The effects of a child born to an adolescent are known to be negative because of the great financial and emotional responsibility the child is. The adolescent mother is likely to live with their parents and remain in the parents’ household because of the incapability to provide stability for neither themselves nor their child. The focus will remain on Latino families who have had the highest birthrate in adolescents in the past 15 years (Chien & East. 2013) and are often in the lower end of the social working class. Latin families reach to attain a stable home for their family by working because they often lack education and when their adolescent introduces a child it creates an imbalance. Thus, Latin adolescents’ childbearing do not only effect the mother to be but their family as well by introducing an emotional and financial imbalance, beginning from pregnancy until the child grows up. Teenage pregnancy is presented as an intergenerational cycle, where it is believed that the mother of an adolescent daughter who had her in her teens becomes a predictor for the daughter to become a teen mother as well. The article focuses on the study made of teen pregnancy intergenerational cycle by using data from National Longitudinal Survey of Youth, this ongoing study used people from the United States that were born in the 1980s that are interviewed yearly throughout their teenage years. The study used a final sample of 1,430 girls that finished all the follow up interviews (Meade, Kershaw & Ickovics, 2008). The survey began in 1997 by randomly selecting households for possible participation, the process began with a trained bilingual interviewer visiting the households and administering a screening interview by gathering demographic information. Once the participants were chosen the interviewer returned and conducted a one-hour interview with both the parent and the youth. The parents answered a wide range of personal questions on a computer interview assistant program to allow them to...