Here's another study pointing out the self evident truth that a married mom and dad household is the best environment for raising children.
There is a new and significant piece of evidence in the social
science debate about gay parenting and the unique contributions that
mothers and fathers make to their children’s flourishing. A study
published last week in the journal Review of the Economics of the Household—analyzing
data from a very large, population-based sample—reveals that the
children of gay and lesbian couples are only about 65 percent as likely
to have graduated from high school as the children of married,
opposite-sex couples. And gender matters, too: girls are more apt to
struggle than boys, with daughters of gay parents displaying
dramatically low graduation rates.
Unlike US-based studies, this one evaluates a 20 percent sample of
the Canadian census, where same-sex couples have had access to all
taxation and government benefits since 1997 and to marriage since 2005.
While in the US Census same-sex households have to be guessed at
based on the gender and number of self-reported heads-of-household,
young adults in the Canadian census were asked, “Are you the child of a
male or female same-sex married or common law couple?” While study
author and economist Douglas Allen noted that very many children in
Canada who live with a gay or lesbian parent are actually living with a
single mother—a finding consonant with that detected in the 2012 New Family Structures Study—he was able to isolate and analyze hundreds of children living with a gay or lesbian couple (either married or in a “common law” relationship akin to cohabitation).
So the study is able to compare—side by side—the young-adult children
of same-sex couples and opposite-sex couples, as well as children
growing up in single-parent homes and other types of households. Three
key findings stood out to Allen:
children of married opposite-sex families
have a high graduation rate compared to the others; children of lesbian
families have a very low graduation rate compared to the others; and
the other four types [common law, gay, single mother, single father] are
similar to each other and lie in between the married/lesbian extremes.
Employing regression models and series of control variables, Allen concludes that the substandard performance cannot
be attributed to lower school attendance or the more modest education
of gay or lesbian parents. Indeed, same-sex parents were characterized
by higher levels of education, and their children were more likely to be
enrolled in school than even those of married, opposite-sex couples.
And yet their children are notably more likely to lag in finishing their
own schooling.
The same is true of the young-adult children of common law parents,
as well as single mothers and single fathers, highlighting how
little—when you lean on large, high-quality samples—the data have
actually changed over the past few decades. The intact, married
mother-and-father household remains the gold standard for children’s
progress through school. What is surprising in the Canadian data is the
revelation that lesbian couples’ children fared worse, on average, than
even those of single parents.
The truly unique aspect of Allen’s study, however, may be its ability
to distinguish gender-specific effects of same-sex households on
children. He writes:
the particular gender mix of a same-sex
household has a dramatic difference in the association with child
graduation. Consider the case of girls. . . . Regardless of the controls
and whether or not girls are currently living in a gay or lesbian
household, the odds of graduating from high school are considerably
lower than any other household type. Indeed, girls living in gay
households are only 15 percent as likely to graduate compared to girls
from opposite sex married homes.
Thus although the children of same-sex couples fare worse overall,
the disparity is unequally shared, but is instead based on the
combination of the gender of child and gender of parents. Boys fare
better—that is, they’re more likely to have finished high school—in gay
households than in lesbian households. For girls, the opposite is true.
Thus the study undermines not only claims about “no differences” but
also assertions that moms and dads are interchangeable. They’re not.
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