| Literature DB >> 19898605 |
Charles R Martinez1, Heather H McClure, J Mark Eddy.
Abstract
This study examined behavioral and emotional adjustment in family contexts in which there was high versus low demand for adolescents to serve as language brokers in a sample of 73 recently immigrated Latino families with middle-school-aged adolescents. Language brokering was conceptualized as a family process rather than merely an individual phenomenon. Multiple agents were used to assess language brokering and parent and youth adjustment. Results indicated that high language brokering contexts had negative associations with family stress, parenting effectiveness, and adolescent adjustment in terms of academic functioning, socioemotional health, and substance use. The findings are particularly important given the limited and mixed findings from formative research on language brokering, particularly in areas within the United States with emerging immigrant populations. Findings suggest the need for advancing practices that increase language and cultural supports for immigrant families and support parents' efforts to foster positive youth and family adjustment.Entities:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19898605 PMCID: PMC2630236 DOI: 10.1177/0272431608324477
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Early Adolesc ISSN: 0272-4316