TY - JOUR
T1 - Revisiting the gender gap in time-use patterns
T2 - Multitasking and well-being among mothers and fathers in dual-earner families
AU - Offer, Shira
AU - Schneider, Barbara
PY - 2011/12
Y1 - 2011/12
N2 - This study suggests that multitasking constitutes an important source of gender inequality, which can help explain previous findings that mothers feel more burdened and stressed than do fathers even when they have relatively similar workloads. Using data from the 500 Family Study, including surveys and the Experience Sampling Method, the study examines activities parents simultaneously engage in and how they feel when multitasking. We find that mothers spend 10 more hours a week multitasking compared to fathers and that these additional hours are mainly related to time spent on housework and childcare. For mothers, multitasking activities at home and in public are associated with an increase in negative emotions, stress, psychological distress, and work-family conflict. By contrast, fathers' multitasking at home involves less housework and childcare and is not a negative experience. We also find several similarities by gender. Mothers' and fathers' multitasking in the company of a spouse or children are positive experiences, whereas multitasking at work, although associated with an increased sense of productivity, is perceived as a negative experience.
AB - This study suggests that multitasking constitutes an important source of gender inequality, which can help explain previous findings that mothers feel more burdened and stressed than do fathers even when they have relatively similar workloads. Using data from the 500 Family Study, including surveys and the Experience Sampling Method, the study examines activities parents simultaneously engage in and how they feel when multitasking. We find that mothers spend 10 more hours a week multitasking compared to fathers and that these additional hours are mainly related to time spent on housework and childcare. For mothers, multitasking activities at home and in public are associated with an increase in negative emotions, stress, psychological distress, and work-family conflict. By contrast, fathers' multitasking at home involves less housework and childcare and is not a negative experience. We also find several similarities by gender. Mothers' and fathers' multitasking in the company of a spouse or children are positive experiences, whereas multitasking at work, although associated with an increased sense of productivity, is perceived as a negative experience.
KW - Experience Sampling Method
KW - dual-earner families
KW - multitasking
KW - well-being
KW - work-family conflict
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=82455179512&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1177/0003122411425170
DO - 10.1177/0003122411425170
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SN - 0003-1224
VL - 76
SP - 809
EP - 833
JO - American Sociological Review
JF - American Sociological Review
IS - 6
ER -