Impact of Single Parenting on Child Development

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My Intel that raising a child in a single family home can have an extreme impact on the child lives. I am personally a single mother and raised three children by myself. I first hand saw the unbalancing of gender roles that it puts on children (my Children). When a child is raised in duel parent households, they are afforded the opportunity to choose the role they want. The child can understand the role of each parent and apply that role to their own understanding. Being raised with a single parent, your understanding of life is mirrored through the image of only one person.The weak parenting skills found among single parents in the study may be related not only to the lack of a second parent, but to a lack of income and education as well. …show more content…

But it is not clear that we should look at these variables in isolation from one another. In real life, compared to married parents, single parents tend to be poorer (because there is not a second earner in the family) and less well-educated (in part because early childbearing interrupts or discourages education), and this is what matters for their children. Regardless of family structure, the quality of parenting is one of the best predictors of children 's emotional and social well-being. Most single-parent households are run by mothers, and the absence of a …show more content…

Sometimes the mothers have the move to find a neighborhood that can accommodate the lifestyle of her financial circumstance. Children living with single parents are exposed to more stressful experiences and circumstances than are children living with continuously married parents. Although scholars define stress in somewhat different ways, most assume that it occurs when external demands exceed people 's coping resources. This results in feelings of emotional distress, a reduced capacity to function in school, work, and family roles, and an increase in physiological indicators of arousal.Many single parents, however, find it difficult to function effectively as parents. Compared with continuously married parents, they are less emotionally supportive of their children, have fewer rules, dispense harsher discipline, are more inconsistent in dispensing discipline, provide less supervision, and engage in more conflict with their

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