‘Working mums’ kids have better skills than those of stay at home mums’

Young children whose mothers are not working have lower capabilities in terms of talking, social skills, movement and everyday skills, according to new research from LSE and the University of Oxford.

The study found the effect was particularly significant in both everyday skills and social skills. Among other findings were that spending more time in nurseries is associated with better social skills and better everyday skills while spending more hours being cared for by grandparents is associated with better talking skills and social skills.

The paper, The development and happiness of very young children, by Professor Paul Anand of LSE, the Open University and Columbia University, and Dr Laurence Roope of the University of Oxford is published in the journal Social Choice and Welfare. The children studied were aged two and three.

The paper says having an older mother has a negative effect on all four of the skills assessed: social skills, talking, movement and everyday skills. However, having a mother with more years of education has a positive impact on all four capabilities.

The researchers also examined the effect of certain activities on young children and found that reading and shopping made them happiest.

There was also an assessment of which activities had the most impact on skills. Reading or telling stories and singing children’s songs are both found to have a positive impact on talking capabilities. Less obviously, visiting other families with children has a positive impact on talking ability.

Singing children’s songs and painting and doing arts and crafts are found to have a positive impact on the development of movement skills, which researchers linked to the actions associated with songs and the hand skills needed for arts and crafts. Taking walks outdoors is negatively associated with movement skills, but the researchers say this may be because children spend long periods in a buggy and spends less time doing other activities which appear to promote skills.

Children with more siblings have better skills in all four areas, perhaps suggesting that they are learning from older siblings, despite having less time interacting with a parent.

The paper concludes: “The welfare and happiness of economic dependents has historically been given relatively little attention in economics, yet it should arguably be a central state of the economics of wellbeing. This paper finds that material affluence is only one of a number of factors important for the development of very young children. More interactive activities between child and carer appear related to the development of both cognitive and non-cognitive capacities – and to child happiness. The finding is plausible and suggests that active parenting plays an important role in child development.”

 



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