Communiqué
Study: Religion is Good for Kids
Kids with religious parents are better behaved and adjusted than
other children, according to a new study that is the first to look
at the effects of religion on young child development.
The conflict that arises when parents regularly
argue over their faith at home, however, has the opposite
effect.
John Bartkowski, a Mississippi State University sociologist and his
colleagues asked the parents and teachers of more than 16,000 kids,
most of them first-graders, to rate how much self control they
believed the kids had, how often they exhibited
poor or unhappy behavior and how well they respected and worked
with their peers.
The researchers compared these scores to how frequently the
children’s parents said they
attended worship services, talked about religion with their
child and argued abut religion in the home.
The kids whose parents regularly attended religious
services—especially when both parents did so frequently—and talked
with their kids about religion were rated by both parents and
teachers as having better self-control, social skills and approaches
to learning than kids with non-religious parents.
But when parents argued frequently about religion, the children were
more likely to have problems. “Religion can hurt if faith is a
source of conflict or tension in the family,” Bartkowski noted.
Why so good?
Bartkowski thinks religion can be good for kids for three reasons.
First,
religious networks provide social support to parents, he said,
and this can improve their parenting skills. Children who are
brought into such networks and hear parental messages reinforced by
other adults may also “take more to heart the messages that they get
in the home,” he said.
Secondly, the types of values and norms that circulate in religious
congregations tend to be self-sacrificing and pro-family, Bartkowski
told LiveScience. These “could be very, very important in shaping
how parents relate to their kids, and then how children develop in
response,” he said.
Finally, religious organizations imbue parenting with sacred meaning
and significance, he said.
University of Virginia sociologist W. Bradford Wilcox, who was not
involved in the study, agrees. At least for the most religious
parents, “getting their kids into heaven is more important than
getting their kids into Harvard,” Wilcox said.
But as for why religious organizations might provide more of a boost
to family life than secular organizations designed to do the same
thing, that’s still somewhat of a mystery, said Annette Mahoney, a
psychologist at Bowling Green State University in Ohio, also not
involved in the research. Mahoney wondered: “Is there anything about
religion and spirituality that sets it apart?”
Unanswered questions
Bartkowski points out that one limitation of his study, to be
published in the journal Social Science Research, is that it did not
compare how denominations differed with regards to their effects on
kids.
“We really don’t know if conservative Protestant kids are behaving
better than Catholic kids or behaving better than mainline
Protestant kids or Jewish kids,” he said.
It’s also possible that the correlation between
religion and child development is the other way around, he said.
In other words, instead of religion having a positive effect on
youth, maybe the parents of only the best behaved children feel
comfortable in a religious congregation.
“There are certain expectations about children’s behavior within a
religious context, particularly within religious worship services,”
he said. These expectations might frustrate parents, he said, and
make congregational worship “a less viable option if they feel their
kids are really poorly behaved.”
- Churchgoers Live Longer
-
Interracial Couples Invest More in Kids�
- Online Prayer Helps Cancer Patients
- Original Story: Study: Religion is Good for Kids
St. Margaret's Episcopal School consistently exceeds the expectations of parents and students. We invite you to visit our campus to discuss your child's education future or email us at school@stmargarets.org.