Children Affected By Divorce

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Effected by Divorce Divorce is a serious issue that one third of all children will endure by the time they are eighteen years old. In past times, divorce was not as common as it is today and sometimes is not taken very seriously these days. Despite the fact that it may appear to profit a few people in some individual cases, overall divorce causes a variety of affects. Some affects can be more severe than others and some may be short term while others end up becoming long term. Divorce does not discriminate and neither do the effects that it causes. Over half of all of America’s children are children of a divorced home. Examples of the effects from divorce range from single parent homes to psychological issues and divorce will never affect …show more content…
The severity of the financial burden is determined by a handful of factors like how much the woman contributed to the family income before the divorce and the willingness of her former husband to make child support payments. Due to this, twenty percent of mothers will fall into poverty as a result and only twenty-five percent of them with child support orders will receive full child support payments. The children involved can be severely affected by the financial burden caused by a divorce. The single parent is often working longer hours than before the divorce so the child is less likely to get quality time with their parents and the child is also less likely to participate in extracurricular activities due to lack of finances and time. Children are over fifty percent less likely to attend college due to the financial strains caused by the divorce of their parents thus affecting their …show more content…
Even if the child has high ambition to do better in school, the child is twenty percent more likely to be held back a grade and have a lower grade point average than a child whose parents are still married. Only half of the children suffering the effects of a divorce are likely to attend college if they are lucky to graduate high school. Children from a divorced home have a twenty-five percent more chance to drop out of high school or skip their high school classes than other children. A child’s grades can also be affected by relocation, which thirty percent of children must go through after a divorce. This sometimes causes the child to have to start a new school which not only affects the child’s grades but their social friendships, behavioral problems, and emotional