Paul Baerwald School of Social Work and Social Welfare, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem.
Municipality of Jerusalem.
Am J Orthopsychiatry. 2018;88(6):701-712. doi: 10.1037/ort0000287. Epub 2017 Aug 17.
Father support of young people living in out-of-home settings is a neglected area of research. The study examines the moderating role of peer victimization in the association between father support and adjustment difficulties among male and female adolescents in residential care settings. Using random cluster sampling, the study includes the reports of 1,409 young people, in Grades 8 to 12, residing in 16 Israeli educational residential care settings designed for youth from underprivileged backgrounds. The findings show that, on average, fathers are highly involved in these young people's lives. They also show that male adolescents, adolescents whose parents are married, Israeli-born adolescents, and those whose fathers have higher education levels have higher levels of father support. Father support is negatively associated with adjustment difficulties. A significant interaction was found between peer victimization, father support, and gender in predicting adjustment difficulties. Among boys who had experienced peer victimization at any point during their lives, the findings show a significant negative association between father support and adjustment difficulties. For boys who had never experienced peer victimization, the association was statistically insignificant. For girls, the picture revealed is different; for those who had experienced peer victimization, the level of father support was insignificantly linked with adjustment difficulties. For girls who had never experienced peer victimization, there was a significant association between increased father support and reduced adjustment difficulties. These findings shed light on ways in which father support is beneficial to young people in residential care, with implications for child welfare and education professionals. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2018 APA, all rights reserved).
父亲对居住在家庭外环境中的年轻人的支持是一个被忽视的研究领域。本研究考察了同伴侵害在父亲支持与居住在住宿照料环境中的男性和女性青少年适应困难之间的关系中的调节作用。使用随机聚类抽样,本研究包括了 16 个以色列教育住宿照料机构中 1409 名 8 至 12 年级年轻人的报告,这些机构是为背景较差的年轻人设立的。研究结果表明,父亲通常高度参与这些年轻人的生活。研究还表明,男青少年、父母已婚的青少年、以色列出生的青少年以及父亲受教育程度较高的青少年,其父亲的支持程度较高。父亲的支持与适应困难呈负相关。研究发现,同伴侵害、父亲支持与性别之间的相互作用在预测适应困难方面具有显著意义。在生活中曾经历过同伴侵害的男孩中,父亲的支持与适应困难之间存在显著的负相关。对于从未经历过同伴侵害的男孩来说,这种关联在统计学上并不显著。对于女孩来说,情况则不同;对于曾经历过同伴侵害的女孩来说,父亲支持的程度与适应困难之间没有显著联系。对于从未经历过同伴侵害的女孩来说,父亲支持程度的增加与适应困难的减少之间存在显著关联。这些发现揭示了父亲支持对居住在住宿照料中的年轻人有益的方式,对儿童福利和教育专业人员具有启示意义。(APA,2018 年,所有权利保留)。