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(800) 364-6933 Birth mother hotline
Education
- Only 50 percent of teenage mothers finish high school.
- Only 70 percent
of teenage fathers finish high school
- 90 percent of mothers under
the age of sixteen will never finish high school.
- Less than two percent
of women who become mothers before the age of twenty will complete
college.
- Lack of education usually results in an inability to get
adequate jobs.
Employment
- Teenage parents are more likely to have low status jobs,
lower hourly wages or be unemployed.
- The younger the mother at childbirth,
the lower her family income will be.
Poverty
- There is a direct link between poverty and teenage parenting.
Families headed by young mothers are seven times more likely
to be poor.
- 71 percent of AFDC recipients under thirty were teenagers when
their first child was born.
- Of all families with young children headed
by women who gave birth as teenagers, 67 percent live below the
officially designated poverty level.
- A study found that only one in ten children
in two-parent families were poor while two out three children
living in single parent homes were poor.
Future Pregnancies
- Teenage mothers are likely to raise large unplanned families
alone. 60 percent of teenagers gave birth before the age of sixteen
will be pregnant again before the age of eighteen.
Concerns About Children of Single Parents
- Children of single parents are likely to have lower I.Q scores
and are more likely to repeat school grades than children raised
in two parent families.
- Children from single parent homes have more
physical and psychological problems than children raised in two
parent homes
- When children of teenage parents grow up, they are more likely
to become teenage parents themselves, receive welfare, or become
divorced.
Concerns About Teenage Marriage
- Marriages that result from an unplanned pregnancy often fail.
- At
least 60 percent of young people who marry before the age of
twenty will be divorced within five years.
- When pregnancy is the major reason
for marriage, the failure rate could reach 90 percent within
the first six years of marriage.
- Even if a husband is working, it is not
likely that he has a well paying job.
- Because the young mother will
likely drop out of school to care for her child, she will find
herself with no education or job skills.
- Marriage will not solve the problem
of an unplanned pregnancy. A good marriage demands hard work
and commitment from each partner. This is often difficult for young
people still working on developing their own identities.
- If you do not receive
support from your family and will not be able to finish high
school because you parent your child, consider these facts carefully.
It may predict your future life and that of your child.
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