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The Kids Are Alright

By Cindy Kuzma, Choice! Magazine. Posted June 9, 2005.


An extensive research study confirms what advocates have been saying for over fifty years: children of gay and lesbian parents are doing just fine.
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Orson Morrison is a 32-year-old clinical psychologist from Toronto. Jesse Carr is a 23-year-old non-profit staff member from a rural Pennsylvania town. Jessie Voors is a 16-year-old high school sophomore from Fort Wayne, IN. Erinne Kovi is a 29-year-old businesswoman and mother of one from Ohio.

What do these four people have in common? They all have gay or lesbian parents. Each of them recognizes that in many ways they are unique. But a new study, published in the journal Child Development, confirms what they have always known: They're just as well-adjusted as people with heterosexual parents.

A New Generation of Research

Researchers have been studying the children of gay and lesbian parents for almost 50 years, trying to find out if they have more problems than other kids. Do they have more behavior problems, a harder time making friends, or difficulties with sexual identity? The answer, time and again, has been a resounding "No."

Before now, as critics are quick to point out, research in this area has had various limitations - in particular, small sample groups and a lack of educational or socioeconomic diversity. But this most recent study is helping to usher in what lead researcher Charlotte Patterson, a professor of psychology at the University of Virginia, calls a "new generation of research."

Patterson and her colleagues used data from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health, a survey of more than 12,000 high school students from across the country. "Using a national sample makes us more confident that the findings are stable and applicable to the broad range of adolescents in the U.S.," says co-author Stephen Russell, associate professor of family studies and human development at the University of Arizona.

The sample size is larger, and the results are still the same. "What this study shows, and what countless other studies have shown, is that sexual orientation is irrelevant in terms of promoting and rearing a healthy child," says Suzanne Johnson, associate professor of psychology at Dowling College and co-author of The Gay Baby Boom. "What matters is who the person is, not who they love."

Relationships Are Key

Teens with same-sex parents were identical to those with opposite-sex parents in almost every area analyzed, from anxiety levels to autonomy, and even grade-point average. It was kids' relationships with their parents, not the gender of their parents' partners, that clearly influenced their development. Those with warm, caring family bonds were doing better at home, in school, and in their social lives than those without them. Other studies have also found parental warmth - being a caring, understanding, and accepting parent - to be one of the most powerful forces behind the healthy development of children and adolescents, regardless of race, socioeconomic status, family structure, and sexual orientation. Gay and lesbian parents are just as likely as heterosexual parents to meet - or to fail to meet - their children's needs for healthy development.

This comes as no surprise to those with experience in child development, including Aimee Gelnaw, executive director of the Family Pride Coalition (http://www.familypride.org), a lesbian and gay organization, and a mother herself. "There's so much that we know about the ingredients to well-being," she says, emphasizing the importance of loving, stable households. "When you bake a cake, it doesn't matter who dumps in the flour. It's just got to be there."


Digg!

Cindy Kuzma is an editor and freelance writer based in Chicago.

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good article; bad grammar
Posted by: amiabledave on Jun 9, 2005 3:30 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I agree with the points made in the article. As a straight who's had many gay friends over the course of my 65-year life, I never assumed that the truth would be otherwise.

What troubles me is the non-standard word in the heading: ALRIGHT. Journalists ought to know better. Correct usage is "all right."

David

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» RE: good article; good reference Posted by: Samantha Vimes
thanks!
Posted by: BTork on Jun 10, 2005 10:05 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I hear the point every now and again about the American Medical Association studies showing that children in gay and lesbian households tend to grow up just as well, if not better, than children in straight parent households. It's good to see articles like this, easily quotable, backing it up.

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Not So Fast
Posted by: faultroy on Jun 10, 2005 6:46 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I hate to rain on previous posters' parades, but not so fast.
I tried to follow up on this sweet little warm and fuzzy story and came up with a number of disturbing issues: 1) Same sex marriages have even higher divorce rates than heterosexuals.
In one of the articles, the blissful union disolved with one of the Lesbian couple indicating that "she was no longer a Lesbian" and therefore petitioned the court to refuse paternity rights to the other since the orignal doner sperm was not the other's--of course, the child, the innocent was in the middle.
It is curious how the story purports to reinforce the notion that there is absolutely no harm to the children when one of the children intereviewed, at some point in the future, would like to discuss "how they are different."
While I have no (conscious) prejudice against same sex unions, I do have concerns about child rearing.
I would like a more in depth study done by someone like the Center for Disease Control--to look at all possible ramifications. I'm not convinced with the high teenage suicide rate that this could not put even more pressure on certain at risk teens.
I cannot imagine being a kid in school and being perpetually teased about my "fag," parents. I do not know if I could ethically put a child through this. Nor am I convinced that anyone else should.
The originators of this study are the same ones that told America that divorce has no negative effect on children.
Now, with USA seeing double digit divorce rates and latch key kids, women and men thrown into economic poverty, they say they "made a mistake," and divorce does play a major role in
a child's upbringing, assimilation and ability to thrive and
make a family.
I would need a lot more information from unbiased sources before I could give my stamp of approval on this kind of a position.

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» RE: Not So Fast Posted by: stewer
» RE: Not So Fast Posted by: hagwind
» RE: Not So Fast Posted by: zannel