Department of Psychology, Brock University, St Catharines, ON L2S 3A1, Canada.
J Youth Adolesc. 2011 Jun;40(6):680-93. doi: 10.1007/s10964-010-9581-y. Epub 2010 Aug 14.
This longitudinal study tested the influence of involvement and selection hypotheses for the association between religious versus non-religious activity involvement and two salient indicators of adolescent psychosocial adjustment (substance use and academic achievement). Participants included 3,993 Canadian adolescents (49.4% girls) who were surveyed each year from grades 9-12. More frequent religious attendance (but not non-religious club involvement) in one grade predicted lower levels of substance use in the next grade. Higher levels of non-religious club involvement (but not religious service attendance) in one grade predicted higher academic achievement in the next grade, and higher academic achievement in one grade predicted more frequent non-religious club involvement in the next grade. The effects were robust, as they were invariant across grade and significant after controlling for individual, peer, and family characteristics. Most importantly, these results suggest that religious activities are not just another club, but, rather, that different developmental assets may be fostered in religious as compared to non-religious activities.
这项纵向研究检验了参与和选择假设对宗教与非宗教活动参与与青少年心理社会适应的两个显著指标(物质使用和学业成绩)之间关联的影响。参与者包括 3993 名加拿大青少年(49.4%为女孩),他们从 9 年级到 12 年级每年接受一次调查。某一年级更频繁的宗教参与(而非非宗教俱乐部参与)预测下一学年物质使用水平较低。某一年级更高水平的非宗教俱乐部参与(而非宗教服务参与)预测下一学年更高的学业成绩,而某一年级更高的学业成绩预测下一学年更频繁的非宗教俱乐部参与。这些影响是稳健的,因为它们在年级之间是不变的,并且在控制了个人、同伴和家庭特征后仍然显著。最重要的是,这些结果表明,宗教活动不仅仅是另一种俱乐部,而是在宗教活动中可能培养出与非宗教活动不同的发展资产。