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Oct 12, 2025
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Size: 26.41 MB
Language: en
Added: Oct 12, 2025
Slides: 9 pages
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Personal Development
Family Structure and Legacies GROUP 4Members:
Lorena
Rosales
Bianito
Delo Santos
Mendoza
Monteverde
FAMILY STRUCTURE The traditional family structure is considered a family support
system that involves two married individuals providing care
and stability for their biological offspring. However, this two-
parent nuclear family has become less prevalent, and
alternative family forms have become more common. The
family is created at birth and establishes ties across
generations. Those generations, the extended family of aunts,
uncles, grandparents, and cousins, can all hold significant
emotional and economic roles for the nuclear family.
Types of Family Structures
Family structures differ from one family to another, that's why, we should
not compare our family with that of others. The following table lists the
different family structures. •Nuclear FamilyAlso known as "conjugal" or "traditional," consisting of married couples and their offspring. - Example: Mother, father, and children.
•Extended Family: Includes all relatives in proximity, such as grandparents, aunts, uncles, and cousins, typically
living together and sharing daily household duties. - Example: A family living together: mother, father, children, grandparents, aunts,
uncles, and other relatives in one roof. Types of Family Structures:
•Single Parent FamilyIncludes one parent and their children only. Could result from divorce, death of one parent, or
single-parent adoption. -Example: Father with his children, or a mother with her children, living in one household.
•Step Family Parents have divorced and remarried, bringing children from other unions
together to form a new nuclear family. - Example: Mother, children, stepfather, and his kids; or father, children, stepmother, and her kids.
• Foster Family A family includes temporary guardian for any member/children whom they may or may
not be biologically related. -Example: Parents, foster child
A family where one or both of the parents' sexual orientation is gay or lesbian. This
may be a two-parent family, an adoptive family, a single parent family or an
extended family. •Gay or Lesbian family
-Example: A Lesbian mother and her children with a gay father A family where the parents have immigrated to another country as adults. Their
children may or may not be immigrants. Some family members may continue to live in
the country of origin, but still be significant figures in the life of the child.
•Immigrant family
-Example:A family whose mom is already an immigrant of Canada. Their mother
already a Canadian citizen but some of the family members are not.
A family that moves regularly to places where they have employnient. The most
common form of migrant family is farm workers who move with the crop seasons.
Children may have a relatively stable community of people who move at the same time
or the family may know no one in each new setting. Military families may also lead a
migrant life, with frequent relocation, often on short notice. •Migrant family-Example:A family who migrated from a province to another, the father is a military
officer.
No matter who we are, where we live, or what our goals may be, we all
have one thing in common: a heritage. That is, a social, emotional and
spiritual legacy passed on from parent to child. Every one of us is
passed a heritage, lives out a heritage, and gives a heritage to our
family. It's not an option. Parents always pass to their children a
legacy... good, bad or some of both. A spiritual, emotional and social
legacy is like a three-stranded cord. Individually, each strand cannot
hold much weight. But wrapped together, they are strong. That's why
passing on a positive, affirming legacy is so important and why a
negative legacy can be so destructive. The good news is that you can
decide to pass a positive legacy on to your children whether you
received one or not. Family Legacies
•The Emotional Legacy
In order to prosper, our children need an enduring sense
of security and stability nurtured in an environment of
safety and love.
•The Spiritual Legacy The Spiritual Legacy is overlooked by many, but that's a
mistake. As spiritual beings, we adopt attitudes and
beliefs about spiritual matters from one source or
another. As parents, we need to take the initiative and
present our faith to our children.
•The Social Legacy To really succeed in life, our children need to learn
more than management techniques, accounting,
reading, writing and geometry. They need to learn the
fine art of relating to people. If they learn how to
relate well to others, they'll have an edge in the game
of life.