Aguayo Liliana, Hernandez Iseli G, Yasui Miwa, Estabrook Ryne, Anderson Erica L, Davis Matthew M, Briggs-Gowan Margaret J, Wakschlag Lauren S, Heard-Garris Nia
Department of Preventive Medicine.
Innovation, De-Risking and Enterprise Acceleration (IDEA) Center.
J Fam Psychol. 2021 Mar;35(2):138-148. doi: 10.1037/fam0000663.
Cultural factors influence the development of all children. Yet, current knowledge of explicit cultural socialization processes in childhood remains limited, mainly by failing to incorporate the experiences of young children. To address this critical gap, the authors introduce the OMERS-Peds task, an observational measurement designed to systematically identify and compare the content of cultural messages passed down from caregivers to offspring during early school age years. The OMERS-Peds was administered to mothers and children (n = 275) from three diverse racial/ethnic backgrounds (African American (n = 153), Hispanic (n = 61), and non-Hispanic White (n = 61)) within the longitudinal Multidimensional Assessment of Preschoolers (MAPS) Study. The OMERS-Peds coding system was used to rate how strongly families endorsed 5 key constructs: family culture, religion, identity, ethnicity, and race. A series of χ2 statistic tests were used to compare scores across racial/ethnic backgrounds, and within families (between children and their mothers). Analyses revealed that in the cultural socialization conversations occurring in early childhood, parents and children prioritize talking about their family's culture and religion. Independent of their racial/ethnic backgrounds, mothers and children seldom discussed race and ethnicity. Contrary to research with older children, differences were mainly identified within families, rather than across racial/ethnic groups. Findings support the need to include children's perspectives in the assessments of cultural socialization, as opposed to relying primarily on parent reports, and highlight the importance of having an observational methodology that allows researchers to examine parent-child bidirectional interactions during early school age years in a systematic manner. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2021 APA, all rights reserved).
文化因素影响着所有儿童的发展。然而,目前对童年期明确的文化社会化过程的了解仍然有限,主要是因为未能纳入幼儿的经历。为了弥补这一关键差距,作者引入了OMERS-Peds任务,这是一种观察性测量方法,旨在系统地识别和比较在学龄早期从照顾者传递给后代的文化信息的内容。在纵向的学龄前儿童多维评估(MAPS)研究中,对来自三种不同种族/族裔背景(非裔美国人(n = 153)、西班牙裔(n = 61)和非西班牙裔白人(n = 61))的母亲和儿童(n = 275)进行了OMERS-Peds测试。OMERS-Peds编码系统用于评估家庭对五个关键概念的认可程度:家庭文化、宗教、身份、族裔和种族。使用一系列卡方统计测试来比较不同种族/族裔背景以及家庭内部(儿童与其母亲之间)的得分。分析表明,在幼儿期发生的文化社会化对话中,父母和孩子优先谈论他们家庭的文化和宗教。无论种族/族裔背景如何,母亲和孩子很少讨论种族和族裔。与对大龄儿童的研究相反,差异主要在家庭内部而非不同种族/族裔群体之间被发现。研究结果支持在文化社会化评估中纳入儿童观点的必要性,而不是主要依赖父母的报告,并强调拥有一种观察方法的重要性,该方法允许研究人员系统地检查学龄早期的亲子双向互动。(PsycInfo数据库记录(c)2021美国心理学会,保留所有权利)