Department of Sociology, Ohio State University, Columbus, OH 43210, USA.
J Youth Adolesc. 2012 Mar;41(3):362-78. doi: 10.1007/s10964-011-9736-5. Epub 2011 Dec 14.
Participation in extracurricular activities is purported to protect the broad spectrum of youth from a host of behavioral risks. Yet, empirical research on the extent to which this assumption holds for involvement in violence by immigrant youth is limited. Thus, using data for 13,236 (51.8% female) adolescents from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health, this study explores how the relationship between extracurricular activities and youth violence varies by type of extracurricular activity profile (sports alone, non-sports alone, and a combination of sports and non-sports) and by generations of immigration (first, second, and third-plus). The sample is composed of 9.3% (n = 1,233) first-generation youth, 15.7% (n = 2,080) second generation, and 74.9% (n = 9,923) third-plus generation. The results reveal that adolescents from the third-plus generation (i.e., non-immigrant youth) who participate in non-sports alone or sports plus non-sports have lower odds of involvement in violence than adolescents from the same generation who do not participate in extracurricular activities. However, for first- and second-generation adolescents, participation in extracurricular activities is associated with higher rather than lower odds of violence compared to their non-participating counterparts. These findings challenge the viewpoint that participation in mainstream extracurricular activities as afforded by US schools is equally beneficial for all youth. They also call for additional research that explores why immigrant youth are less likely than non-immigrant youth to gain violence-reducing benefits when they participate in extracurricular activities.
参与课外活动据称可以保护广大青少年免受一系列行为风险的影响。然而,关于这种假设在多大程度上适用于移民青少年参与暴力行为的实证研究有限。因此,本研究使用了来自全国青少年健康纵向研究的 13236 名(51.8%为女性)青少年的数据,探讨了课外活动与青少年暴力之间的关系因课外活动类型(仅体育、非体育活动和体育与非体育活动的组合)和移民代际(第一代、第二代和第三代及以上)的不同而有所不同。该样本由 9.3%(n=1233)的第一代青少年、15.7%(n=2080)的第二代青少年和 74.9%(n=9923)的第三代及以上青少年组成。研究结果表明,来自第三代及以上(即非移民)的青少年,如果只参加非体育活动或体育加非体育活动,那么他们参与暴力的可能性比来自同一代但不参加课外活动的青少年要低。然而,对于第一代和第二代青少年来说,与不参加课外活动的同龄人相比,参加课外活动与更高而不是更低的暴力可能性相关。这些发现挑战了这样一种观点,即美国学校提供的主流课外活动对所有青少年都是同样有益的。它们还呼吁进行更多的研究,探讨为什么移民青少年在参加课外活动时,获得减少暴力的好处的可能性低于非移民青少年。