CHILDREN & DIVORCE: A SNAPSHOT

by Hilda Rodriguez and Chandler Arnold

October 1998


A Substantial Percentage of Children Experience the Divorce of Their Parents.

 

 

 

While Children of Divorce Do Not Always Experience Problems, There are Significant Negative Differences In Teen Births and High School Dropout Rates Between Children Whose Parents Have Divorced and Those Whose Parents Have Remained Together.

                                                                                Two-Parent                                 Divorce
High School Dropout Rate                                               13%                                         31%
Teen Birth Risk                                                                11%                                         33%

The Differences in Outcomes Relate in Part to Differences in the Parents and the Amount of Parental Conflict

For Affected Children, However, Marital Disruption Has Some Immediate Effects

The Intermediate Effects of Divorce on Children

Health

Academic Achievement

  • Children with divorced parents, are more likely to exhibit signs of early disengagement from school than children from intact families.
  • Marital disruption is accompanied by increases in truancy and more negative attitudes toward school. Marital disruption appears to be associated with behavioral and affective changes, rather than with changes in more cognitive phenomena like aspirations and grades.
  • Children of divorce report lower educational expectations on the part of their parents, less monitoring of school work by both their mothers and fathers, and less overall supervision of school and social activities than children from intact families. The change in parenting practices is strongest for father's monitoring of school work, which reflects the fact that most children live with their mothers after a divorce.
  • One possible reason for lower academic achievement is a diminution in income in the custodial parent's household. For example, income differences account for between 30 and 50 percent of the overall difference in high school graduation rates among children from two parent and single parent households.
  • Part of the income effect is that a decrease in income frequently leads to an increase in residential mobility. In turn, residential mobility is associated with lower school achievement. Thus, residential mobility and the accompanying disruption of social ties are potentially important mechanisms underlying the lower school achievement of children from disrupted families.
  • Moreover, children who move frequently do not receive specialized educational services, nor do they receive the individual attention they may need from teachers in order to identify gaps in their knowledge.

Behavioral Problems

Long-Term Effects of Parental Divorce

Gender Differences in the Effects of Marital Disruption

Boys and Divorce

  • The experience of marital disruption lowers boys'--but not girls'-- mathematics and reading performances. However, the adverse effect of divorce for boys' math performance is largely offset when they break-up means the termination of a high-conflict relationship.
  • Boys from disrupted families have higher high school drop out rates (28% to 20%) and behavior problems scores (23% to 14%) than girls from disrupted families.

Girls and Divorce

 


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Last Revised on 01/24/02