| Literature DB >> 34989042 |
Roushanac Partovi1, Esther J Calzada2, Kathleen M Roche1, Todd D Little3, Maria Jose Sanchez Roman1.
Abstract
Latin American-origin parents play an important role in supporting the formal education of their youth, but cultural, linguistic, and systemic barriers make parent involvement difficult. The aim of the present study was to examine how Latina mothers' experiences with discrimination were associated with short-term changes in their adolescent children's academic performance, directly and indirectly through mothers' appraisal of home-school dissonance. Data were drawn from an ongoing longitudinal study of 547 mother-youth dyads in suburban Atlanta. Results showed a significant indirect relationship between mothers' experiences of discrimination and declines in adolescents' grade point average by way of increased home-school dissonance. Thus, Latina mothers' discriminatory experiences may have spillover effects on adolescent academic achievement through increasing proximal barriers to parent involvement.Entities:
Keywords: Latin American-origin adolescents; academic performance; home-school dissonance
Year: 2022 PMID: 34989042 PMCID: PMC9256850 DOI: 10.1111/jora.12719
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Res Adolesc ISSN: 1050-8392