Publication | Closed Access
The Effects of Early Maternal Employment on Later Cognitive and Behavioral Outcomes
299
Citations
39
References
2001
Year
Parental CareEducationMaternal EmploymentBehavioral OutcomesChild Mental HealthPsychologySocial SciencesLater CognitiveDevelopmental PsychologySocioemotional DevelopmentAfrican American StudiesCognitive DevelopmentHuman DevelopmentSocial-emotional DevelopmentEarly Childhood ExperienceChild AssessmentEarly Life ExposureChild PsychologyBehavioral SciencesChild Well-beingEarly Childhood DevelopmentWhite ChildrenMaternal HealthEarly Maternal EmploymentChild DevelopmentAdolescent Cognition
This article investigates the long‐term impact of early maternal employment on children's cognitive and behavioral outcomes. Non‐Hispanic White and African American children aged 3 to 4 in the 1986 National Longitudinal Survey of Youth were followed longitudinally to see whether the effects that prior studies found at age 3 to 4 persist into the school‐age years (ages 7 to 8) or whether those effects attenuate over time. The empirical results indicate that maternal employment in the 1st year of a child's life has significant negative effects on White children's cognitive outcomes. These effects persist to ages 7 or 8 for some children but not for others. We also found some negative effects of maternal employment in the 1st year on behavioral problems as assessed at age 7 or 8, but again these effects are found only for White children.
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