S
SpiritMeadow
Guest
I’ve never seen any good studies that suggest that only traditional male/female parenting is good. What I have seen through a number of studies over the years is that children do well if they are loved, given time, supported in their identity and specialness, and given a rich environment in which to explore. This seems to have very little to do with gender of the care giver or their situation. Of course all children deserve a decent financial situation but everyone knows of dozens of anecdotal cases of kids reared in dire circumstances by tenacious mothers who went on to be leaders in their fields. Anecdotal evidence is not definitive by any means, but as I said, I’ve yet so see a good study (one not done by fundamentalists from the right) done by a reputable institution that suggests that only the traditional family situation produces good results.I’m being a bis lazy and just skimmed the previous posts. A major problem in studies comparing same gender to traditional families is a major sampling bias. Most studies (at least in theory) try to take a random sample of people to study. Our societies not accepting of same gender families has resulted in many cases in only the very best same gender people having children in their care.
So many studies compare the very best same gendered families to the average traditional families.
Thus the making any such research questionable.