August 2022         
Today's Date: July 2, 2024
SCOTUS Ruling in Rahimi Case Upholds Protections for Domestic Violence Survivors, BWJP Experts Celebrate   •   Freedmen’s Town Community Investment Initiative Launches   •   Media Advisory: Arvest Bank Awards $15,000 CARE Award to University District Development Corp.   •   REI Systems Awarded $6M Contract from U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs for its Grants Management Solution   •   Survey of Nation's Mayors Highlights City Efforts to Support LGBTQ+ Residents   •   Black-Owned Pharmacy Startup in St. Louis Combines Services of Walgreens and Amazon to Address Pharmacy Desert Crisis   •   Martina Navratilova, Riley Gaines, Donna de Varona, Jennifer Sey Join Female Athletes For Rally in Washington, DC to "Take Back   •   World's Largest Swimming Lesson™ (#WLSL2024) Kicks Off First Day of Summer with Global Event Teaching Kids and Parents How   •   Carín León's Socios Music Forms Global Partnership with Virgin Music Group and Island Records   •   Susan G. Komen® Warns of Dire Impact from Braidwood Management, Inc. et al. v. Xavier Becerra et al. Ruling That Will Force   •   Media Advisory: Federal Housing Finance Agency Director Sandra Thompson Visits Affordable Apartment Complex in Dallas   •   Melmark Receives $30M Gift to Fuel Services for Individuals with Autism, Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities   •   The V Foundation for Cancer Research Announces 2024 Recipients for A Grant of Her Own: The Women Scientists Innovation Award for   •   Travel Industry Professional Women Gather for Third Annual Women in Travel THRIVE at HSMAI Day of Impact 2024   •   Produced by Renegade Film Productions/Chameleon Multimedia, Obscure Urban Legend ‘Sweaty Larry’ to Be Invoked for Fi   •   Maximus Named a Top Washington-Area Workplace by The Washington Post   •   PARAMOUNT GLOBAL, NICKELODEON AND DCMP FORM MULTI-YEAR PARTNERSHIP TO MAKE BRANDS' GLOBALLY BELOVED KIDS' PROGRAMMING ACCESSIBLE   •   Chinatown Storytelling Centre Opens New Exhibit: Neighbours: From Pender to Hastings   •   Lifezone Metals Announces Voting Results from its 2024 Annual General Meeting   •   Shop, Sip, and Support Social Justice Programs at Five Keys Furniture Annex in Stockton, California, on Saturday, June 22nd from
Bookmark and Share

Study: Staying together 'for the sake of the kids’ doesn’t necessarily help them

 

 

 

NEWS FROM THE CORNELL CHRONICLE

 

 

 

By:  Susan Lang

ITHACA, N.Y. – The research is clear: Adolescents tend to fare better – academically and behaviorally – when they live with both biological parents. But when their parents frequently argue, young adults are significantly more likely to binge drink than other teenagers. They also tend to smoke and perform at school in ways similar to those who don’t live with both biological parents.

“Our findings suggest that exposure to parental conflict in adolescence is associated with poorer academic achievement, increased substance use and early family formation and dissolution, often in ways indistinguishable from living in a stepfather or single-mother family,” said Kelly Musick, Cornell University associate professor of policy analysis and management.

Musick is the lead author of a study that looked at how teenagers in 1,963 households in the National Survey of Families and Households fared from their teens to early thirties, comparing those who lived with married parents who often fought with those living in stepfather or single-mother households. Musick and co-author Ann Meier of the University of Minnesota looked at such outcomes as school success, substance abuse and nonmarital childbearing.

Their work, which was presented at the annual meetings of the Population Association of America and the American Sociological Association, is published as a report from the California Center for Population Research at the University of California-Los Angeles; it is summarized in “The Rural New York Minute,” a publication of Cornell’s Community and Rural Development Institute.

“Our results clearly illustrate that the advantages of living with two continuously married parents are not shared equally by all children,” said Musick. “Compared with children in low-conflict families, children from high-conflict families are more likely to drop out of school, have poor grades, smoke, binge drink, use marijuana, have early sex, be young and unmarried when they have a child and then experience the breakup of that relationship.” The timing and sequence of young adult transitions, she added, are important indicators for success in later life, and income and parenting did not account for these differences.

Interestingly, for half these outcomes, “associations with parental conflict are statistically indistinguishable from those with stepfather and single mother-families, said Musick.  While young adults from high-conflict households are significantly less likely to drop out of high school, have early sex and cohabit, and they are more likely to attend college, compared with stepfather or single-mother families, they are also significantly more likely to binge drink.

“The odds of binge drinking are about a third higher for children from high-conflict families compared to single-mother families,” Musick said.

The bottom line, she said, is that children in high-conflict married households tend to do no better than those in stepfather and single-mother families. How well parents manage their anger and conflict is obviously important for the outcomes of children, but she stressed, policy initiatives that promote marriage “need to take account of how variation within marriage relates to child well-being.”

The study was funded by the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development and the National Institutes of Health Office of Behavioral and Social Sciences. The full report: <http://papers.ccpr.ucla.edu/papers/PWP-CCPR-2008-022/PWP-CCPR-2008-022.pdf.>

 

Chronicle story link: <http://www.news.cornell.edu/stories/May09/fightingParents.sl.html>

 

Media Contact: Nicola Pytell

Phone: (607) 254-6236

Cell: (607) 351-3548

E-Mail: nwp2@cornell.edu



Back to top
| Back to home page
Video

White House Live Stream
LIVE VIDEO EVERY SATURDAY
alsharpton Rev. Al Sharpton
9 to 11 am EST
jjackson Rev. Jesse Jackson
10 to noon CST


Video

LIVE BROADCASTS
Sounds Make the News ®
WAOK-Urban
Atlanta - WAOK-Urban
KPFA-Progressive
Berkley / San Francisco - KPFA-Progressive
WVON-Urban
Chicago - WVON-Urban
KJLH - Urban
Los Angeles - KJLH - Urban
WKDM-Mandarin Chinese
New York - WKDM-Mandarin Chinese
WADO-Spanish
New York - WADO-Spanish
WBAI - Progressive
New York - WBAI - Progressive
WOL-Urban
Washington - WOL-Urban

Listen to United Natiosns News