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1.
The present study examined the extent to which individuals exposed to frequent and intense interparental conflict (IPC) across childhood and adolescence are sensitized to conflict during late adolescence. Late adolescents' perceptions of their exposure to IPC while growing up were examined in relation to their self-reported emotional and social-cognitive reactions to simulated conflict. Emotional functioning and gender were expected to moderate the relations of IPC to late adolescents' reactions. IPC exposure had stronger effects on the negative emotional reactions of adolescents low in emotional functioning and males than on the emotional reactions of adolescents higher in emotional functioning and females, respectively. Moreover, IPC was positively related to females' negative beliefs about conflict implications but unrelated to males' beliefs. Results are discussed in terms of the sensitization hypothesis and gender differences in sensitivity to conflict. 相似文献
3.
Research on achievement gaps by race/ethnicity and poverty status typically focuses on each gap separately, and recent syntheses suggest the poverty gap is growing while racial/ethnic gaps are narrowing. In this study, we used time-varying effect modeling to examine the interaction of race/ethnicity and poverty gaps in math and reading achievement from 1986–2005 for poor and non-poor White, Black, and Hispanic students in three age groups (5–6, 9–10, and 13–14). We found that across this twenty-year period, the gaps between poor White students and their poor Black and Hispanic peers grew, while the gap between non-poor Whites and Hispanics narrowed. We conclude that understanding the nature of achievement gaps requires simultaneous examination of race/ethnicity and income. 相似文献
4.
The involvement of adolescents with deviant peer groups is one of the strongest proximal correlates to juvenile delinquency
and stems from a variety of causes. Past research has linked ineffective parenting with peer variables, including deviant
peer group involvement and peer conflict during adolescence. In this study, adolescents’ appraisals of procedural justice
within the family (adolescents’ appraisals of how fairly they are treated by parents in the process of resolving family conflict)
were examined as one aspect of effective parenting that may relate to deviant peer group involvement in early adolescence.
Data from 1660 middle school students (ages 11–14, mean = 12.6) indicated that higher appraisals by adolescents of procedural
justice during family conflict resolution were related to lower levels of both peer conflict and deviant peer group involvement.
A structural model was tested in which the relationship between adolescents’ appraisals of procedural justice in the family
and deviant peer group involvement was partially mediated by measures of peer conflict. This model was found to have adequate
fit to the data, indicating that part of the relationship between procedural justice appraisals and deviant peer group involvement
can be explained by levels of peer conflict. Implications of these findings are discussed.
Jennifer L. Stuart
is a doctoral student in Counseling Psychology at the University of Florida. Her research interests include adolescent development
and juvenile justice.
Mark R. Fondacaro
is a Professor of Psychology at John Jay College of Criminal Justice—CUNY. He received his Ph.D. in clinical psychology from
Indiana University and his J.D. from Columbia University School of Law. His major research interests are ecological jurisprudence
and the conceptualization and assessment of procedural justice in legal and extra-legal contexts including the family and
the juvenile justice and health care systems.
Scott A. Miller
is Professor of Psychology at the University of Florida. He received his Ph.D. in Child Development from the University of
Minnesota. His research focuses on cognitive development in children.
Veda E. Brown
is an Assistant Professor of Juvenile Justice and Psychology at Prairie View A&M University, Texas. Her research interests
include cognitive development in early childhood, especially with reference to the role of parents.
Eve M. Brank
is an assistant professor in the Department of Criminology, Law and Society at the University of Florida. She received her
Ph.D. in Social Psychology and her J.D. from the University of Nebraska-Lincoln, Law/Psychology program. Her research focuses
primarily on families, juveniles, and especially parental responsibility laws. 相似文献
5.
Research on the mechanisms by which interparental conflict (IPC) affects child depression suggests that both parenting and
children’s conflict appraisals play important roles, but few studies have explored the role of general cognitive style or
included both parenting and cognitions in the same design. Moreover, the effects of IPC on minority children are not well
understood. In this longitudinal study, parenting was examined as a mediator of the relation between increasing IPC and change
in depression. General cognitive style was included as a moderator. The combined influence of parenting and cognitions was
also explored. A racially and ethnically diverse sample of 88 fifth and sixth graders from two urban schools reported their
cognitive style, depressive symptoms, and perceptions of conflict and parenting at two time points separated by one year.
Parental warmth/rejection mediated the relation between IPC and depression, and general cognitive style acted as a moderator.
Parenting, cognitive style, and IPC did not significantly interact to predict change in depression over time. Findings indicate
that both parenting and children’s general cognitive style play a role in understanding the impact of increasing IPC on children’s
well-being. 相似文献
6.
Research on sexual and gender minority student achievement indicates that such students report lowered achievement relative to other students. Increased victimization and less school belonging, amongst other factors, have been identified as contributing to these inequalities. However, supportive schooling structures and caregiver support may support their achievement. A nationally representative survey of secondary school students was used to identify specific factors that support achievement for sexual minority (n?=?485), gender minority (n?=?298), and heterosexual cisgender (where one’s sex assigned at birth “matches” a binary gender identity, i.e., a male assigned at birth identifies as a boy/man, n?=?7064) students in New Zealand. While reported victimization did not affect achievement for sexual and gender minority students, school belonging, and teacher expectations of success, emerged as significant factors. Differences emerged between sexual minority and gender minority achievement factors, suggesting a range of detailed policy implications and recommendations. 相似文献
7.
This study compared the effects of social intelligence and cognitive intelligence, as measured by academic achievement, on
adolescent popularity in two school contexts. A distinction was made between sociometric popularity, a measure of acceptance,
and perceived popularity, a measure of social dominance. Participants were 512, 14–15 year-old adolescents (56% girls, 44%
boys) in vocational and college preparatory schools in Northwestern Europe. Perceived popularity was significantly related
to social intelligence, but not to academic achievement, in both contexts. Sociometric popularity was predicted by an interaction
between academic achievement and social intelligence, further qualified by school context. Whereas college bound students
gained sociometric popularity by excelling both socially and academically, vocational students benefited from doing well either
socially or academically, but not in combination. The implications of these findings were discussed. 相似文献
8.
Increasingly, researchers have found relationships between a strong, positive sense of racial identity and academic achievement
among African American youth. Less attention, however, has been given to the roles and functions of racial identity among
youth experiencing different social and economic contexts. Using hierarchical linear modeling, the authors examined the relationship
of racial identity to academic outcomes, taking into account neighborhood-level factors. The sample consisted of 564 African
American eighth-graders (56% male). The authors found that neighborhood characteristics and racial identity related positively
to academic outcomes, but that some relationships were different across neighborhood types. For instance, in neighborhoods
low in economic opportunity, high pride was associated with a higher GPA, but in more advantaged neighborhoods, high pride
was associated with a lower GPA. The authors discuss the need to take youth’s contexts into account in order to understand
how racial identity is active in the lives of African American youth.
Christy M. Byrd
is a Ph.D. student in the Combined Program in Education and Psychology at the University of Michigan. Her research interests
include how school and neighborhood contexts shape racial identity and personal development for children and adolescents.
Tabbye M. Chavous
is an Associate Professor in the School of Education and the Department of Psychology at the University of Michigan. Her primary
academic affiliation is with the Combined Program in Education and Psychology. She received her Ph.D. in Community Psychology
from the University of Virgina. Her research interests center around social, developmental, and contextual influences on the
academic and psychological development of African American adolescents, with an emphasis on gender and racial identity development,
school climate effects, and family socialization processes. 相似文献
9.
As students transition to post-secondary education, they experience considerable stress and declines in academic performance.
Perceived social support is thought to improve academic achievement by reducing stress. Longitudinal designs with three or
more waves are needed in this area because they permit stronger causal inferences and help disentangle the direction of relationships.
This study uses a cross-lagged panel and a bivariate growth curve analysis with a three-wave longitudinal design. Participants
include 10,445 students (56% female; 12.6% born outside of Canada) transitioning to post-secondary education from ages 15–19.
Self-report measures of academic achievement and a generalized measure of perceived social support were used. An increase
in average relative standing in academic achievement predicted an increase in average relative standing on perceived social
support 2 years later, but the reverse was not true. High levels of perceived social support at age 15 did not protect against
declines in academic achievement over time. In sum, perceived social support appears to have no bearing on adolescents’ future
academic performance, despite commonly held assumptions of its importance. 相似文献
10.
Although the role of school engagement in influencing children’s academic competence has been recognized in past theory and
research, how school engagement may mediate the relationships between ecological and personal resources and academic competence
remains largely unknown. Using structural equation modeling procedures, the present study was aimed at examining the role
of school engagement in mediating the associations between ecological and personal assets and academic competence. Data from
960 participants (45.6% boys) who took part in the Grades 5 and 6 assessments of the longitudinal, 4-H Study of Positive Youth
Development were used. Evidence was found for a model positing two distinct school engagement components, Behavioral and Emotional,
and for the role of these facets of school engagement in the relationships between developmental assets and later academic
competence. Personal and ecological assets had indirect effects on later academic competence, via behavioral and emotional
school engagement. Behavioral and emotional school engagement predicted academic competence differently. Emotional engagement
was indirectly linked to academic competence, via behavioral engagement. Behavioral and emotional engagement also had different
individual and contextual antecedents. Implications of the findings for evaluating the role of behavioral and/or emotional
school engagement in academic competence and positive youth development are discussed. 相似文献
11.
The persistent underachievement among African American boys has led to increased empirical inquiry, yet little research considers
within-group variation in achievement nor positive youth characteristics that help explain positive achievement outcomes.
This study conceptualized culturally-based factors (racial pride and religiosity) as adolescent assets that would promote
African American boys’ achievement and also enhance positive effects of other youth assets (positive educational utility beliefs)
on achievement. Our sample included 158 adolescent boys ( M = 17.08) from a large, socioeconomically diverse suburban community context. Accounting for demographic background variables,
educational utility beliefs were positively associated with academic grade performance. A significant educational utility
beliefs and racial pride interaction indicated a stronger, positive association of educational utility beliefs with grade
performance among boys with higher racial pride relative to those with lower racial pride. Also, there was a stronger positive
association between educational utility beliefs and grades for boys reporting lower religious importance, but boys endorsing
both lower educational utility beliefs and religious importance were at highest risk for low grade performance. Overall results
suggest the importance of considering culturally-based factors in studying achievement motivation processes among ethnic minority
adolescents. 相似文献
12.
This study examines prostitution, homelessness, delinquency and crime, and school problems as potential mediators of the relationship
between childhood abuse and neglect (CAN) and illicit drug use in middle adulthood. Children with documented cases of physical
and sexual abuse and neglect (ages 0–11) during 1967–1971 were matched with non-maltreated children and followed into middle
adulthood (approximate age 39). Mediators were assessed in young adulthood (approximate age 29) through in-person interviews
between 1989 and 1995 and official arrest records through 1994 ( N = 1,196). Drug use was assessed via self-reports of past year use of marijuana, psychedelics, cocaine, and/or heroin during
2000–2002 ( N = 896). Latent variable structural equation modeling (SEM) was used to test: (1) a four-factor model with separate pathways
from CAN to illicit drug use through each of the mediating risk factors and (2) a second-order model with a single mediating
risk factor comprised of prostitution, homelessness, delinquency and crime, and poor school performance. Analyses were performed
separately for women and men, controlling for race/ethnicity and early drug use. In the four-factor model for both men and
women, CAN was significantly related to each of the mediators, but no paths from the mediators to drug use were significant.
For women, the second-order risk factor mediated the relationship between CAN and illicit drug use in middle adulthood. For
men, neither child abuse and neglect nor the second-order risk factor predicted drug use in middle adulthood. These results
suggest that for women, the path from CAN to middle adulthood drug use is part of a general “problem behavior syndrome” evident
earlier in life.
相似文献
13.
Using data from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health, this study tests whether the relationship between academic
achievement and problem behaviors is the same across racial and ethnic groups. Some have suggested that academic achievement
may be a weaker predictor of problem behaviors among Asian Pacific Islander American (API) youth; that they can have high
grades but still exhibit problem behaviors. This study finds that academic performance is a significant predictor of aggressive
and nonaggressive delinquent offenses, gang initiation, sexual behaviors, and substance use, and that the relationship generally
does not vary by race and ethnicity. Thus, there is little evidence that API youth are high achievers who are also engaging
significantly in problem behaviors. The existing perceptions of API youth may be largely based on stereotype and ambivalence.
相似文献
14.
In this study of 62 African American families living in poverty, we examined the main and interactive effects of psychological, family, and school factors on students' grade point average across the middle school transition. Both parent interviews and student surveys were collected, resulting in three major findings. First, students experienced a significant decline in grade point average across the transition from elementary to middle school. Second, students who felt more academically efficacious had higher grade point averages across the transition than did their peers. Third, significant interactions were found between family and school factors. These results suggest that rather than focusing exclusively on either parental involvement or the school environment, the combination of both family and school factors may be most effective in supporting the academic achievement of poor African American students during the transition to middle level schools. 相似文献
15.
Stress research shows that race, socioeconomic status (SES), and family context significantly impact an adolescent’s psychological
well-being, yet little is known about the mediating effects of family context on racial and SES differences in depressive
symptoms among Black and White youth. We investigate these associations using a sample of 875 (45% female) from a South Florida
community-based study of youth mostly between the ages of 19 and 21. Ordinary least squares (OLS) analyses find that Blacks
and lower SES youth have more depressive symptoms than Whites and those in higher SES families. Racial disparities are partially
mediated by family related stressors and SES differences are fully explained by family stressors and emotional support. We
also find that emotional family support conditions the relationship between race and depressive symptoms such that Whites
experience more depressive symptoms at lower levels of emotional support but Blacks have more symptoms at higher levels. The
findings highlight the importance of identifying factors within the family context that influence a youth’s psychological
well-being and ability to cope with adversities. 相似文献
16.
School engagement is an important theoretical and practical cornerstone to the promotion of academic accomplishments. This article used a tripartite—behavioral, emotional, and cognitive—model of school engagement to assess the relationship between school engagement and academic success among high school students, and to determine whether a reciprocal relationship exists between these constructs. Data were derived from 710 youth (69 % female) who took part in Waves 6 through 8 (Grades 10 through 12) of the 4-H study of positive youth development. Longitudinal confirmatory factor analyses confirmed the invariance of the tripartite model of school engagement. Results of a structural equation model showed that the components of school engagement and academic achievement were mutually predictive and that these predictions varied from grade to grade. Future possibilities for evaluating the relationship between school engagement and academic achievement, as well as the implications for educational policy and practice, are discussed. 相似文献
18.
Previous research on the association between violence and biological stress regulation has been largely cross-sectional, and has also focused on childhood. Using longitudinal data from a low-income, high-risk, predominantly African-American sample ( n = 266; 57 % female), we tested hypotheses about the influence of cumulative exposure to violence during adolescence and early adulthood on cortisol responses in early adulthood. We found that cumulative exposure to violence predicted an attenuated cortisol response. Further, we tested whether sex, mothers’ support, or fathers’ support moderated the effect of exposure to violence on cortisol responses. We found that the effect of cumulative exposure to violence on cortisol was modified by sex; specifically, males exposed to violence exhibited a more attenuated response pattern. In addition, the effect of cumulative exposure to violence on cortisol was moderated by the presence of fathers’ support during adolescence. The findings contribute to a better understanding of how cumulative exposure to violence influences biological outcomes, emphasizing the need to understand sex and parental support as moderators of risk. 相似文献
19.
Most educational leaders are aware of the added academic challenges that children of divorce from single-parent homes face. However, there has been an assumption among educators and the American public that parental remarriage benefits children academically. Therefore, educational researchers and theorists have given almost no exhortations for teachers and principals about sensitizing themselves to the needs of children of divorce from reconstituted families. Using the 1988 National Educational Longitudinal Survey data set, this study matched students by family structure, race, and socioeconomic status. The results indicate that children of divorce from reconstituted families score no higher and often even lower in academic achievement than children of divorce from single-parent families. Therefore, the assumption by many educators that children of divorce from reconstituted families are better off academically than children of divorce from single-parent families is not supported. 相似文献
20.
Classroom context and school engagement are significant predictors of academic achievement. These factors are especially important
for academically at-risk students. Grounded in an ecological systems perspective, this study examined links between classroom
context, school engagement, and academic achievement among early adolescents. We took a multidimensional approach to the measurement
of classroom context and school engagement, incorporating both observational and self-reported assessments of various dimensions
of classroom context (instruction quality, social/emotional climate, and student–teacher relationship) and school engagement
(psychological and behavioral engagement). Using data from the NICHD Study of Early Child Care and Youth Development, we tested
whether school engagement mediated the link between classroom context and academic achievement among 5th grade students, and
whether these pathways were the same for students with previous achievement difficulties identified in 3rd grade. Participants
included 1,014 children (50% female) in 5th grade (mean age = 11). The majority of the participants were white (77%) and 23%
were children of color. Results indicated that psychological and behavioral engagement mediated the link between classroom
context and academic achievement for students without previous achievement difficulties. However, for students with previous
achievement difficulties psychological and behavioral engagement did not mediate the link between classroom context and academic
achievement. These results suggest that improving classroom quality may not be sufficient to improve student engagement and
achievement for students with previous achievement difficulties. Additional strategies may be needed for these students. 相似文献
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