Children struggle with maths and making friends when their parents divorce, a study has found.Just a reminder, those who publish in the American Sociological Review aren't know to be members of the religious right.
They often fall behind classmates whose parents stay married, suffering from anxiety, loneliness and feeling sad – and may never catch up academically.
Contrary to some previous research, children through primary school did not show any negative effects before the parents decided to split, the U.S. study found.
But as soon as the divorce process started, the children suffered a range of problems that persisted, a report in the American Sociological Review said.
Thursday, June 02, 2011
Divorce 'permanently harms learning and affects their ability to make friends'
The Daily Mail reports: