How did working-class families and middle-class families experience urbanization and industrialization differently?

A) Working-class families tended to have strong family ties as a result of their urban lives and work, whereas women and children in middle-class families tended not to participate in the work that men did.
B) Working-class families often did not spend much time together because everyone worked at different times, but middle-class families tended to work and socialize together.
C) In middle-class families only the men earned money, but in working-class families, some women did work out of the home.
D) In working-class families, more children lived with their parents into their twenties, whereas in middle-class families children tended to leave home as soon as they got work.
E) Working-class families tended to have fewer members of the household engaged in work, which is what kept them in a permanent state of poverty.


Answer: C

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