In 1971 Judith Wallerstein contacted 60 families who recently filed for divorce in Marin County, California. Marin County is a wealthy, insular area adjacent to San Francisco. Twenty-five years later, Wallerstein was still in contact with 45 of these families.
From this group, Judith attempted to draw inferences about the effects of divorce on children.
Invalid Use of Statistics – Skewed Population
There are two initial problems. First, the study group is skewed. Wealthy Marin County is representative of the population of the United States in the same way a county in rural Mississippi is representative of the population of the United States. In addition, the sample size—45—is too small to make statistically valid generalizations.
The next problem is Judith compares children from intact families with children of divorce. To make the comparison valid she needs two groups: a group staying together and a group with similar characteristics divorcing. But she has only one group—a divorcing group. There is no control group.
Let's take a simplified example. Imagine Judith had the two groups she needed. In the U.S. about 20% of families involve an alcoholic parent, and at least 15% involve sexual abuse of one or more children in the family.
At the beginning of her study, 12 families in each group would involve alcoholism, and 9 families involve sexual abuse of children. If she compared what happened to the children who escaped sexual abuse or an alcoholic home, to the children raised in a sexually abusive or alcoholic home, she could draw some conclusions.
Flawed Methodology
She could suggest an answer to the question, What would the children of divorce be like if the parents had stayed together? Unfortunately, since Judith lacks this data, she cannot make valid inferences.
Judith Wallerstein lumps families staying together in one group, which she then compares to families divorcing. This is an apples and oranges comparison. The first group contains well-married couples as well as problem marriages, while the second group contains only problem marriages.