Do half of all marriages really end in divorce? It’s probably the most often

游客2023-08-26  37

问题     Do half of all marriages really end in divorce? It’s probably the most often(36)______statistic about modern love. But in an(37)______new guide to marriage, "For Better, " Tara Parker-Pope, a New York Times reporter(and divorcee), devotes a chapter to(38)______the 50% statistic. Since the 1970s, when more women started going to college and delaying marriage, " marital(39)______appears to be improving each decade, " she writes. For example, about 23% of college graduates who married in the 1970s (40)______within 10 years. For those who wed in the 1990s, the rate(41)______ to 16%. According to research at the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School, one of the clearest(42)______ of whether wedding vows will stick is the age of the people saying them. Take the 1980s for example: A full 81% of college graduates who got(43)______ in that decade at age 26 or older were still married 20 years later.(44)______, but just 49% of those who married young and did so without a degree lasted 20 years, a cohort that Parker — Pope spends little time discussing. Instead she contends that the 50% statistic is a myth that persists(45)______. Social conservatives use it to call for more marriage-friendly policies,(46)______ [br] (36)
Do half of all marriages really end in divorce? It’s probably the most often(36)quoted statistic about modern love. But in an(37)upbeat new guide to marriage, "For Better, " Tara Parker-Pope, a New York Times reporter(and divorcee), devotes a chapter to(38)refute the 50% statistic. Since the 1970s, when more women started going to college and delaying marriage, "marital(39)stability appears to be improving each decade, " she writes. For example, about 23% of college graduates who married in the 1970s(40)split within 10 years. For those who wed in the 1990s, the rate(41)dropped to 16%. According to research at the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School, one of the clearest(42)predictors of whether wedding vows will stick is the age of the people saying them. Take the 1980s for example: A full 81% of college graduates who got(43)engaged in that decade at age 26 or older were still married 20 years later.(44)Only 65% of college graduates who said "I do" before their 26th birthday made it that far, but just 49% of those who married young and did so without a degree lasted 20 years, a cohort that Parker — Pope spends little time discussing. Instead she contends that the 50% statistic is a myth that persists(45)because it’s something of a political Swiss army knife, handy for any number of agendas. Social conservatives use it to call for more marriage — friendly policies,(46)while liberals find it handy to press for funding for programs that help single moms.

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