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Having No Dad Affects Black Boys' Self-Esteem. Life with
father translates to stronger kids
Julia
McNamee Neenan HealthScout Reporter
(HealthScout) -- Living in a fatherless family
damages a black boy's self-esteem, says an American study released
recently.
"In the black community, there's a slogan, 'Black mothers
raise their daughters and love their sons,' " says one of the study's
authors, Carolyn B Murray, an associate professor at the University of
California, Riverside. "It's the father who holds that boy accountable. He
has that boy toe the line; he holds the rules and
responsibilities."
But when fathers aren't present in black
families, regardless of such things as family income and education, young
boys' self-esteem drops, the study says. That doesn't appear to happen
with young girls in these families, it says. What this means for the boys,
experts say, can range from their having problems in school to
participating in gangs as part of their search for male role models. It's
a "real crisis," Murray says.
Just 25 per cent of black children
were raised in homes in which only the mother was present in 1960, she
says, but that number had climbed to 54 per cent by 1993. In addition, she
says, 78 per cent of all black families were headed by married couples in
1950, down to 34 per cent by 1996.
The children's scores on the
study's tests reflect these statistics.
Measuring general
self-esteem, for instance, boys from families headed by married couples
scored higher than boys from families headed solely by a mother, the
researchers say. Girls scored similarly, but with much less difference
between the two groups.
Scores on specific self-esteem issues
paint an even darker picture, Murray says, citing the question of how a
boy sees his body, or how macho he feels. Boys coming from families with a
father scored higher -- meaning they felt stronger, more competitive --
than did boys from families without fathers, the study says.
The
findings, based on a study of 116 African-American 15-year-olds from
Southern California, appeared in the September issue of the Journal of
Family Psychology.
The dangers this poses for young black boys
can be serious, Murray says, though she cautions that it's important not
to generalize.
"They're at risk for joining gangs because they're
looking for a male influence, for direction, for a male model," she says.
"And they're also at risk for not doing as well at school."
The
absence of a father seems to lead to lower self-esteem because fathers
expect more from their sons than mothers do, Murray says. Where a mother
might expect a daughter to do homework, get dinner prepared and clean the
house after school, she says, the mother might expect little from a
son.
And expectations that are met yield higher self-esteem, she
says. "Mothers hold girls accountable; fathers hold boys accountable,"
Murray says. "Two parents are better than one."
George Garrow,
executive director of the National Organization of Concerned Black
Men, says boys growing up in fatherless families seem to do well until
the age of 9 or 10, when they begin to need focus. Lacking a father's
influence, he says, they begin to seek male role models elsewhere.
"Then they find their role model experience from other young boys,
who are equally clueless," Garrow says.
If the father role is
never filled, he says, the boys may join gangs or find unhealthy mentors.
"The young man is going to play out what he thinks this image is, to be a
man," Garrow says.
In the end, he says, it's not just the
self-esteem that's damaged by the absence of a father. "It impacts the
psychological, social and emotional development of young boys," Garrow
says.
The California study shows family income playing a small
part in boys' self-esteem, as does how the family is organized. Boys
probably feel more responsible for a family's income and how power is
divided in the family, Murray speculates. How well a family actually
functions, however, had a much greater effect on girls than boys, she
says, probably because girls take responsibility for
relationships.
Marriage counselling and jobs programs that would
help black men remain at home could help the situation portrayed in the
study, Murray says.
What To Do
Schoolboys'
achievements can be raised by persuading them that they can overcome a
street culture that is anti-achievement, British researchers
say.
The culture - black-dominated but cutting across ethnic groups
- means they feel they cannot be good at school and keep in with their
peers, according to Tony Sewell, a lecturer in education at Leeds
University, as reported by BBC News Online.
But pilot projects
have shown it is possible to overcome this, he said. For general info
about raising your child's self-esteem, including an array of links to
other helpful Web sites, visit About.com. For an alternative view, take
a look at this essay from the Centre for Equal Opportunity, which
says action comes first, then self-esteem.
Please print this article and share it with someone you
know....
Copyright
© 2001 BayState
Web Technologies, Inc. All rights reserved. Republication or
redistribution of BlackBostonOnline.com content is expressly prohibited
without the prior written consent of BayState Web Technologies,
Inc.
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