Back to History

Fields Changed

Registration

Field Before After
Last Published April 12, 2021 11:51 AM November 08, 2021 03:22 PM
Primary Outcomes (End Points) We measure male’s participation in eight household tasks – child care, collecting fuelwood, fetching water, cooking, washing clothes, processing grains, cleaning the house, and washing dishes. We collected information if the man performed these activities yesterday and how many minutes he spends on each activity. We also collected information on the women’s satisfaction with the amount of time that the man contributes towards household chores and child car. We ask this question both in general and specifically towards each of the eight household chores listed above. Furthermore, we collected information about the women’s perception on how the male has changed his participation in household chores between baseline and endline. Using the information collected, we construct two groups of outcome variables: one for the man’s participation in chores and one for woman’s perception about the man’s participation in chores. We measure male’s participation in eight household tasks – child care, collecting fuelwood, fetching water, cooking, washing clothes, processing grains, cleaning the house, and washing dishes. We collected information if the man/woman performed these activities yesterday and how many minutes he/she spends on each activity. We also collected information on the women’s satisfaction with the amount of time that the man contributes towards household chores and child car. We ask this question both in general and specifically towards each of the eight household chores listed above. Furthermore, we collected information about the women’s perception on how the male has changed his participation in household chores between baseline and endline. Using the information collected, we construct two groups of outcome variables: one for the man’s participation in chores and one for woman’s perception about the man’s participation in chores.
Primary Outcomes (Explanation) Within the first group of outcome variables, we have the following indicators: - a continuous variable measuring the number of minutes the man spent on each household chore - a continuous variable measuring the number of minutes the man spent on all household chores in total yesterday - a dummy indicating whether the man participated in a given household chore or not - an index constructed by counting the number of household chores in which the man participated. Within the second group of outcome variables, we have the following indicators: - a variable indicating the women’s perception of the change in the man’s participation in household chores since baseline - a likert scale variable indicating how satisfied the women is, with the amount of time the man contributes towards household chores, - a likert scale variable indicating how satisfied the women is, with the amount of time the man contributes towards overall household chores. Within the first group of outcome variables, we have the following indicators: - Minutes spent on chores: continuous variables measuring the number of minutes the man/woman spent on each household chore, on all household chores, on public household chores, and private household chores - Participation in chores or not: binary variable indicating whether the man/woman participated in a given household chore or not, an index variable constructed by counting the number of household chores in which the man/woman participated, an index variable constructed by counting the number of public household chores in which the man/woman participated, and an index variable constructed by counting the number of private household chores in which the man/woman participated Within the second group of outcome variables, we have the following indicators: - Likert scale variables indicating how satisfied the women is, with the amount of time the man contributes towards each household chores, public household chores, private household chores, and overall household chores. - a variable indicating the women’s perception of the change in the man’s participation in household chores since baseline.
Keyword(s) Behavior, Gender, Labor Behavior, Gender, Labor
Building on Existing Work No
Back to top

Other Primary Investigators

Field Before After
Affiliation University of Georgia
Back to top