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2008年1月25日金曜日

What a typical day of a Japan family? -

A question for homework, and few more question such as what are usually the members of family under one roof? What are the roles of women and mother usually play in Japan families? What are the roles of men and fathers usually play in Japan Families? What are the benefits and responsibility of eldest son in a Japan families? AND How long do children usually live with their parents in Japan?

In japan, people work crazy hours! Kids go to school, and then they take the subway home and stay home for like two hours or something, then they have to go to cram school. Which is where you study so you can get into college and a good high school. After women have kids, they stop working and stay at home. Men work and they give all of their money to or however much they make to their wives, and then she budget the money. But idk how long they live with their parents. I ll have to find out! :p

gt;What are the roles of women and mother usually play in Japan families? Women and mother are required to do homework like cleaning, washing and cooking. And sometimes work to supplement income as income of Japanese men are declining since 1990. gt;What are the roles of men and fathers usually play in Japan Families? Men and fathers are required to work long and get income to support families. gt;What are the benefits and responsibility of eldest son in a Japan families? The eldest son has responsibility to take over the family. If one family has specific small business, the eldest son will take over. And it s usually him who cares his parents when they get old. I don t think there is any benefit of being the eldest son. gt;How long do children usually live with their parents in Japan? It depends. But it s getting later that children leave their parents because income is declining. Some people are living with their parents even after 30. It happens more often for women.

A typical day of a Japanese family is: the children go to school and the parents go to work or one stays home and cleans, cooks and does laundry. After school many teenagers will go to malls to go shopping or go to friends houses to hang out. Going to cafes are popular too. When they get home they do their homework. Raising the children, supervising education, doing the housework and home accounting are the mothers’ jobs. The Fathers’ job is to provide a monthly income for the family. Modern young working parents share their roles, such as housework, taking care of children and supervising education. However, families with junior high school and older children tend to carry on the traditional roles. In Japan, many children go to work while still living at home even after they graduate from college. In fact, Japanese parents prefer that. It is not unusual for Japanese parents to provide financial support for a house or condominium when the oldest son marries. Japanese parents have a strong expectation that the oldest son will take care of them when they get older. The Japanese parents think that it is the parents’ responsibility to make sure their children graduate from college. They don’t hesitate to invest large amounts of money for their children’s education. Many will live at home till the age of 21 or older (leave after college). Hope I helped :).

I know Japanese siblings are like regular siblings. When I visited my in-laws for the first time (Aki and I were still dating) and his parents left so it was just Aki, his sister Mika, and me. Well, Aki turned up his music in his room and it made his sister so mad she was shouting things normal American girls would shout (I hate you, turn that down! etc). A lot less women work than men in Japan. Some women prefer to marry and have children. They might go to a two year college to learn about sewing and cooking. Some choose to go to the university and have a career. men usually are the bread makers, they work USUALLY 6 days a week. Aki is a chonan (eldest son) and he is spoiled beyond belief. When we were dating his parents bought and sent him whatever he wanted. I was in disbelief, made me want Japanese parents. They paid his tuition in full each semester, called him all the time, he gets what he wants when he wants. Mika is 20 I think, or going on 20 and she still lives with her parents. Oh, I have one son with Aki. My son is chonan, so he is spoiled by me and his grandparents. I see why chonan is spoiled when I look at my son (he is 8 months old)

ask a japaniese family

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