English 1060
Sunday, April 28, 2013
Final Reflection
It's hard to believe that this semester is already over! This class has really been a challenge. Writing has never been my strong subject so making this paper great was stressful. Thankfully, I had the notes from Dr. Marquard to help guide me and the many times I had my dad read my paper to see if I had made any mistakes or if something sounded stupid haha. Overall, I feel pretty confident about my final paper. I really hope I make a good grade on it and this class. It has been a fun time in this class. I wish everyone a great summer and success throughout the rest of their education.
Writing Proposal
Natalie Abendschein
Dr. Marquard
ENG 1060-013
25 April 2013
Research Proposal
In this paper, I will be addressing the effect that
divorce has on children. Divorce is a
very hard time not only for the children involved, but for the parents as
well. With the extra stress, often
times, it can lead to parents lacking in their parenting skills causing them to
disconnect or become very critical and angry with their child without meaning
to. Research I found provides support as
to how parents can make a strong bond with their child through the Mindful
Parenting Program. Also, other research
indicates the use of school counselors and teachers to have their understanding
and connection with the child in order to help the child cope. All of this and more will help support my
argument which is, with divorce being an overwhelming experience for not only
the child, but the parents involved, it can often lead to a lack in parenting
skills that affects the child. A child
should not feel as if they have to pick a side and should be able to feel close
with both parents and have a strong relationship with both of them.
The essay will continue, arguing three different
ideas. These ideas are, first, this
essay will take a look at how a child involved in a divorce acts in school and
the ways their teachers and counselors help them. Secondly, this essay will argue if having
both parents involved in the child’s life is more beneficial to the child as
opposed to having only one parent involved.
Finally, this essay will argue that this research can effectively be
used and look at a child before a divorce, and after a divorce.
It is very important for everyone, especially parents
going through a divorce with children, to understand these ideas. With a better understanding, they will be
able to change their ways and help their child cope and even develop a much
stronger relationship with their child than they might have had before. If everyone can understand these factors,
they can help children involved in divorce, whether the child is theirs or not.
Argumentative Essay
Natalie Abendschein
Dr. Marquard
ENG 1060-013
25 April 2013
Divorce
and the Effect It Has On Children: An Argumentative Essay
Introduction
Divorce seems to be a growing trend
among our society today. People get
married at such young ages because they think that they have found the person
they want to spend forever with. People
even get married because they end up conceiving a child together and think that
getting married is what is best for the child, even if they are unsure how they
feel about the other person. A divorce
isn’t that big of an issue when there is no child in the middle. However, Liz Trinder, Joanne Kellet, and
Louise Swift state, that when a child is involved, the divorce of their parents
can have a major effect in their lives.
The age of the child does determine the effect the divorce has on them
though. For instance, if the child is
younger, the divorce of their parents is going to affect them more than a child
who is in their preteens to teenage years.
A young child involved in a divorce might feel as if they have to choose
a side or can even feel like they are the reason their parents are getting a
divorce. It is important to understand
in detail, the different ways that divorce can affect a child.
With divorce being an overwhelming
experience for not only the child, but also the parents involved, it can often
lead to a lack in parenting skills that affects the child. A child should not feel as if they have to
pick a side and should be able to feel close with both parents and have a
strong relationship with both of them.
However, sometimes the child may feel as if they should choose a side so
to say, but as Elizabeth Altmaier and Raelynn Maloney state in their article,
“it is important to improve parenting post-divorce by enhancing interpersonal
and emotional connections in a parent-child relationship.” The Mindful Parenting Program has also been
designed to help parents and their children interact and connect. Further information on this program will be
mentioned later in this essay. So with
that being stated, there are multiple articles during my research that were
found addressing this topic on divorce. Comparing these articles and understanding the
ways to improve these relationships will help anyone involved in a divorce with
children in talking to their child and understanding how their child feels and
how they can help them so the child doesn’t feel as if they are to blame.
To prove the above claim, this essay
will argue three different ideas. First
off, this essay will take a look at how a child involved in a divorce acts in
school and the ways their teachers and counselors help them. Secondly, this essay will argue if having
both parents involved in the child’s life is more beneficial to the child as opposed
to having only one parent involved.
Finally, this essay will argue that this research can effectively be
used and look at a child before a divorce, and after a divorce. After arguing and proving these three ideas,
it will become easier to see how the parenting skills can be lacked, but it
will also give reason on how to fix their parenting not only for their child,
but for them as well.
How Schools Help Children Involved
in a Divorce
Divorce can happen at any time. Not every divorce happens during summer when
children are out of school. Children,
especially elementary aged children are prone to have a much larger and harder
effect of their parents’ divorce. As
stated by the U.S. Census Bureau in 2000, “each year in the United States, more
than one million children experience parental divorce.” In an article written by Marianne Connolly
and Eric Green, they state, “Projections indicate that by age 18, approximately
40% of children will experience their parents’ divorce” (3). Connolly and Green also state, “empirical
research confirms that children of divorce are at an increased rate for the
development of psychological, behavioral, social, and academic problems”
(3). School is where a child spends 8
hours of their day Monday through Friday and for nine months out of the
year. It is important that the teachers
and the counselors know about children who are going through a divorce and
understand how they are acting in order to help them. Some children might feel as if they have no
one at home to talk to and unleash their feelings, causing them to keep it
bottled up inside of them and act in ways they normally do not. As Connolly and Green state, “school is a
familiar setting for children and can provide them with a natural support
network of classmates and teachers” (11).
It is important for a child to feel comfortable with their teachers and
their counselors. Research from Connolly
and Green confirms that, “teachers rate children from divorced families higher
on factors such as heightened anxiety surrounding academic failure, the
inability to reflect, irrelevant talk, and inattention (6). Connolly and Green also state, “research
indicates that children of divorce attend less school, watch more television,
do less homework, and have less parental supervision of their schoolwork”
(7). School counselors can help children
cope with their feelings and help them adjust to living with the divorce while
maintaining good grades in school.
The
research that Connolly and Green discuss is called Evidence-based practices,
which is a movement within psychology and education to identify, disseminate,
and promote the use of practices with demonstrated empirical support (8). The use of evidence-based practices in school
counseling requires professionals to learn more about their students and
interventions and how to evaluate and improve their program (Connolly, Green
9). A child should be able to develop a
trusting relationship with their school counselor. They should be able to feel that they can go
and speak with the counselor and know that they will not be judged or scared to
say how they really feel about their parents’ divorce. A counselor is trained to be there to help a
person in need and provide the best advice and counseling for them. School-based interventions that focus on
developing effective coping styles, clarifying misconceptions, developing
realistic appraisals of control, and providing accurate attributions for
parental problems have been shown to be associated with better adjustment in
school (Connolly, Green 11). As a
counselor, they should involve the parents as well as the teacher to provide
the best outcome. Being able to have
everyone involved in the child’s life will help the child better cope and help
the teacher understand behavior issues the child may have and help the parents’
understand their child’s feelings better (Connolly, Green 22). Most importantly, frequent communication and
updates with the parents’ is crucial in making a positive and effective change
(Connolly, Green 20).
The article by Richard Weissbourd
also ties into how school counselors and teachers can help a child cope with
divorce. In his article, Weissbourd
states some of the same things that Connolly and Green stated in their
article. Weissbourd suggests that
teachers and parents should put aside their feelings and focus on the feelings
of the child so they can better understand them mentally and emotionally (31). It is critical that a teacher know about a
child’s home life. Granted, every child
involved in a divorce is different, but if they know about the divorce, it can
help them develop a relationship with the child that they both can understand
and deal with together. Some can argue that
every child deals with divorce differently, which is true, but ultimately it is
important for the counselors, teachers and parents to develop a relationship
with the child that everyone can understand and learn to cope with the divorce
whether they show signs of distress or not (Connolly, Green 22).
This first idea helps support the
claim of this paper. By having the
child’s teachers and school counselors involved in the situation at hand, one
can take the initiative to bond with the child and understand what they are
thinking and feeling. Once they have
made that connection with the child, it can become very beneficial for everyone
involved. While some might argue that the
child’s teachers and other school officials should not be involved in this personal
matter, this research helps prove that having these connections can be very
beneficial to everyone involved.
Both Parents vs. One Parent
When a couple gets divorced, in some
cases there can be much issue with who should have primary custody of the child
and when the other parent should be able to see the child. Some divorces can become very nasty over
these issues, but what they are failing to realize is they are not hurting
themselves, they are hurting their child.
Legal disputes over the child’s wellbeing can cause a very large impact
on the child. Some parents feel that the
other parent should have no contact with the child at all; wanting them to sign
their rights away and just become a distant memory (Brown 44-45). In the article written by Joanne Kellet, Louise
Swift, and Liz Trinder, they state, “one key area of debate concerns whether
more contact with non-resident parents, typically fathers, is associated with
more positive outcomes for children” (181).
Also, the authors state, “to date, research findings suggest that
children retaining a warm and close relationship with non-resident fathers who
continue to pay child support tend to do better” (181).
It
is important that a child feels close with both parents, even if they do not
see one every day. This can be achieved
at a much better pace if both parents are cordial to each other rather than
having conflict between them. Even if
there is conflict and hard feelings between the parents, it is beneficial for
the child if they do not show that around the child. After all, it is the child who is suffering
the most and conflict between parents only causes greater stress for the child. “The most positive adjustment was amongst
children where the reporting parent was under less strain and had fewer
concerns about the parenting capacity of the other parent” (181). The primary focus post-divorce is the needs
and feelings of the child. There were
many different studies discussed in this article, however the child adjustment
measure (SDQ), was the most important one.
The SDQ is a 25 item scale with five sub-scales: conduct problems,
hyperactivity, emotional symptoms, peer problems and pro-social behavior. The first four sub-scales can be summed to
give a total difficulties score, with higher scores indicating more problem
behavior (183). It is important to
understand how the SDQ uses measurements of the child to determine the
emotional and behavioral wellbeing of them (183). As the research states, “higher scores
indicate more behavior problems” (183).
The child should not feel as if they
need to pick a side and should be able to talk to both parents about what they
are feeling. If that strong connection
is developed between the child and both parents, as well as both of the parents
getting along for the sake of the child, it is much easier for the child to
cope with the divorce and be able to move on from it.
The article by Joseph H. Brown, Pedro
Portes, Kathy Saylor, and Manbeena Sekhon suggest a similar approach. In their article, they conducted a study
known as the Divorce Adjustment Inventory-Revised (DAI-R). The study is completed by parents and
children to measure the child’s adjustment before and after divorce. It seems to be a very effective way in
measuring the child’s adjustment because they are not only getting what the
parents see and feel from the child, but also how the child feels which is the
most important factor and the reason for the studies. It also suggests that a strong parent-child
relationship with both parents is most effective in helping the child cope (64).
Also,
in the article by Bonnie Mackey and Wade C. Mackey, it states that in some
parts of the United States, the father is seen as optional, whereas in other
parts of the United States the father is seen to be an essential part of the development
of his child (139). In addition to that,
it also goes on to state, “that the on-going biological and residential social
father improves his child’s chance of graduating high school” (139). With both parents being in the child’s life,
the child can feel a sense of being complete even though their parents are no
longer together. If both parents stand
behind the child and help them every step of the way, the child might feel as
if they can accomplish anything which is a very powerful feeling. Although Mackey and Mackey inform the reader
on how having a father in the child’s life can improve their chance of
graduating, it still helps argue that both parents involved with the child are
better than one.
This
second idea also helps support the claim of this paper. Having both parents involved in the child’s
life helps the child cope better emotionally and mentally. Also, with the parents being civil for the
sake of their child, it makes the child feel closer to both of them and results
in a more efficient recovery from the divorce.
Before and After Divorce
With the mixed feelings a child
encounters during a divorce, they might find it hard to ever feel the same or
have that “family” life. With the
different research discussed previously, everyone involved in a child’s life is
important in helping them with a divorce.
A child has their peers to talk to as well as their teachers and school
counselors while they are at school.
Feeling as if they have that support at school can help them improve
their academic standing as well as give them guidance on how to deal with their
parents’ divorce. A child’s peers who
have already gone through a divorce or are going through one also can be very
helpful to the child as well. They are
talking to someone their age and they can give each other advice on how they
each cope with their feelings and possibly even suggest to each other new ways
to cope.
In
addition to school life, there is also a program designed for parents and
children going through a divorce. The Mindful Parenting Program, or MPP, was
designed to help parents and children interact and to help the parents connect
with the child by facilitating parents’ self-awareness, mindfulness, and
intentionality in parenting (Altmaier, Maloney 1232). It also talks about how the MPP helps parents
turn around how they can sometimes criticize, anger, or even withdraw from their
child without meaning to. It helps the
parents reconnect with their child and help them listen to the child and help
them cope with the divorce mentally and emotionally (Altmaier, Maloney 1232). With reading and understanding the MPP,
parents can better cope with their feelings, as well as their child’s feelings,
and help them develop a better and stronger relationship with their child
during a hard time in both of their lives. Altmaier and Maloney also state, that
it is important to improve parenting post-divorce by enhancing interpersonal
and emotional connections in a parent-child relationship (1237). By doing this, the child will maintain a
positive relationship with both parents and better cope with feelings
associated with divorce and be able to connect emotionally with both of the
parents.
Mixing
all of this research together will help parents understand what their child may
be feeling and help them make the changes they need in order to provide and
focus on their child. If the parents
realize these factors and take the steps to change it, the child involved will
eventually be able to overcome the fact that their parents got divorced and be
able to move on and enjoy life with each of the parents and maintain a strong,
open relationship with each of them.
This
final idea also helps support the claim of this paper. By having parents going through a divorce use
the many different strategies proven to work in this essay, they can take the
steps needed to help their child cope and understand that the divorce is not
their fault. Also, they can learn ways
to bond and make a strong relationship with their child. In addition, the parents can better
understand themselves and change their ways in order to better provide for the
child.
Conclusion
After reading all of this, one might
be able to argue that every divorce is different and every child is
different. This is very true, but
ultimately, even if the child does not show signs of distress and they act as
if they don’t care, they actually do deep down.
No child wants to have to go through the pain of their parents getting a
divorce, even if it is for the best. In
our society today, it seems like one cannot turn on the television or radio
without hearing about gang activity, drugs, or other crimes. Sure most of them are adults, but some are
also teenagers. If parents involved in a
divorce can take a stand and make the change and understand their child and
help their child cope and make that strong parent-child relationship, the children
in our society might have a better outlook and perspective on life and the
world. They might even want to continue
what their parents did for them and make a career out of it or just help kids
who need that one person to talk to who understands how they feel. All it takes is understanding and change, and
if society can recognize that and understand what this essay has argued, the
children involved in divorce today might grow up and make a change in the
world. It all begins with not one, but both parents making the change for the
sake of their child.
Works
Cited
Altmaier, Elizabeth,
and Raelynn Maloney. "An Initial Evaluation of a Mindful Parenting Program." Journal of Clinical
Psychology. 63. (2007): 1231-1238. Print.
Brown , Joseph H. ,
Pedro Portes, Kathy Saylor, and Manbeena Sekhon. "Assessing Children's Adjustment to Divorce Stress: A Validation
of the Divorce Adjustment Inventory- Revised
Scales Through Family Functioning and Child Adjustment Standard Measures."
Journal of Divorce &
Remarriage. 44.1/2 (2005): 47-70. Print.
Brown, Thea. "An
evaluation of a new post-separation and divorce parenting program." Family Matters. 78. (2008): 44-51. Print.
Connolly, Marianne, and
Eric Green. "Evidence-Based Counceling Interventions With Children of Divorce: Implications for Elementary School
Counselors." Journal of School Counseling.
7. (2009): 1-37. Print.
Ford, David, and
Kenneth Kickham. "Are State Marriage Initiatives Having an Effect? An
Initial Exploration of the
Impact on Divorce and Childhood Poverty Rates." Public Administration Review. 69.5 (2009):
846-854. Print.
Kellet, Joanne, Louise
Swift, and Liz Trinder. "The Relationship Between Contact and Child Adjustment in High Conflict Cases after
Divorce or Separation." Child and Adolescent Mental Health. 13.4 (2008): 181-187. Print.
Mackey, Bonnie, and
Wade Mackey. "Father Presence and Educational Attainment: Dad as a Catalyst for High School Graduates." Education.
133.1 (2012): 139-150. Print.
Pedro-Carroll, JoAnne,
and Sara Sutton. "A Two-Year Follow-up Evaluation of a Preventive Intervention for Young Children of
Divorce ." School Psychology Review. 28.3 (1999): 467-476. Print.
Sanz-De-Galdeano, Anna,
and Daniela Vuri. "Parental Divorce and Students' Performance: Evidence from Longitudinal Data." Oxford
Bulletin of Economics and Statistics . 69.3 (2007): 321-338. Print.
Weissbourd , Richard.
"The Schools We Mean to Be." Educational Leadership. 66.8
(2009): 26- 31. Print.
Service Learning Project
Hey guys! For my service learning project, I helped out a kindergarten class back home in Hope Mills. Since my major is elementary education and the grade I want to teach is kindergarten, I spoke with a teacher at Gallberry Farms Elementary who happened to be my sister's kindergarten teacher. I told her about what I had to do and she was completely on board with letting me use her class as my project. Kids hold a very dear spot in my heart and working with these children was very special to me. It's amazing how much they look up to someone who works so close with them. I went and spent every Friday with them for 5 weeks. During that time, I was able to work one on one with each student and learn a little bit about them and help them in the areas that they needed the most help in. For instance, there is one little boy who always gets in trouble and gets sent to the principle and has even been suspended twice this year. While I was there though, I was able to make a connection with him and eventually, I was the only person he would listen to and stopped getting in trouble as much. Also, a precious little girl became very very close with me. She always wanted to be around me and one day she was sitting with me and told me that her mommy had left her and moved away cause she didn't want to be with her or her siblings so now she only has a daddy. This absolutely broke my heart and I just hugged her and told her I was always there if she needed me. She then proceeded to tell me that she wishes her mommy loved her like I did. Each child is so different and so special in their own way. The days that I was there, I would read stories to them and help them learn to read and have them read some stories to me. I would also help them in their math lessons. The teacher would break the class up into three groups and the groups would rotate through different sections between the teacher, the assistant and myself. Just helping these precious children out and seeing the improvement with all of them during these few weeks is so rewarding. This project has really helped me realize that teaching is my calling and especially teaching kindergarten. Even though this class is over now, I will continue to go to their class until they are out of school. I have made such a connection with all of these kids and I want to continue to see them grow and succeed!
Monday, March 25, 2013
Course Reflection
Hey guys! Sorry I haven't posted in a while. Things have been pretty crazy over spring break and the week after. I was in the hospital with some medical issues so that's why I haven't been in class. I'm looking forward to being back tomorrow morning. Hopefully I haven't missed too much! I finished my annotated bibliography and I feel pretty good about it. I can't believe that this class is almost finished. I have learned a lot and feel like my writing has gotten better. I am excited to finish this semester off in this course and to see how much my writing has improved from the beginning of the course to the end.
Monday, January 28, 2013
Blog #1
Since starting this course a few weeks ago, we have covered many different things like our essays we will be required to write, our readings and our reading responses, as well as our service learning. I have never had a course that requires a blog or service learning for that matter. I am pretty excited to decide on where and what I want to do my five hours of service learning. I have thought of a few ideas, I am just crossing my fingers that Dr. Marquard will approve of the one I am really hoping to do. Writing has never been my strong subject, but Dr. Marquard always makes our class interesting, yet fun. I am hoping to excel in this course and come out of it with not only a good grade, but also a better appreciation of writing.
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