, 315 value, criteria, 68 work–family, life balance, 292

S

T R

index 463

Time as a resource, 263–264 definition of, 258 financial goals, 406f management of, 258–263 perceptions of, 272 procedural model, 275f

Time displacement, 262 Time-tagging, 282 Trade-offs, 111–112, 378f Transfer payments, 252 Transformation, 48 Transparency, 433 Type A and B persons, 337–338

Uncertainty, 156 Unemployment economic crises, 400f

and family, 297–299 rate in U.S., 399

University of Chicago, 220 Utility, 119, 138, 140

optimization of, 140 5s philosophy and, 441

Value chains, 79–80 shared commitments, 80f Value orientation, 69

Values clarification, 11 college students and, 92–94 definition of, 10 process, 67f societal and cultural, 76–77 terminal and instrumental, 75t

Verbal symbols, 202 Visible symbols, 202 Volunteer work, 314

Wants, 10 Waste and recycling, 385–387 households, 384ill

Waste stream, 371 Water, 373–376

contamination, 388ill Wealth, 426–427 Well-being, 445–447

Weddings, 72 Work/workplaces

family-supportive policies, 300–301 feeling overworked, 304–305 passion for, 296

Workaholism, 306–307 Work and family See also Work,

family-supportive policies conflicts between, 293–295 interchange between, 299–301 overview of, 292

Work ethic, 305–306 Work simplification, 36

You-messages, 204

W YU

V

  • Cover
  • Title Page
  • Copyright Page
  • Contents
  • Preface
  • About the Author
  • Acknowledgments
  • 1 Management Today
    • Main Topics
    • What Is Family Resource Management?
      • Introduction to Family and Household Trends
      • Management as a Process
      • Successful Plans: Putting Management into Action
      • Why Manage?
      • Who Manages?
      • Influences on Management Styles
      • Interdisciplinary Foundation
    • Life Management for Individuals and Families
      • Managing the Second Half of Life
      • Singles, Households, Nonfamily Households, and Families
      • Changes in Family and Household Composition
    • What Lies Ahead?
    • Summary
    • Key Terms
    • Review Questions
    • References
  • 2 Management History and Theories
    • Main Topics
    • History of Management
      • The Early Years of Management
      • Household Production/Consumption System I: Premodern (Early 1900s)
      • Household Production/Consumption System II: Modern (1950s to 1990s)
      • Household Production/Consumption System III: Postmodern (Early 21st Century)
      • Four Eras of Management
    • Theory Overview
      • Functions of Theory
      • Theories Ahead
    • Systems Theory
      • Open and Closed Families
      • Subsystems and System Elements
      • The Personal System
      • Family Systems Theory and Management
      • Application of Systems Theory to Households
      • Human Ecology and Ecosystems
    • Economic Theory
      • Optimization and Satisficing
      • Risk Aversion
    • Summary
    • Key Terms
    • Review Questions
    • References
    • For Further Reading
  • 3 Values, Attitudes, Goals, and Motivation
    • Main Topics
    • Values and Attitudes
      • Types of Values
      • Values, Lifestyles, and Consumption
      • Societal and Cultural Values
      • Families, Values, Standards, and Households
      • Value Chains
      • Attitudes
    • Goals and Motivation
      • Goals Versus Habits
      • Goal Attributes
      • Types of Goals
      • Goals and Performance, Creativity, and Learning
      • Setting Goals
      • Disengaging from Goals
      • College Students’ Values, Goals, and Life Outcomes
      • Motivation
    • Summary
    • Key Terms
    • Review Questions
    • References
  • 4 Resources
    • Main Topics
    • Resources Defined
      • Types of Resources
      • Economics and Resources
      • Resource Attributes and a Model
      • Resource-Advantage Theory
      • Other Resource Allocation Factors: Utility and Accessibility
      • Decision Making and Resources
      • Knowledge, Education, and Health: Vital Resources
      • Cultural Perceptions of Resources
    • Resources, Families, and Households
      • Consumption: China Using More Resources
      • Strategy and the Conservation of Resources Theory
    • Summary
    • Key Terms
    • Review Questions
    • References
  • 5 Decision Making and Problem Solving
    • Main Topics
    • Decisions Defined and Explored
      • Decision Making as Part of Management
      • Steps in Decision Making
      • Self-Doubt, Self-Ambivalence, and Decision Making
      • Models, Rules, and Utility
      • Reference Groups
      • Personal Decision Making
    • Family Decision Making, Including Division of Household Work
      • Consumer Decision Making in Families
      • Getting Out of the House
    • Problem Solving
      • Definition, Analysis/Timing, and Plan of Action
      • Uncertainty, Risk, and Success
      • The GO Model: Visualization of a Problem-Solving Process
    • Summary
    • Key Terms
    • Review Questions
    • References
  • 6 Planning, Implementing, and Evaluating
    • Main Topics
    • What Is Planning?
      • The Planning Process and Task
      • Need Fulfillment
      • Time, Stress, and Planning
      • Planning in Families and Other Groups
      • Standard Setting
      • Scheduling, Sequencing, and Multitasking
      • Attributes of Plans
      • Types of Plans
    • What Is Implementing?
      • Actuating
      • Checking and Controlling
    • What Is Evaluating?
    • Summary
    • Key Terms
    • Review Questions
    • References
  • 7 Communication
    • Main Topics
    • Communication as Part of the Management Process
      • Channels, Noise, and Setting
      • Sending and Receiving
      • Listening
      • Messages
      • Channels and Feedback
    • Communication Conflicts
      • In Families
      • Cultures and Subcultures
    • Communication in Small Groups
      • Group Discussions and Cohesion
    • Information and Communications Technology
      • Social Networks and Social Network Sites
      • Information Overload and Habitual Decision Making
      • The Internet and the Human Capacity to Process Information
      • The Role of the Home and the Individual
    • Summary
    • Key Terms
    • Review Questions
    • References
  • 8 Managing Human Needs
    • Main Topics
    • Changes in Population
      • Population Terms and Trends
      • Population Age and Composition
      • Households and Families
    • The Nature of Change
      • Mobility
      • Managing Change
    • Meeting Individual, Family, and Societal Needs
      • Two-Earner Families
      • Child Care
      • Caregiving for Older Persons and the Elderly
      • Adjusting to Retirement
      • The Homeless
      • Individuals with Disabilities
      • Single-Parent, Remarriage, and Stepfamilies or Blended Families
      • Poverty and Low-Income Families
    • Summary
    • Key Terms
    • Review Questions
    • References
  • 9 Managing Time
    • Main Topics
    • Time as a Resource
      • Discretionary Versus Nondiscretionary Time
      • Children, Adolescents, and Time
      • Adults and Time
      • Modern Tools of Time Management
      • The ABC Method of Time Control and Goals
      • Time Perceptions
      • Perceptions of Time across Cultures
      • Biological Time Patterns
    • Quantitative and Qualitative Time Measures
      • Demands, Sequencing, and Standards
    • Summary
    • Key Terms
    • Review Questions
    • References
  • 10 Managing Work and Family
    • Main Topics
    • Introduction to Work and Family Research
    • Overview of Work and Family
      • Work and Family Conflicts
      • Benefits of Work and Spillover to Families
      • Resolving Work and Family Conflicts
      • Social Support and Work and Family
      • Family-Supportive Workplace Policies
    • The Meaning of Work and Leisure
      • Feeling Overworked
      • Work Ethic
      • Workaholism and Vacations
      • The Three Ps: Procrastination, Parkinson’s Law, and Pareto’s Principle
      • Workforce Trends
      • Home-Based Work and Telecommuting
      • Volunteer Work
      • Leisure
    • Summary
    • Key Terms
    • Review Questions
    • References
  • 11 Managing Stress and Fatigue
    • Main Topics
    • Theoretical Frameworks
    • Stress Research
      • Crises and Adaptation to Stress
      • Planning and Organizing
      • Outsourcing
      • Decision Making and Stress
      • The Body’s Response to Stress
      • Diet, Exercise, and Stress
    • Stress Management
      • Type A and Type B Personalities
      • Techniques for Reducing Stress
      • Job Stress
      • Burnout
      • Stress and Nonevents
      • Parents, Children, Stress, Burnout
      • College Students and Stress
    • Fatigue
      • The Body and Fatigue
      • Systems Theory: Sleep, Energy, and Fatigue
    • Summary
    • Key Terms
    • Review Questions
    • References
  • 12 Managing Environmental Resources
    • Main Topics
      • Sustainability
    • The Ecosystem and Environmentalism
      • Problem Recognition
      • Biodegradability
      • Biological Diversity
      • Individual and Family Decision Making
      • Incorporating Agriculture into Communities
    • Environmental Problems and Solutions
      • Water Quality and Availability
      • Energy
      • Noise
      • Waste and Recycling
      • Air Quality
    • Summary
    • Key Terms
    • Review Questions
    • References
  • 13 Managing Finances
    • Main Topics
    • Financial Management and Security
    • Family Economics: Avoiding Economic Fallout, Building Toward the Future
      • The Business Cycle and Inflation
      • Individuals and Families as Producers and Consumers
    • Income, Taxes, Net Worth, Budgets, and Saving
      • Managing Credit and Reducing Debt
      • Banking, Investments, and Insurance
      • Children, Expenses, and Financial Literacy
      • Saving for College
      • College Students, Starting Out
    • Retirement and Financial Planning
      • Financial Planning
    • Further Family Economic Issues
      • The Gender Gap, Earnings Gap, and the Glass Ceiling
      • Wealth and Poverty
    • Summary
    • Key Terms
    • Review Questions
    • References
  • 14 Managing Tomorrow
    • Main Topics
    • Technology and Innovation
      • Visionary Leadership and Managerial Judgment
      • Household Innovations
      • Adopting Innovations and Applying Technology
      • The 5S Management Concept
      • Information and Innovation Overload
    • Family, Home, and Global Change
      • Quality of Life and Well-Being
      • Multiculturalism
      • Sustainability, Environment, and Consumption
      • Health Care and the Food Supply
    • Summary
    • Key Terms
    • Review Questions
    • References
  • GLOSSARY
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