Hirsch Barton J, Mickus Maureen, Boerger Rebecca
Program in Human Development and Social Policy, Northwestern University, Evanston, Illinois 60208, USA.
Am J Community Psychol. 2002 Apr;30(2):289-303. doi: 10.1023/A:1014689129369.
Although prior research suggests the importance of nonparental adults to adolescents, the ecological context of those relationships has received little attention. This study examined ties to influential adults among 122 adolescents who varied by race, family structure, and gender The strongest effects were for race. Blacks reported stronger ties than Whites to the maternal grandmother as well as more supportive interactions with adult males. While race differences in grandparental ties were robust across social class (SES), ties to an influential adult male became nonsignificant upon controlling for SES. African American girls from divorced families consistently reported the strongest ties. Discussion considers the role of culture versus SES in explaining race differences. Implications for mentoring interventions are proposed, with special attention to the role of actualizing latent ties to already existing network members.
尽管先前的研究表明非父母成年人对青少年很重要,但这些关系的生态背景却很少受到关注。本研究调查了122名在种族、家庭结构和性别方面存在差异的青少年与有影响力的成年人之间的联系。种族的影响最为显著。黑人报告称与外祖母的联系比白人更强,并且与成年男性的互动更具支持性。虽然跨社会阶层(SES),祖孙关系中的种族差异很明显,但在控制了SES之后,与有影响力的成年男性的联系就变得不显著了。来自离异家庭的非裔美国女孩一直报告称她们与他人的联系最为紧密。讨论考虑了文化与SES在解释种族差异方面的作用。提出了对指导干预措施的启示,特别关注激活与现有网络成员潜在联系的作用。