Eitle David, Thorsen Maggie
Montana State University, Department of Sociology & Anthropology, Wilson 2-127, P.O. Box 172380, Bozeman, MT 59717.
Montana State University, Department of Sociology & Anthropology. Wilson 2-122.
Int J Sex Health. 2018;30(3):309-322. doi: 10.1080/19317611.2018.1502226. Epub 2018 Oct 31.
While there exist a voluminous number of studies examining predictors of adolescent sexual behavior, few studies have explored the role of the school social context in influencing teen sexual activity generally and specifically, the role that school contextual factors play in helping understand race differences in risky sexual behaviors. Using data from a nationally-representative school-based survey of American youth in grades 7-12, we find support for our core hypothesis that school contextual factors are associated with risky sexual behavior, number of sexual partners, and ever having sex, albeit it nuanced ways and that such factors cannot account for much of the race gap in adolescent sexual behavior. We interpret these findings to be more supportive of a social contagion model (versus a school climate model).
虽然有大量研究探讨青少年性行为的预测因素,但很少有研究探讨学校社会环境在总体上影响青少年性活动的作用,特别是学校环境因素在帮助理解危险性行为中的种族差异方面所起的作用。利用一项对美国7至12年级青少年进行的具有全国代表性的校本调查数据,我们发现支持我们的核心假设,即学校环境因素与危险性行为、性伴侣数量以及曾经有过性行为有关,尽管方式细微,而且这些因素不能解释青少年性行为中种族差距的很大一部分。我们将这些发现解释为更支持社会传染模型(而非学校氛围模型)。