Why Married Parents Are Important for Children
Children of divorce experience
lasting tension as a result of the increasing differences in their parents'
values and ideas.
In the not too distant past this
question would never have been asked. Of course children should be born into a
loving marriage relationship. Or, if children were born out of wedlock, they
would be adopted and raised by generous, caring couples. Society assumed that
children needed this stability in order to thrive.
U.S. society has changed, however,
and so have attitudes towards marriage and children. Society no longer assumes
that married parents are the norm. At the same time, social science research
has confirmed the wisdom and value of traditional practice. Children do better
when raised by their married mother and father.
Some facts:
- In 2004, 68% of children still lived with two married
parents, 23% lived with only their mothers, 5% lived with only their
fathers, and 4% lived with neither of their parents (Family Structure and Children’s Living Arrangements, Federal Interagency Forum on Child and Family
Statistics.
- Only 45% of all teenage children live with their
married biological parents (The Positive Effects of Marriage: A Book of
Charts, Patrick Fagan).
- Children in single- parent families comprise 27% of all
American children, yet they account for 62% of all poor children (Ibid).
- The three most significant reasons children are raised
without their married mother and father are unwed pregnancy, cohabitation,
and divorce (The State of Our Unions: The Social Health
of Marriage in America 2006,
David Popenoe and Barbara Whitehead, National Marriage Project, print
version, p.33).
Some questions:
- Given that more than 32% of children are not living
with both their parents, what impact does this have on the children?
- Are children suffering or are they resilient? Can they
rebound from divorce and emerge even stronger? Or are they at-risk for
long-term negative effects?
- Are children better off with one parent who loves them
than two parents who are bickering and fighting?
Some answers from the Social
Sciences:
- Children raised in intact married families:
are more likely to attend college
are physically and emotionally healthier
are less likely to be physically or sexually abused
are less likely to use drugs or alcohol and to commit delinquent behaviors
have a decreased risk of divorcing when they get married
are less likely to become pregnant/impregnate someone as a teenager - Children receive gender specific support from having a
mother and a father. Research shows that particular roles of mothers
(e.g., to nurture) and fathers (e.g., to discipline), as well as complex
biologically rooted interactions, are important for the development of
boys and girls (Marriage and the Public Good: Ten Principles, 2006).
- A child living with a single mother is 14 times more
likely to suffer serious physical abuse than is a child living with
married biological parents. A child whose mother cohabits with a man other
than the childÃs father is 33 times more likely to suffer serious physical
child abuse (The Positive Effects of Marriage: A Book of
Charts, Patrick Fagan).
- In married families, about one- third of adolescents
are sexually active. For teenagers in stepfamilies, cohabiting households,
divorced families, and those with single unwed parents, the percentage
rises above one-half (The Positive Effects of Marriage: A Book of
Charts, Patrick Fagan).
- Children of divorce experience lasting tension as a
result of the increasing differences in their parents values and ideas. At
a young age they must make mature decisions regarding their beliefs and
values. Children of so- called “good divorces” fare worse emotionally than
children who grew up in an unhappy but “low-conflict” marriage (Ten Findings from a National Study on the Moral and Spiritual
Lives of Children of Divorce,
Elizabeth Marquardt).
Does this mean that it’s better to
stay in a bad marriage than to get a divorce?
It depends. Statistics are
generalizations. Many loving parents are able to compensate for the traumatic
effect of divorce on a child. On the other hand, the research cited above
should warn parents to slow down and proceed with caution before deciding that
divorce is the best solution for the child.
Parents’ marital unhappiness and
discord negatively affect their children’s well- being, but so does the
experience of going through a divorce. Children in very high conflict homes may
benefit by being removed from the conflict. In lower-conflict marriages, and
perhaps as many as two-thirds of divorces are of this type, the situation of
the children can be made much worse following a divorce. These children benefit
if parents can stay together and work out their problems rather than get a
divorce (Paul R. Amato and Alan Booth, A Generation at Risk, Cambridge, MA:
Harvard University Press, 1997).
All marriages have their ups and
downs. Recent research using a large national sample found that 86% of people
who were unhappily married in the late 1980s, and stayed with the marriage,
were happier when interviewed five years later. Indeed, 60% of the formerly
unhappily married couples rated their marriages as either “very happy” or “quite
happy” (Unpublished research by Linda J. Waite, cited in Linda J. Waite and
Maggie Gallagher, The Case for Marriage, New York: Doubleday, 2000, p.148).
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