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Conflicts Between Parents a Major Cause for Child’s Adverse School Behavior

by Tanya Thomas on Sep 18 2008 4:11 PM

Some children are often branded “troublemakers” at school or suffer from severe attention problems, but this may not be their doing entirely. Researchers at the University of Rochester, Syracuse University, and the University of Notre Dame, after a comprehensive study, have identified the underlying problem. They claim that such children who time and again get into trouble are those who worry a lot about conflicts between their parents.

The researchers attribute this to the fact that such kids have more difficulty paying attention to the tasks before them.

This study is one of the first to chart how children’s concerns about their parents’ relationship may increase their vulnerability to later adjustment problems.

For the study, researchers looked at a group of 216 predominantly White 6-year-olds, their parents, and their teachers annually over a three-year period.

Children were evaluated to determine their negative thoughts and worries about how their parents got along, based on how they completed unfinished stories about conflicts between parents.

Teachers reported on children’s ability to get along with their classmates and take part in class activities, and on their behavior as a measure of how they had adjusted to school.

Specifically, they were asked whether the children were cooperative with peers, followed teachers’ directions, used classroom materials responsibly, and usually acted appropriately.

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Children’s attention problems were assessed through reports by parents and computerized measures of how they were able to focus and sustain attention.

The researchers found that kids who had concerns about how their parents got along had more attention problems a year after the concern was first identified, according to the study.

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These attention problems, in turn, were linked to reports by teachers that the children had problems adjusting to school in the same year and one year later.

Attention difficulties accounted for an average of 34 percent of the relationship between children’s worries about their parents and school problems.

In many cases, children’s negative thoughts were based on witnessing actual relationship problems between parents, and the study suggests that the children may have used the negative thoughts to help them cope with stress in high-conflict homes.

The study appears in the September/October 2008 issue of the journal Child Development.

Source-ANI
TAN/SK


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