Department of Human Development and Family Studies, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, Colorado 80523, USA.
J Adolesc Health. 2011 Oct;49(4):407-13. doi: 10.1016/j.jadohealth.2011.02.003. Epub 2011 May 25.
The purpose of this study was to examine the effects of school demographic factors and youth's perception of discrimination on delinquency in adolescence and into young adulthood for African American, Asian, Hispanic, and white racial/ethnic groups.
Using data from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health (Add Health), models testing the effect of school-related variables on delinquency trajectories were evaluated for the four racial/ethnic groups using Mplus 5.21 statistical software.
Results revealed that greater student ethnic diversity and perceived discrimination, but not teacher ethnic diversity, resulted in higher initial delinquency estimates at 13 years of age for all groups. However, except for African Americans, having a greater proportion of female teachers in the school decreased initial delinquency estimates. For African Americans and whites, a larger school size also increased the initial estimates. Additionally, lower social-economic status increased the initial estimates for whites, and being born in the United States increased the initial estimates for Asians and Hispanics. Finally, regardless of the initial delinquency estimate at age 13 and the effect of the school variables, all groups eventually converged to extremely low delinquency in young adulthood, at the age of 21 years.
Educators and public policy makers seeking to prevent and reduce delinquency can modify individual risks by modifying characteristics of the school environment. Policies that promote respect for diversity and intolerance toward discrimination, as well as training to help teachers recognize the precursors and signs of aggression and/or violence, may also facilitate a positive school environment, resulting in lower delinquency.
本研究旨在考察学校人口统计学因素和青少年对歧视的感知对非裔美国人、亚裔、西班牙裔和白人种族/民族群体在青春期和青年期的犯罪行为的影响。
本研究使用来自青少年健康纵向研究(Add Health)的数据,使用 Mplus 5.21 统计软件,针对四个种族/民族群体,评估了测试与学校相关的变量对犯罪轨迹影响的模型。
结果表明,对于所有群体,学生的种族多样性和感知到的歧视增加,但教师的种族多样性增加并不会导致更高的初始犯罪率,而这会导致更高的初始犯罪率。然而,除了非裔美国人,学校中女教师的比例增加会降低初始犯罪率。对于非裔美国人和白人来说,更大的学校规模也会增加初始犯罪率。此外,较低的社会经济地位会增加白人的初始犯罪率,而在美国出生会增加亚洲人和西班牙裔的初始犯罪率。最后,无论初始犯罪率是多少,以及学校变量的影响如何,所有群体最终都会在 21 岁的青年期收敛到极低的犯罪率。
教育工作者和公共政策制定者可以通过改变学校环境的特征来改变个体风险,从而预防和减少犯罪。促进对多样性的尊重和对歧视的不容忍的政策,以及培训帮助教师识别攻击和/或暴力的前兆和迹象的政策,也可能促进积极的学校环境,从而降低犯罪率。