Degree Date

6-2026

Document Type

Dissertation - Public Access

Degree Name

Ed.D. Doctor of Education

Academic Discipline

Teaching and Learning

First Advisor

Dr. Blanca Gamez-Djokic

Second Advisor

Dr. Angela Elkordy

Third Advisor

Dr. Rob Morrison

Abstract

This dissertation examines childcare as a site of gender inequality shaped by cultural norms, structural barriers, and digital discourse. Despite increased awareness of shared parenting ideals, mothers predominantly bear the “mental load.” This study introduces the idea of a motherhood contract: implicit expectations that mothers are responsible for managing children’s needs. Two research questions guide this study. (1) What are parents’ experiences of managing the mental load of caregiving? How do they make sense of these experiences within the gendered and moral expectations shaping family life? (2) How are cultural ideas about childcare and parenting constructed, circulated, and reproduced through parents’ narratives and social media discourse? The research employs qualitative narrative inquiry drawing on feminist theory and the sociology of care to situate individual experiences within broader systems of power. Findings introduce moral risk—the social and internal consequences of failing to meet “good” caregiving standards. The mental load becomes cognitive labor and risk management; parents anticipate needs and absorb accountability to avoid judgment. Although often framed as individual choices, these practices are shaped by cultural and digital norms. Narratives of choice and efficiency reinforce mothers’ responsibility and conceal structural barriers like workplace inflexibility. Career sacrifices appear voluntary even when constrained, rendering caregiving invisible and perpetuating gendered expectations. Ultimately, the dissertation demonstrates that childcare decision-making is culturally mediated, reproducing and legitimizing gender inequality. By connecting cultural discourse, family practices, and online self-surveillance, the research explains how unequal caregiving persists through both external barriers and internalized norms.

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