Literature DB >> 33519013

Stress of Language Brokering and Mexican American Adolescents' Adjustment: The Role of Cumulative Risk.

Yishan Shen1, Eunjin Seo1, Dorothy Clare Walt2, Su Yeong Kim3.   

Abstract

This study focused on early adolescents' stress of language brokering and examined the moderating role of family cumulative risk in the relation of language brokering to adjustment problems. Data came from self-reports of 604 low-income Mexican American adolescent language brokers (54% female; X ¯ age = 12.4 ; SD = 0.97; 75% born in the United States) and their parents (99% foreign-born) in central Texas. Path analyses revealed that brokering stress, but not frequency, was positively associated with adolescents' adjustment problems, including depressive symptoms, anxiety, and delinquency. We also found that the relation between stress of brokering for mothers and adolescents' depressive symptoms was stronger among families with a high cumulative risk. Further, with a high cumulative risk, adolescents exhibited delinquent behaviors regardless of the levels of stress from translating for fathers. Current findings underscore the importance of examining family contexts in assessing the consequences of language brokering for Mexican American early adolescents' well-being.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Mexican American; cumulative risk; language brokering; psychosocial adjustment; stress

Year:  2019        PMID: 33519013      PMCID: PMC7841983          DOI: 10.1177/0272431619847526

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Early Adolesc        ISSN: 0272-4316


  25 in total

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Authors:  Kimberly A Updegraff; Susan M McHale; Shawn D Whiteman; Shawna M Thayer; Melissa Y Delgado
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2.  Cumulative family risk predicts increases in adjustment difficulties across early adolescence.

Authors:  Cheryl Buehler; Jean M Gerard
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3.  Childhood poverty and young adults' allostatic load: the mediating role of childhood cumulative risk exposure.

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4.  Relations of growth in effortful control to family income, cumulative risk, and adjustment in preschool-age children.

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5.  The familial context of adolescent language brokering within immigrant Chinese families in Canada.

Authors:  Josephine M Hua; Catherine L Costigan
Journal:  J Youth Adolesc       Date:  2011-06-17

6.  Acute salivary cortisol response among Mexican American adolescents in immigrant families.

Authors:  Su Yeong Kim; Minyu Zhang; Katharine H Zeiders; Lester Sim; Marci E J Gleason
Journal:  Cultur Divers Ethnic Minor Psychol       Date:  2018-07-30

7.  A brief measure for assessing generalized anxiety disorder: the GAD-7.

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8.  Measurement equivalence of the language-brokering scale for Chinese American adolescents and their parents.

Authors:  Su Yeong Kim; Yijie Wang; Scott R Weaver; Yishan Shen; Nina Wu-Seibold; Cindy H Liu
Journal:  J Fam Psychol       Date:  2014-03-03

9.  Stability of intelligence from preschool to adolescence: the influence of social and family risk factors.

Authors:  A J Sameroff; R Seifer; A Baldwin; C Baldwin
Journal:  Child Dev       Date:  1993-02

10.  Parents' Perceived Discrimination and Adolescent Adjustment in Chinese American Families: Mediating Family Processes.

Authors:  Yang Hou; Su Yeong Kim; Nancy Hazen; Aprile D Benner
Journal:  Child Dev       Date:  2016-08-22
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