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Hi, I need help with essay on Continuation of the first assignment i gave u. Continue with the same topic. Paper must be at least 1750 words. Please, no plagiarized work!It believes that certain indiv
Hi, I need help with essay on Continuation of the first assignment i gave u. Continue with the same topic. Paper must be at least 1750 words. Please, no plagiarized work!
It believes that certain individual and relationship factors that are present in married people, especially when they marry later, can affect the stability of their marriages, although this paper recognizes that marriage stability may or may not always be linked with happiness or quality of marriage, as well as age at marriage. Literature Review Studies showed that people who marry later in life tend to stay married than people who marry during their teens, although compatibility, education, and economic factors shape the stability of marriage for both groups. The ideal age of marriage is in early (Glenn, Uecker, &. Love, 2010) to late twenties (Lehrer, 2008), although people who marry later can also have stable marriages (Glenn et al., 2010. Teachman, 1983). Teenage marriage has higher dissolution rates than older people who get married, although teenage childbirth is not strongly correlated with marital dissolution (Moore &. Waite, 1981. Witt et al., 1987). Educational level (Heaton, 2002. South, 1995), socio-economic status of women before and during marriage (Martin, 2006), and perceptions of role consensus and quality of spouse role enactment (Bahr, Chappell, &. Leigh, 1983) impact marital stability, whether people marry early or not (Martin, 2006). Because compatibility is critical to marriage stability (South, 1995), marrying earlier is not always strongly correlated to higher marital dissolution, except when it interfered with educational and/or employment opportunities for women, since women are still the typical gender burdened with childcare and household responsibilities (South, 1995). Hypothesis The main hypothesis is that people, who marry later, specifically from their early to late twenties, tend to have higher marriage stability than teenage marriages. Other mediating factors can exist to ensure the strength and duration of marriages for older people, such as race, religion, education, compatibility, and socio-economic conditions, but only the last three were emphasized. The socio-economic factors include the socio-economic class of women before they got married and the combined class status of the marriage couple, where middle-class and upper-class families tend to have more stable marriages than the working-class and poor families. Furthermore, this paper believes that people who are compatible and have at least middle-class status tend to have stable marriages that are based on quality of relationship. Research design Data was collected through survey (n=10) and face-to-face interviews (n=6), as well as secondary research, so that triangulation of data collection and analysis can be performed. The sampling strategy was convenience and snowball strategy, where couples who are initially known to the student were asked to participate in surveys and interviews and they were asked to refer the student to other couples they know who are either married early or later in life, whether they are divorced or not. The survey included demographics and questions on compatibility, while the interviews were done for the same sampling where selection was performed through drawing lots. interview questions verified compatibility. The researcher exerted effort in equalizing the number of early marriage and later marriage for both sampling and interview methods, and tried to do research in an extensive manner through consulting Google Scholar and EBSCO databases.