Department of Sociology, Loyola University, Chicago.
J Youth Adolesc. 1979 Mar;8(1):91-101. doi: 10.1007/BF02139143.
This article analyzes data from a survey research study of students in the fifth through twelfth grades of an upper middle class Chicago suburban community. The findings indicate the use of alcohol and drugs among both prepubertal and teenage students, and the involvement of both groups in theft and vandalism. The level of community affluence and quality of community institutions and services rule out the explanations ("the tangle of pathology") usually offered in studies of delinquency in lower class and low-income communities. Peer group pressures and psychogenic factors appear to influence these kinds of acting-out behavior. And since considerable numbers of students noted that their parents had not established certain important regulations for them, the view advanced by this study is that deficient socialization and inadequate parenting also appear to be causes of these behavioral problems. However, since the study did not categorize the data in a way to permit cross-tabulations either supporting or invalidating this argument, this conclusion is a tentative one. It is suggested that future research dealing with these problems among this social stratum investigate the influence of parenting on acting-out behavior.
本文分析了一项针对芝加哥中上阶层郊区社区五至十二年级学生的调查研究数据。调查结果表明,青春期前和青少年学生都有饮酒和吸毒的现象,而且这两个群体都参与了盗窃和破坏公物的行为。社区的富裕程度以及社区机构和服务的质量排除了通常在研究贫困和低收入社区青少年犯罪时提出的解释(“病态的纠结”)。同伴压力和心理因素似乎影响了这些行为。而且,由于相当多的学生指出他们的父母没有为他们制定某些重要的规定,这项研究认为,社会化不足和育儿不当也可能是这些行为问题的原因。然而,由于该研究没有对数据进行分类,以便进行交叉制表来支持或否定这一论点,因此该结论只是初步的。本文建议,未来在这一社会阶层中研究这些问题的研究应调查育儿方式对行为不当的影响。