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Achievement higher for children in
nuclear families than for children in blended or single-parent families
Educational outcomes of children in stable blended
families are substantially worse than those of children reared in
traditional nuclear families, according to a study published in the most
recent issue of the journal Demography. Both stepchildren and their
half-siblings who are the joint children of both parents achieved at
similar levels, well below children from traditional nuclear families,
according to economists Donna Ginther of the University of Kansas and
Robert Pollak of Washington University of St. Louis. Policymakers have
focused on the differences between two- parent families and
single-parent families, but this study finds that a crucial distinction
is between children raised in traditional nuclear families (families
where all children are the joint children of both parents) and children
reared in other family types (single-parent families or blended
families).
Ginther and Pollak examined achievement test results
and levels of educational attainment (high school completion, college
attendance, college graduation) of 11,064 children tracked up to 15
years in two large national studies — the National Longitudinal Survey
of Youth 1979 and the Panel Study of Income Dynamics. They found that
stepchildren and their half-siblings who spent their childhoods with
their two biological parents achieved at virtually similar levels,
significantly below children from traditional nuclear families. When the
researchers took into account family income and mother's education, the
relationship between family type and children's educational outcomes
weakened substantially and was often statistically insignificant for
children living with a single-parent. “Family structure may be
associated with other factors that contribute to how well children do in
school and whether they go on to college, such as limited time and
money,” says Ginther. “Or parents in traditional nuclear families may
differ in ways we don't fully understand from parents in blended
families and those in single-parent families.” For example, the presence
of stepchildren could be a source of stress, affecting educational
outcomes for joint children in blended families. These findings should
make policymakers cautious, Ginther argues. “Policies that are intended
to improve children's well-being often focus on promoting two-parent
families, which is easy to observe and, some believe, relatively easy to
influence through tax and welfare policy, couples' counseling, or laws
governing marriage, divorce, and child support,” says Ginther. “If the
relationship between educational achievement and family structure is
influenced by variables other than family type, then policies that seek
to affect family structure may have little or no effect on outcomes for
children.”
The full article, “Family Structure and Children's
Educational Outcomes: Blended Families, Stylized Facts, and Descriptive
Regressions,” is available on
http://www.prb.org/cpipr.
31 January 2005
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