Where are the studies that show the outcomes are as good for children raised by single parents or cohabiting parents, compared to children raised by biological married parents? As for children raised by homosexual parents, I think there is a question mark on their outcomes compared to other children because where are the studies on outcomes for children raised by homosexual parents that don’t have issues such as being open to social desirability bias, small samples etc.
I think the study you are referring to is the one sponsored by the American Academy of Pediatrics which spans 3 decades.
Siegel, a School of Medicine professor of pediatrics, coauthored a report, published by the American Academy of Pediatrics the week before the court case, arguing that three decades of research concur that kids of gay parents are doing just fine.
“Many studies have demonstrated that children’s well-being is affected much more by their relationships with their parents, their parents’ sense of competence and security, and the presence of social and economic support for the family than by the gender or the sexual orientation of their parents,” Siegel writes with coauthor Ellen Perrin, a Tufts University professor of pediatrics and director of developmental and behavioral pediatrics.
In an interview with BU Today, Siegel acknowledges the limits of all this research: none of the studies has been a randomized, controlled trial—the Holy Grail of scientific investigation—and all studies of gay parenting are necessarily small, since there aren’t many gay parents. The report cites estimates that gay couples and single parents are raising almost two million American children.
Granted, samples are small and the nature of science is to be skeptical but it is an excellent start. I have come across many people here on CAF who believe that the ONLY credible parent are legitimately married man and woman and have made up their minds that SS sex parenting should be stopped if not eliminated. The study referred to spans 3 decades and does not falsify that SS parents are incapable of providing quality parenting and a suitable environment to raise children. If fact the implications are that it is the quality of the parents and not the orientation that is the important condition.
Indulge me while I switch to a different scenario of the close to one half million kids in foster care many of whom do not fare well. Rather than expend rhetoric, time, money and energy on condemning SS parenting why not put our rhetoric, efforts, time and money to promoting good families for those in real need.