Close X
Thursday, November 28, 2024
ADVT 
Life

'Most US Children Likely To Live With Unmarried Mothers'

IANS, 18 Dec, 2014 12:37 PM
    More than half of all US children will likely live with unmarried mothers at some point before they reach 18, said a study by researchers from the Princeton University and the Harvard University, the US.
     
    The absence of a biological father increases the likelihood that a child will exhibit anti-social behaviour like aggression, breaking rules and delinquency.
     
    "These children are 40 percent less likely to finish high schools or attend colleges," the team noted.
     
    Since 1965, the percentage of children raised by unmarried mothers has gone up significantly among all groups.
     
    "The fact that single motherhood is increasing faster among women with less than a college degree means that children growing up with a single mother are likely to be doubly disadvantaged," said Sara McLanahan from Princeton University.
     
    The official poverty rate in 2013 among all families with children was 40 percent if the family was headed by an unmarried mother and only eight percent if the family was headed by a married couple.
     
    Evidence on the impact of these trends comes from the Fragile Families and Child Wellbeing study which is following a cohort of nearly 5,000 children born in large American cities between 1998 and 2000.
     
    The findings coincide with the 50th anniversary of the controversial "Moynihan Report," a 1965 study by sociologist Daniel Patrick Moynihan that argued that growing up in homes without a male breadwinner led to a life of poverty, unemployment and crime.
     
    Also, the high rate of partner turnover during a mother's peak fertility years means that children now experience multiple men entering and exiting their lives, the researchers added.
     
    "Both the departure of a father and the arrival of a mother's new partner disrupt family routines and are stressful for most children, regardless of whether the father was married to the mother or just living with her," McLanahan pointed out.
     
    Changing the current dynamic will be difficult, the authors wrote.
     
    The study appeared in the journal EducationNext.

    MORE Life ARTICLES

    Green offices make workers happy - and productive

    Green offices make workers happy - and productive
    "Green" offices with plants make staff happier and more productive than "lean" designs stripped of greenery, new research shows....

    Green offices make workers happy - and productive

    For DINK couples, outsourcing parenthood is cool

    For DINK couples, outsourcing parenthood is cool
    For double-income-no-kid (DINK) couples, raising a child is the most difficult part. For them, creches and day-care centres in the marketplace are no less...

    For DINK couples, outsourcing parenthood is cool

    Close relationships the basis of stress-free life

    Close relationships the basis of stress-free life
    We all know that deep and meaningful relationships play a vital role in one's overall well-being but still, most of us are bereft of emotional bonding in life...

    Close relationships the basis of stress-free life

    Gas Or Electric, One Oven Or Two? Questions Pondered When Purchasing New Stove

    Gas Or Electric, One Oven Or Two? Questions Pondered When Purchasing New Stove
    VICTORIA - When a homeowner is building or renovating the kitchen, one of the most important decisions for the heart of the home revolves around the stovetop and oven.

    Gas Or Electric, One Oven Or Two? Questions Pondered When Purchasing New Stove

    Decoded: What makes an angry face

    Decoded: What makes an angry face
    Also include thinned lips and flared nostrils as researchers have identified the origin and purpose of the facial expression for anger that is universal....

    Decoded: What makes an angry face

    'Thank you' turns new acquaintance into friends

    'Thank you' turns new acquaintance into friends
    Thanking a new acquaintance for their help makes them more likely to seek an ongoing social relationship with you, a new study indicates....

    'Thank you' turns new acquaintance into friends