The great depression left many scarring imprints on families, especially the children. In many cases, children had to leave their education behind and had to seek cheap employment at factories to help provide meager financial support. The lack of money circulating around made living conditions horrible. Families, especially immigrant families were living in squalor; either crammed in a single roomed apartment or left to sleep outside.
yes, they lived together, and they lived with joint families which included grandparents, aunty ,uncle and parents and 6 or more children.
because the children are more likely to die in developing countries ans so to ensure that some of their children survive, parents have lots of children.
In the 17th century, a family was either a nuclear family with parents and children alone or they were extended families living under one roof. The parents provided education to their children and made them grow up as responsible?æ citizens. The children were expected to obey and respect their parents and assist them in their work. The father?æwas the head of the family. The father worked for the family and the mother taught them religion and?æbasic rules to be followed like obeying, working, helping, etc.
students and other young people had to leave school and get a job to support their families, since most of their parents were out of work. i hope i answered your question ! good luck (:
Nuclear families (families with children AND parents), Step families (families with parents or parent who has/have children from previous relationships), Extented families (families with aunts, uncles, grandparents,cousins, etc.) ,Single parents families (families containing only one parent in charge of the rest of the family) and Adopted families (families who have adopted children to the family).
Families.
Children had to work with parents to help their families survive.
eh eh eh of course there feking was children have parents, parents become homeless so do the children IDIOT
Families can be further broken down into nuclear families (parents and children), extended families (relatives beyond nuclear family), single-parent families (one parent raising children), and blended families (combining children from previous relationships).
Children had no 'rights'. The parents had complete control over their families.
Today, families are typically small in Europe, with parents only producing an average of about 2 children, if that. However, in the old days it was not uncommon for families to have four, five, even ten children.
Not usually.
Family life in Canada is as diverse as its people. While many families are made up of two parents with children, there are many other types of families as well. In Canada, you may form the type of family that works best for you. For example, Canada has over one million single-parent families, with women heading most. There are hundreds of thousands of stepfamilies---created when adults who already have children marry one another---and many common-law unions (unmarried people who live together) with and without children. Sometimes grandparents raise their grandchildren or uncles and aunts raise their nieces and nephews. Some parents adopt children. Other families are made up of same-sex couples, with or without children, and many couples have no children. Sometimes extended families live together, with parents, children, uncles, aunts, cousins and grandparents all living under one roof. It is common in Canada for two-parent families to have both parents working outside the home.
All families are different. If their own parents are still alive, they may want to pay for the wedding.
Your children are cousins to your niece's children. This relationship arises because both sets of children share a common grandparent through their respective parents. Essentially, your niece is the sibling of one of their parents, making the children from both families cousins.
What percentage of children in the UK live within a step-family