Larson R W, Richards M H, Sims B, Dworkin J
Department of Human and Community Development, 1105 W. Nevada St., University of Illinois, Urbana, Illinois 61801, USA.
Am J Community Psychol. 2001 Aug;29(4):565-97. doi: 10.1023/A:1010422017731.
The time budgets of a population of youth provide important information about their daily experience and socialization. This study reports data on the time budgets of a sample of 253 urban African American poor to working- and middle-class 5th-8th graders in Chicago. These youth were found to spend less time in school than other postindustrial adolescent populations, but spent no less time doing homework than White suburban U.S. young adolescents. They spent large quantities of time at home and with their families--at rates comparable to rates for young adolescents in a society with collectivist values like India. Unlike with other populations, early adolescence was not associated with major age changes in time allocations. Amount of time in schoolwork did not differ by grade, and amount of time with family did not show the decline with age that has been found for European American suburban adolescents.
一群年轻人的时间分配情况能提供有关他们日常经历和社交活动的重要信息。本研究报告了对芝加哥253名城市非裔美国贫困学生至工薪阶层及中产阶级五至八年级学生的时间分配数据。研究发现,这些年轻人在学校的时间比其他后工业化时期的青少年群体少,但做作业的时间并不比美国白人郊区青少年少。他们在家中和与家人相处的时间很长,这一比例与印度等具有集体主义价值观社会中的青少年相当。与其他群体不同的是,青春期早期与时间分配上的重大年龄变化并无关联。学业时间量在各年级之间并无差异,与家人相处的时间量也没有呈现出美国白人郊区青少年随年龄增长而减少的趋势。