May
27th
  6:56:18 AM

‘Mum, Dad, where are you? I need to talk’

It’s Youth Week in New Zealand and a survey of almost 10,000 students at 96 secondary schools shows that more than half of them want to spend more time with their parents.

Some 54 per cent “sometimes” or “hardly ever” get enough time with their mothers and 61 per cent sometimes or hardly ever get enough time with their dads. This is “big stuff”, says Auckland University researcher Simon Denny. “Having a close relationship with a parent is one of the most important predictors of good health and wellbeing for young people.”

An important reason for not seeing enough of one or other parent is family breakdown. Only 73 per cent of students in 2007 lived in their main home with two “parents” -- and that included step-parents. Some 29 per cent of students said they lived in more than one home, usually spending part of the time with each parent.

The majority (81 per cent) reported that family members got along well or very well, but only 71 per cent said they were happy about how they personally got on with their families. That was better, though, than the 2001 figure of 59 per cent. And 90 per cent said at least one parent cared about them a lot.

But the proportion saying they got enough time with at least one parent "most of the time" fell from 62 per cent to 56.5 per cent. Among the others, 62 per cent said they did not get enough time with their mothers because they were at work, and 72 per cent gave the same answer for their fathers.

"What we see is that from 2001 to 2007 was a period of relative economic good times when both the parents might be working more," Dr Denny said. "That means there is more money in the family, so overall the family relationships are good.

"But if parents are prioritising their work over their teenagers, I'd get concerned. [Australian author] Steve Biddulph says you can't be a good father if you're working more than 50 hours a week. I think that's a reasonable guide."

Around one in five teenagers said they missed out on parent time because either their mother or father was simply “out”. ~ NZ Herald, May 23



 
about this blog | Bookmark and Share

Search this blog

 Subscribe to FamilyEdge
rss RSS feed of posts

 Recent Posts
Why Sensible, Well-balanced Parents are Superior
10 Feb 2012
Daycare must focus on child, not adult needs, says new report
9 Feb 2012
About gender
7 Feb 2012
More time online = less happiness among girls
6 Feb 2012
Changing the way teens think
3 Feb 2012

 MercatorNet blogs
Style and culture: Tiger Print
US political scene: Sheila Liaugminas
News about bioethics: BioEdge
From the editors: Conniptions

 Archive
Feb 2012 | Jan 2012 | Dec 2011 | more >>

 From MercatorNet's home page

How hedonism became America’s official religion
9 Feb 2012
An edict from the Obama administration has ended the American experiment in religious liberty.

Bombs across the border
10 Feb 2012
The US makes a strong case that its military interventions in Pakistan are just and legal. Whether they’re good is…

A parental defence of highly effective nagging
10 Feb 2012
When a deadly habit becomes a useful tool in the parental armoury.

Lost in Transition III: A collective challenge
9 Feb 2012
Who is to blame for the moral ignorance of young adults, and what is to be done?

Pink Lego
8 Feb 2012
Why are feminists throwing their toys out of the cot over a victory for girl power?


 Tags
commitment, happiness, United Nations, media, Australia, demography, education of children, AIDS, child abuse, Spain, women, adoption, smacking, mental health, abortion, work, recession, one-child policy, family values, parental rights, video games, large families, obesity, books, fathers, family structure, health, friendship, working mothers, homosexuality, psychology, cohabitation, gender equality, pornography, trafficking, children's health, parenting, morality, fertility, family meals, young adult, brain, polygamy, character education, sexualisation of children, teenagers, education, United States, immigration, research, gender, emerging adults, Obama, men, child safety, single motherhood, unemployment, fatherhood, motherhood, suicide, adolescence, child wellbeing, France, divorce, poverty, schools, ageing, birth control, contraception, family, New Zealand, dating, children, fashion, self-control, China, social networking, South Africa, work-life balance, baby boomers, violence, media ethics, family policy, prostitution, family relationships, marriage, sexual behaviour, Africa, abstinence, internet, same-sex marriage, sex education, child welfare, Hollywood, child development, childcare, technology, family economics, child obesity, television, feminism, family breakdown, religion, girls, youth, social media,