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      The long-term consequences of parental divorce for children’s educational attainment

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      Demographic Research
      Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research

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          Income is not enough: incorporating material hardship into models of income associations with parenting and child development.

          Although research has clearly established that low family income has negative impacts on children's cognitive skills and social-emotional competence, less often is a family's experience of material hardship considered. Using the Early Childhood Longitudinal Study, Kindergarten Class of 1998-1999 (N=21,255), this study examined dual components of family income and material hardship along with parent mediators of stress, positive parenting, and investment as predictors of 6-year-old children's cognitive skills and social-emotional competence. Support was found for a model that identified unique parent-mediated paths from income to cognitive skills and from income and material hardship to social-emotional competence. The findings have implications for future study of family income and child development and for identification of promising targets for policy intervention.
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            Children of divorce in the 1990s: an update of the Amato and Keith (1991) meta-analysis.

            P. Amato (2001)
            The present study updates the P. R. Amato and B. Keith (1991) meta-analysis of children and divorce with a new analysis of 67 studies published in the 1990s. Compared with children with continuously married parents, children with divorced parents continued to score significantly lower on measures of academic achievement, conduct, psychological adjustment, self-concept, and social relations. After controlling for study characteristics, curvilinear trends with respect to decade of publication were present for academic achievement, psychological well-being, self-concept, and social relations. For these outcomes, the gap between children with divorced and married parents decreased during the 1980s and increased again during the 1990s.
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              Achievement Inequality and the Institutional Structure of Educational Systems: A Comparative Perspective

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Demographic Research
                DemRes
                Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research
                1435-9871
                January 2014
                May 2014
                : 30
                :
                : 1653-1680
                Article
                10.4054/DemRes.2014.30.61
                9f97af94-47b8-40a3-baa4-07842bb3950e
                © 2014
                History

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