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Journal Article

Citation

Fuller B, Caspary G, Kagan SL, Gauthier C, Huang DSC, Carroll J, McCarthy J. Early Child Res. Q. 2002; 17(4): 470-497.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2002, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/S0885-2006(02)00187-4

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

Various initiatives over the past 40 years have aimed to strengthen children's early learning and social development. One policy theory--manifest in recent welfare reforms--postulates that requiring single mothers to work more outside the home will advance children's well-being. We first examine whether young children's social development is related to maternal employment among 405 women who entered welfare-to-work programs in 1998. For girls, age 24-42 months, we found that their mother's recent employment duration was significantly associated with a lower incidence of aggressive behavior and inattentiveness, measured by two scales from the Child Behavior Checklist (CBCL 2/3). Yet these relationships with employment were weaker than more robust associations observed for proximal child-rearing practices, including the frequency of reading with the child, enforcing a regular bedtime, the propensity to spank the child, as well as levels of maternal depression. We then assess whether broader measures of the mother's economic security help to predict these proximal determinants of development. We observed that food security and indicators of job quality consistently predicted the proximal factors. Structural equation models (SEM) provided additional evidence that these broader indicators of economic security, but not recent employment per se, operated through parenting practices and maternal depression to influence girls' and boys' social development. These results are consistent with recent findings from random-assignment experiments, showing that employment gains rarely affect child outcomes unless mothers' income and broader economic security also improve.

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