Steinberg L, Dornbusch S M, Brown B B
Department of Psychology, Temple University, Philadelphia, PA 19122.
Am Psychol. 1992 Jun;47(6):723-9. doi: 10.1037//0003-066x.47.6.723.
Using data collected from a large sample of high school students, the authors challenge three widely held explanations for the superior school performance of Asian-American adolescents, and the inferior performance of African- and Hispanic-American adolescents: group differences in (a) parenting practices, (b) familial values about education, and (c) youngsters' beliefs about the occupational rewards of academic success. They found that White youngsters benefit from the combination of authoritative parenting and peer support for achievement, whereas Hispanic youngsters suffer from a combination of parental authoritarianism and low peer support. Among Asian-American students, peer support for academic excellence offsets the negative consequences of authoritarian parenting. Among African-American youngsters, the absence of peer support for achievement undermines the positive influence of authoritative parenting.
作者利用从大量高中生样本中收集的数据,对关于亚裔美国青少年学业成绩优异以及非裔和西班牙裔美国青少年学业成绩较差的三种普遍观点提出了质疑:(a)育儿方式、(b)家庭对教育的价值观以及(c)青少年对学业成功的职业回报的看法存在群体差异。他们发现,白人青少年受益于权威型育儿方式和同伴对成就的支持相结合,而西班牙裔青少年则受到父母专制主义和同伴支持不足的双重影响。在亚裔美国学生中,同伴对学业优异的支持抵消了专制型育儿方式的负面影响。在非裔美国青少年中,同伴对成就缺乏支持削弱了权威型育儿方式的积极影响。