3.2. The Model
Initially, this study used the family structure as an independent variable and a comprehensive development index of rural children in Shanxi China as a dependent variable to develop a benchmark model 1 to study the direct effects of family structure on the development of rural children. Because the development of children in rural China also involves four factors: health, education, socialization, and behavioral development, this study constructs Model 2, Model 3, Model 4, and Model 5 to examine the impact of family structure on children’s health, education, behavior, and social development.
The model is constructed as follows:
Here, Yi represents the development level of student i, Xki refer to the k-th individual-level variables of student i (including control variables such as family structure, gender, age, etc.). βk1 represents the k-th individual-level regression coefficient; α indicates a fixed intercept; and ε1 indicates a random disturbance.
Secondly, this paper investigates the mediating effect of parental emotional involvement and behavioral involvement on children’s development in Shanxi, rural China. Here, we examine the mediation effects using the bootstrap method proposed by Hayes [
20]. The specific model is as follows:
Here, D1, D2, …, Dk−1 represent k − 1 dummy variables after recoding k-level independent variables; Y is the dependent variable; M is the mediator variable; c1, c2, …, ck−l represent k − 1 relative total effects; c′1, c′2, …, c′k−1 represent k − 1 relative direct effects.
In this paper, family structure is measured by examining the living arrangements between the students and their parents and is categorized into four groups: (1) complete families, (2) absent father families, (3) absent mother families, and (4) absent parent families.
Table 7 indicates that among the families of primary school students surveyed in the sample area, the proportion of complete families is 39.53%, the proportion of absent fathers is 22.67%, the proportion of absent mothers is the lowest, at 7.21%, and the proportion of both parents absent at the same time is 30.58%. In the study, 60.47% of rural primary school children lived in families where both parents were absent or one parent was absent. The rural areas of Shanxi China show a diverse development pattern in terms of family structure and living arrangement, and the proportion of incomplete families is relatively high.
The mediating effect studied in this paper is the mechanism of participation deprivation, which consists of two components: emotional participation and behavioral participation. In the survey, students provide their parents with options from never = 1, rarely = 2, sometimes = 3, often = 4, and always = 5.
The control variable in this study is selected based on characteristics of individual students (or families). It includes the child’s gender (male = 1), age, child’s self-assessed health, parent-child relationship (frequency of quarrels between you, father and mother, never-always = 1–5), parents’ marital quality (father and mother, never-always = 1–5), and peer group quality.
Based on the descriptive statistics presented below (
Table 8), the rural family structure in Shanxi shows a diversified pattern, with a relatively high proportion of incomplete families, and incomplete families showed significant differences in their healthy development and social development. Furthermore, compared with complete families, rural children with absent mothers display significantly different comprehensive development than those with absent parents, but no significant differences are detected in families with absent fathers. Furthermore, there is a significant difference in parental behavioral participation between intact families and those with absent fathers, absent mothers, and absent parents.
3.3. Results
3.3.1. The Effects of Family Structure on the Development of Children in Shanxi Rural Areas
We conducted a regression analysis using the child development index as the dependent variable and the family structure as the independent variable. As the family structure is a four-category independent variable (K = 4), the complete family is used as the reference group, and the type of family structure is dummy coded. Thus, with the entire family as a benchmark, each dummy coding group is used as an independent variable, and the rural child development index, rural children’s healthy development index, education development index, behavior development index, and social development index are used as factors in the regression analysis. The result is as follows:
Model 1 indicate that after controlling for individual characteristics such as age, gender, children’s self-rated health, peer quality, parent-child relationship, and marital relationship, children growing up in families with absent mothers and in families with both parents absent significantly lag behind children in completed family. This result also partially support hypothesis 1.
The results of Model 2 show that children from non-intact families are more likely to be disadvantaged with respect to healthy development than children from intact families. Specifically, the healthy development for children in absent father families was lower than that of children from intact families; the healthy development for children in absent mother families was also lower than that of children in intact families, and the healthy development for children in families with absent parents was even lower than that of children in complete families. The above results confirm hypothesis 1a. In rural areas, the healthy development of children from incomplete families is significantly lower than that of children from complete families.
Based on the results of Model 3, there was no significant difference between children from incomplete and complete families in their educational development. Model 4 showed that there were no significant differences in the behavioral development of children in families with absent parents, absent fathers, and absent mothers. The results of Model 5 show that the absence of one or both parents will adversely affect the social development of children. In particular, the social development of children in families with absent fathers, absent mothers, and absent parents is 6.23, 5.93, and 8.50 lower than that of children in intact families. The results confirm Hypothesis 1d that the level of social development of rural children from incomplete families is significantly lower than that of children from complete families.
It can therefore be concluded that family structure is indeed closely related to children’s development in Shanxi rural areas. The absence of one parent or both parents will have a negative impact on the health and social development of children. A child’s overall development can be affected by the absence of a mother as well as the absence of both parents. Due to the differences in roles and functions played by fathers and mothers in the family, there are also significant differences within families without one parent.
3.3.2. The Mediating Effect of Parental Emotional Involvement
Using the bootstrap method, this paper considers the entire family as the benchmark level and performs dummy coding on other family types (D1, D2, D3), and then it establishes a regression equation to determine whether parental emotional involvement mediates the relationship between the family structure and the development of children in Shanxi rural areas.
Figure 1 illustrates the model result.
As a result of the overall mediation analysis, the 95% bootstrap confidence interval for the overall mediation test is [0.27 0.39], excluding 0, suggesting that the three relative mediation effects are not all zero. Therefore, a further relative mediation test analysis is necessary. The relative mediation analysis shows that using the complete family type as a reference, the relative mediation effect for absent father families relative to complete families has a bootstrap confidence interval of 95% [−2.60 0.27], including 0, showing that the relative mediation effect is not significant. Similarly, the 95% bootstrap confidence interval for the relative mediation effect of mother-absent families relative to intact families is [−6.19 −1.49], excluding 0, showing a significant relative mediation effect, and the mediation effects −3.68 (a2 = −11.14, b = 0.33, a2b = −3.68), which indicates that the emotional involvement of parents of children from families with absent mothers is 11.14 less than that of children from intact families (a2 =−11.14), so the child development index of the mother-absent family is lower (b =0.33).
In contrast to the direct effect in
Table 9 (
c2 = −5.56,
p < 0.01), the relative mediating effect of absent mother families on rural child development was not significant (
c2′ = −2.01,
p > 0.1), indicating that parental emotional involvement is the only mediating variable.
Finally, the 95% confidence interval of the relative mediation effect of a family with absent parents versus a complete family with both parents is [−3.23 −0.58], including 0, indicating that there is a significant relative mediation effect. The relative mediating effect is −1.81 (a3 = −5.49, b = 0.33, a3b = −11.81), that is, the emotional involvement of parents of children from families with absent parents is 5.49 lower than that of children from families with two parents (a3 = −5.49); consequently, the development index of children growing up in families with absent parents is also lower (b = 0.33). The relative direct effect was significant (c3′ =−3.67, p < 0.01), which indicate that following removal of mediating effects, the development index of children with absent parents was 3.67 lower than that of children in complete families; The effect was significant (c3 = −5.33, p < 0.01), and the relative mediation effect of a3b was 33.96% (−1.81/−5.33).
In Shanxi rural areas, parental emotional involvement plays a mediating role between family structure and child development, and this effect is significant in mother-absent families and two-parent-absent families, meaning that compared with complete families, mother-absent families and two-parent absent families have lower parental involvement and comprehensive development levels for their children. This partially supports Hypothesis 2a.
3.3.3. The Mediating Effect of Parental Behavioral Participation
Similarly, the bootstrap method was also used to examine the mediating role of parental involvement in rural child development.
Figure 2 illustrates the model result.
The overall mediation analysis shows that the 95% bootstrap confidence interval for the overall mediation test is [0.16 0.27] excluding 0, showing that the 3 relative mediation effects are not all 0. Thus, a further relative mediation test analysis is necessary. Results of the relative mediation analysis indicate that with the complete family type as the reference level, the 95% bootstrap confidence interval of the relative mediation of the father-absent family relative to the complete family is [−2.38 −0.16], excluding 0, showing that the relative mediation is significant. The 95% bootstrap confidence interval of the relative mediation of the mother-absent family relative to the complete family is [−4.01 −0.53], excluding 0, showing that the relative mediation is significant, and the 95% bootstrap confidence interval of the relative mediation of the both-parents-absent family relative to the complete family is [−3.44 −1.27], excluding 0, showing that the relative mediation is significant.
As a result, parental behavioral participation can moderate the relationship between family structure and the development of children in Shanxi rural areas. There is a lower level of parental behavioral participation in fatherless families, mothers’ absence families, and families with both parents absent. As a result, the comprehensive developmental level of children growing up in these three types of incomplete families is also lower. Here Hypothesis 2b is confirmed.
3.4. Robustness Check
Based on the above analysis, we can conclude that family structure is closely related to the development of children in Shanxi rural areas. An absence of one or both parents will negatively affect the child’s health, social development, and overall growth. In the mechanism of family structure affecting child development, parental involvement and behavior clearly have a mediating effect. This paper will conduct a robustness test in order to verify the reliability of the research results as follows.
We first reclassify the four independent variables of complete family, absent father family, absent mother family, and absent parent family into two categories, complete family and incomplete family, for regression analysis and intermediary mechanism testing.
Then, 50% of the total sample will be randomly selected to examine the robustness of parental emotional and behavioral involvement in the development of children in Shanxi rural areas as a mediating mechanism.
Ultimately, we found that the results of both methods reveal that family structure affects children’s development in Shanxi rural areas, and that parental emotional and behavioral involvement has a mediated effect between the family structure and the development of rural children in Shanxi China. The conclusion maintains a high degree of reliability.