Contributions of the Fragile Families and Child Wellbeing Study to Child Development.

Sarah James, Sara McLanahan, Jeanne Brooks-Gunn
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引用次数: 5

Abstract

We describe the promise of the Fragile Families and Child Wellbeing Study (FFCWS) for developmental researchers. FFCWS is a birth cohort study of 4,898 children born in 1998-2000 in large US cities. This prospective national study collected data on children and parents at birth and during infancy (age 1), toddlerhood (age 3), early childhood (age 5), middle childhood (age 9), adolescence (age 15), and, in progress, young adulthood (age 22). Though FFCWS was created to understand the lives of unmarried parent families, its comprehensive data on parents, children, and contexts can be used to explore many other developmental questions. We identify six opportunities for developmentalists: (a) analyzing developmental trajectories, identifying the importance of the timing of exposures for later development, (c) documenting bidirectional influences on development, (d) understanding development in context, (e) identifying biological moderators and mechanisms, and ( f ) using an urban-born cohort that is large, diverse, and prospective.

脆弱家庭与儿童福利研究对儿童发展的贡献。
我们描述了脆弱家庭和儿童福利研究(FFCWS)对发展研究人员的承诺。FFCWS是一项对1998-2000年在美国大城市出生的4898名儿童的出生队列研究。这项前瞻性全国研究收集了儿童和父母在出生时、婴儿期(1岁)、幼儿期(3岁)、幼儿期(5岁)、童年中期(9岁)、青春期(15岁)以及正在进行的青年期(22岁)的数据。虽然FFCWS是为了了解未婚父母家庭的生活而创建的,但它关于父母、孩子和环境的综合数据可以用来探索许多其他发展问题。我们确定了发展学家的六个机会:(a)分析发展轨迹,确定暴露时间对后期发展的重要性,(c)记录对发展的双向影响,(d)理解环境中的发展,(e)确定生物调节因子和机制,以及(f)使用一个庞大,多样化和前瞻性的城市出生队列。
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