Schofield Thomas J, Parke Ross D, Kim Young, Coltrane Scott
Department of Human and Community Development, Family Research Group, University of California, Davis, CA 95616, USA.
Dev Psychol. 2008 Jul;44(4):1190-4. doi: 10.1037/a0012529.
The authors examined the degree to which disparities in parent and child acculturation are linked to both family and child adjustment. With a sample of 1st- and 2nd-generation Mexican American children, acculturation and parent-child relationship quality at 5th grade, and parent-child conflict, child internalizing, and child externalizing at 7th grade were measured. Acculturation gaps with fathers were found to be related to later father-child conflict as well as internalizing and externalizing outcomes. Many of the associations between father-child acculturation gaps and outcomes were moderated by the child's report of the relationship quality between the child and his or her father. Father-child acculturation gaps were associated with negative outcomes only when children reported a poor relationship with their fathers. Mother-child acculturation gaps were not associated with mother-child conflict or adjustment indices.
作者研究了父母与子女文化适应差异与家庭和子女适应之间的关联程度。以第一代和第二代墨西哥裔美国儿童为样本,测量了五年级时的文化适应情况和亲子关系质量,以及七年级时的亲子冲突、孩子的内化问题和外化问题。研究发现,与父亲的文化适应差距与后来的父子冲突以及内化和外化结果有关。父子文化适应差距与结果之间的许多关联受到孩子对自己与父亲关系质量报告的调节。只有当孩子报告与父亲关系不佳时,父子文化适应差距才与负面结果相关。母子文化适应差距与母子冲突或适应指标无关。