(PDF) A Review of Family Structure’s Effects on Children's ...
PDF | On Jan 1, 2022, Wenli Yang published A Review of FamilyStructure’s Effects on Children's Mental Well Being | Find, read and cite all the research you need on ResearchGate
The Increasing Diversity and Complexity of Family Structures ...
We recommend social network and profile-based methods as alternatives to capturing key dimensions of familystructure and processes. Understanding the diversity of households and families in which adolescents are raised can improve theory and research on parenting.
The impact of family structure on the health of children ...
Nearlythreedecades of research evaluating the impact of familystructure on the health and well-being of children demonstrates that children living with their married, biological parents consistently have better physical, emotional, and academic well-being.
Family structure and child outcomes: a high definition, wide ...
Using data from the National Survey of America’s Families (NSAF), this research investigates the relationships between a highly defined set of family structures and a broad set of child outcomes at a particular point in time in a child’s life.
Family Structure Stability and Transitions, Parental ... - MDPI
Socioeconomicstratification plays a major role in family structure, with low-income families seeing more instability. We argue that the impact of family structure is attenuated by transitions in and out of family structures that may decrease a specific resource important to child academic outcomes: parental involvement.
The Effects of Family Structure and Family Process on the ...
Familystructure is hypothesized to indirectly influence children’s psychological well-being by affecting family processes, such as parent-child relationships and parental conflict, background variables, such as income, and individual characteristics, such as mother’s psychological well-being.
Family Dynamics and Child Outcomes: An Overview of Research ...
In this article, which is the introduction to the Special Issue on “Family dynamics and children’s well-being and life chances in Europe,” we refine this picture by identifying variation in this conclusion depending on the family transitions and subpopulations studied.
Effects of Family Structure on Mental Health of Children: A ...
Our study highlighted the role of psychosocial factors, namely, familystructure and its adverse effects on the mental well-being of children. Keywords: Familystructure, hospitalization rates, single parents, trauma.
The Impact of Family Structure and Family change on Child ...
Over the past two decades or so, a significant literature has developed on the impact of familystructure and family change on child wellbeing. This literature documents an accumulating body of evidence that children raised in different family contexts display differential patterns of outcomes across a wide range of developmental domains.
Journal of Family Theory & Review - Wiley Online Library
We reflect on dominant methodological trends across four primary domains: (a) approaches to measuring familystructure, (b) approaches to analyzing associations between family structure and well-being, (c) the application of theory, and (d) conceptualizations of well-being.
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PDF | On Jan 1, 2022, Wenli Yang published A Review of Family Structure’s Effects on Children's Mental Well Being | Find, read and cite all the research you need on ResearchGate
We recommend social network and profile-based methods as alternatives to capturing key dimensions of family structure and processes. Understanding the diversity of households and families in which adolescents are raised can improve theory and research on parenting.
Nearly three decades of research evaluating the impact of family structure on the health and well-being of children demonstrates that children living with their married, biological parents consistently have better physical, emotional, and academic well-being.
Using data from the National Survey of America’s Families (NSAF), this research investigates the relationships between a highly defined set of family structures and a broad set of child outcomes at a particular point in time in a child’s life.
Socioeconomic stratification plays a major role in family structure, with low-income families seeing more instability. We argue that the impact of family structure is attenuated by transitions in and out of family structures that may decrease a specific resource important to child academic outcomes: parental involvement.
Family structure is hypothesized to indirectly influence children’s psychological well-being by affecting family processes, such as parent-child relationships and parental conflict, background variables, such as income, and individual characteristics, such as mother’s psychological well-being.
In this article, which is the introduction to the Special Issue on “Family dynamics and children’s well-being and life chances in Europe,” we refine this picture by identifying variation in this conclusion depending on the family transitions and subpopulations studied.
Our study highlighted the role of psychosocial factors, namely, family structure and its adverse effects on the mental well-being of children. Keywords: Family structure, hospitalization rates, single parents, trauma.
Over the past two decades or so, a significant literature has developed on the impact of family structure and family change on child wellbeing. This literature documents an accumulating body of evidence that children raised in different family contexts display differential patterns of outcomes across a wide range of developmental domains.
We reflect on dominant methodological trends across four primary domains: (a) approaches to measuring family structure, (b) approaches to analyzing associations between family structure and well-being, (c) the application of theory, and (d) conceptualizations of well-being.