Don’t Write Off The ‘Nuclear Family’
Media Release 7 Sep 2016
Family First is warning that recent media headlines such as “Mum, dad and the kids? Not so much …” “nuclear family a thing of the past“ and “the nuclear family has exploded” are misleading because of the shortcomings and limitations of the research that the statements are based on.
“The research comes from a very small sample of just over two hundred 15-year-olds. The study itself states that ‘the sample cannot be generalized to all New Zealand children.’ This is primarily because the 15 year-olds’ parents were young at the time of their birth, but also because it is not a random sample of NZ teenagers,” says Bob McCoskrie, National Director of family First NZ.
“The mothers’ median age was just 22 and young maternal age is a known marker for increased instability of family life. The study authors state that ‘young parenthood may be associated with educational and socioeconomic disadvantage’. That only 26 percent were living with two biological parents by age 15 may be an effect of this disadvantage and distinct to this sample.”
“Additionally, nuclear families are defined as mother, father and siblings. To highlight the finding that ‘7 percent lived their whole lives in households containing only nuclear family members’ only tells us that many lived in households including a grandparent or boarder for instance. If we look at nuclear families of the past, the same would almost certainly be true. This is primarily a report on the living arrangements of children,” says Mr McCoskrie.
“Significantly, the study also fails to distinguish between couples who are married and de facto couples.”
“Marriage is an important social good with a smorgasbord of positive outcomes for children and adults alike. This has been discovered from decades of research. In virtually every category that social science has measured, children and adults do better when parents get married and stay married – provided there is no presence of high conflict or violence. This is not a criticism of solo parents. It simply acknowledges the benefits of the institution of marriage. Governments should develop policies which encourage and support what works best,” says Mr McCoskrie.
Despite these shortcomings the study does provide new and useful data about the diversity and frequent disruption of some family households. Participants had lived in an average of 9.1 houses by age 15. Discussion about the impact of changing schools and social networks is raised but left unanswered by the researchers. Ironically a separated mother highlighted in one of the media reports of the study said, ‘Everyone is a bit sick of moving I think. The kids want a forever home.’
Family First believes that children want and need stability and security. Study after study shows the nuclear family – with or without Grandma living downstairs – is the best model for providing these.
“It’s regrettable that many seem happy to write off the nuclear family. Fortunately they are premature. The number of unmarried births is now falling as are divorce rates.”
ENDS
Limitations of the Study
“There are limitations to this study because of the nature of the cohort. This is not a random sample of New Zealand teenagers. All participants had at least one parent born in Dunedin and some were from the same families. The participants had relatively young parents at birth (median mothers’ age was 22) and young parenthood may be associated with educational and socioeconomic disadvantage. However, the parents of these participants were not extremely young: there were very few teenage parents. While the sample cannot be generalised to all New Zealand children, the participants represent a group of children who are often the target of social policy: those with young parents. They also comprise a group of young people not often represented in research, including those who have left education or come from very disadvantaged backgrounds. There was a high participation rate (82%) and the participants displayed a sense of commitment and trust in supplying full data. Participants came from both urban and rural locations, and include both New Zealand Europeans and Māori although there were few from other ethnic groups.”
http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/1177083X.2016.1196715
EDITORIAL: Married, with Children?
Fans of the traditional family should not be intimidated by bad statistics.
Glenn T. Stanton/ November 14, 1994
http://www.christianitytoday.com/ct/1994/november14/4td021.html
A model of a traditional family? Not according to the spin the media put on a recent report by the U.S. Census Bureau. “The Diverse Living Arrangements of Children: Summer 1991.” This report captured headlines across the country, claiming that the “traditional family” is nearly the exception, rather than the rule. As proof, the press highlighted the bureau’s claims that only 50.8 percent of all children live in a traditional “nuclear” family. What got lost in the interpretation, however, was the fact that the report defined “traditional” as any family consisting of two married adults living with only biological children. Ironically, the father of the family described above, James C. Dobson, founder and president of Focus on the Family, is the nation’s staunchest and best-known advocate of the “traditional family.” The Census Report would not define his family as traditional because all the children raised in the Dobson home were not biological.
Using the Census Bureau’s definition of the traditional family, many of the icons of family life we know through television would also be excluded. The Waltons miss out because they have Grandma and Grandpa living under the same roof. And forget the Brady Bunch, because Mike and Carol Brady created a blended family after their spouses died. Even Steve Douglas’s My Three Sons fails to measure up because he was a widowed, single dad.