The Origins of Happiness

(Elliott) #1
Happiness over the Life Course

The next issue is how the parents relate to each other. There


is clear evidence that parental conflict produces badly be-


haved and unhappy children. So what about family break- up,


which the British Cohort Study identified as important? The


answer is that the measured effect of family break- up is largely


a proxy for family conflict, which is highly correlated with


it. But, where there is already conflict, does family break- up


make things even worse for the children? As we show in


Chapter 13, it depends how bad the conflict is. If the conflict


is terrible, break- up helps; if the conflict is mild, break- up


adds to the damage.


Finally how are children affected by the psychological


make- up of the parents, and especially their mother? The


mother’s mental health matters relatively little for children’s


academic performance, but it matters greatly for their be-


havior and their emotional health. Their father’s mental


health generally matters less.


So parents matter. But what about schools? Many people


think schools only affect academic performance and be-


havior, but probably not the emotional health of the child,


since this depends so heavily on the family. This view is


totally wrong. In the Avon study we know which primary


school and which secondary school each child went to. So


we can see in Figure 1.5 (b) what difference these schools


made.^15 The effect of schools is huge, holding constant the


child’s family background. Even at the age of 16 the pri-


mary school still had an enduring influence— and for be-


havior and emotional health it had as great an influence as


the secondary school.


It might be interesting to compare the importance of


schools with that of parents. But we cannot do this because,


while each school has many children in the sample, making

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