| dc.description.abstract | The aim of this research was to investigate the influence of hospitality careers on
preferred family size. The specific objective was to examine whether ladies' level of
education, age, and careers influence their decision on the number of children they
would have. The descriptive research method was used in the study. The data was
collected from 186 respondents who were randomly selected. The study
triangulated both qualitative and quantitative methods. The majority 46% of the
respondents had 1 to 2 children while 30% had 3 to 4 children with a minority of
8 % having between 4 to 6 children. This finding was significant X2 =88.377, df (4),
p<.0001 It was found that women's employment, education, marital status, attitude
toward having children, and availability of family planning methods influenced
their family size. There were weak positive correlations (r=0.195) p<0.026)
between the hospitality career and the preferred family meaning that the career
influenced respondents' attitude towards family size. There was a positive
correlation between job flexibility and intention to have a family (r=-.483, p<.003.)
There were weak inverse correlations between the financial cost of bringing up
children and the number of children a family would like to have (r=-227, p<.012). | en_US |