University of Michigan SSW, 1080 S. University, Rm B660, Ann Arbor, MI 48109, United States.
Drug Alcohol Depend. 2013 Dec 1;133(2):330-7. doi: 10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2013.06.010. Epub 2013 Jul 24.
Research explaining school effects on alcohol use is scare. This study examined the interactive effect between family support and school characteristics (size, poverty, and sector) on adolescents' alcohol use trajectories in Chicago.
Longitudinal and multilevel data were from the Project of Human Development in Chicago Neighborhoods and the Common Core of Data (National Center for Educational Statistics). The sample consisted of 2205 adolescents in 558 schools. A three-level hierarchical linear model was used to estimate multilevel growth curve models and school effects on alcohol trajectories.
In addition to the strong relationship between parental support and alcohol trajectories; the results also found school effects on the average baseline of alcohol use and the rates of change across time. Interestingly, high levels of parental support were more effective in preventing alcohol use in public schools, while adolescents attending private schools with low levels of parental support were more likely to consume alcohol. Similarly, students attending public schools with higher rates of poverty who enjoy higher levels of parental support were less likely to consume alcohol compared to students with lower parental support attending lower rates of schools poverty.
Key findings highlight the importance of the interaction between parental support and school characteristics meaning that protective factors provided by parents could be reinforced or diminished by the school context.
解释学校对酒精使用影响的研究很少。本研究考察了家庭支持与学校特征(规模、贫困和部门)之间的相互作用对芝加哥青少年饮酒轨迹的影响。
来自芝加哥社区人类发展项目和核心数据(国家教育统计中心)的纵向和多层次数据。样本由 558 所学校的 2205 名青少年组成。使用三级层次线性模型来估计多层次增长曲线模型和学校对酒精轨迹的影响。
除了父母支持与酒精轨迹之间的密切关系外;研究结果还发现学校对酒精使用的平均基线和随时间变化的速度有影响。有趣的是,高水平的父母支持在公立学校预防饮酒方面更有效,而在父母支持水平较低的私立学校就读的青少年更有可能饮酒。同样,在享受高水平父母支持的高贫困率公立学校就读的学生比在贫困率较低的学校就读的学生饮酒的可能性较小,而后者的父母支持水平较低。
主要发现强调了父母支持与学校特征之间相互作用的重要性,这意味着父母提供的保护因素可能会受到学校环境的增强或削弱。