The Shocking Truths of Divorce

1075 Words3 Pages

An absence of a parent or a parent’s separation, divorce, when a child is developing, may affect the child’s future relationships. “Evidence shows that, on average, children who have experienced parental divorce score somewhat lower than children in first-marriage families on measures of social development, emotional well-being, self-concept, academic performance, educational attainment, and physical health” (Demo, Supple)

Since there are high rates of divorce in America, I decided to write about it. Providing facts that might persuade the reader to think the way I do. Divorce is like a disease, it starts with a disagreement until the relationship is destroyed.

According to Princeton University, today less than half of children grow with both parents, one third are born to unmarried families, and another third are born to married parents who divorce before the child reaches adulthood. According to the National Institute of Child health and human development, the child population in the United States is around 26 % [70.2 million]. If Princeton University’s research was accurate: half of the children population grows with both parents, then it’s obviously 50 % of the child population. Breaking it down to number it would be around 35.1 million children who live with both parents. One third are born to unmarried families, it’s around 23.4 million children, 33 %. And the other third of children in the United States are born to married parents then divorce before the child reaches adulthood would be around 23.4 million children, 33 %. I was impressed to see these high numbers. It was just insane to see how many divorced families reside in the United States. According to divorcerate.org, the divorce rate on 2010 in America is betwee...

... middle of paper ...

...ation between couples, go to a counselor. Try to work things out. If the relationship still doesn’t work, then why have a child!

Works Cited

David H. Demo, Andrew J. Supple. “Effects on Children”. N.d. web. October 31, 2010.

DivorceRate.org ”What is the current divorce rate in America?”.N.d. Web. October 31, 2010. < http://divorcerate.org/>

Eunice, Kennedy, Shriver. ”Forum on Child and Family Statistics”. National Institute of Child Health & Human Development. 2000. Web.

Michael E. Lamb. “The Role of the Father in Child development”.2004. Web. October 31, 2010. < http://leecollege.polarislibrary.com>

Michael E. Lamb. “Parenting and Child Development in “Nontraditional Families”. 1999. Web. October 31, 2010. < http://leecollege.polarislibrary.com>

Open Document