The relationships between maternal age (at birth) and educational
and psychosocial
outcomes at age 18 were examined in a birth cohort of 1025 New Zealand
children. This
analysis indicated the presence of consistent tendencies for increasing
maternal age to be
associated with declining risks of educational underachievement, juvenile
crime, substance
misuse, and mental health problems. Children with teenage mothers had risks
of later
adverse outcomes that were 1.5 to 8.9 times higher than the risks for offspring
of mothers
aged over 30. Subsequent analyses revealed that the associations between
maternal age
and later educational and psychosocial outcomes were largely, but not wholly,
explained by
associations between maternal age and the child-rearing practices and home
environments
experienced by children. In general, increasing maternal age tended to
be associated with
more nurturant, supportive, and stable home environments. In turn, these
linkages between
maternal and childhood environment explained most of the association between
maternal
age and later outcomes. The theoretical and applied implications of these
results are
considered.