But what of the effects upon the children? As the figures given above show, many mothers don't leave home to work until their children are six or more years old. Even so, the children will generally not be at home without their mother for more than two or three hours. They get out of school at three or threethirty, and mother returns after five. Mother would not see significantly more of her children, except at the very end of this period, even if she stayed at home. It is perhaps not difficult to understand why the working mother is often happier with her children than the mother who, having become progressively fatigued and exhausted with the routine chores of the day, awaits the return of the children from school with some trepidation. Feminists have claimed that the loneliness of the average housewife, when husband and children are away, would compare unfavorably with the kind of stimulation that the working mother receives from her workaday experience with the outside world. But this opinion is not supported by the finding of the polls on the views of working women. In 1981 the Harris poll found that 44 percent of working women felt that their working outside the home had negative effects, while 37 percent felt that their working outside had had positive effects, 14 percent felt that it had had no effects, and 5 percent were unsure.
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A working mother may, however, work too hard, and she may be in no state to resume the cares of a household upon returning from work. Of course, this is highly undesirable, and no mother should engage in exhausting work. It is unnecessary to deal here with the exploitation of women as cheap labor, unequal pay for the same job, and discrimination against women workers. These practices are slowly losing ground, but unfortunately have not been completely eradicated. They are regrettable, and an unfortunate reflection upon the character of many employers.
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Thus far, all I have attempted to do in this chapter is to show that more and more women, and particularly married women, are working, and will continue to do so, outside the home. It is a trend that no one can halt: The married working woman is here to stay. For the most part she works for the same reason that the married man does: to support the family.
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During World War II the Women's Bureau of the Department of Labor conducted a study among 13,000 working women employed in all sorts of industries. More than half the married
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