Jacobs Center for Productive Youth Development, University of Zurich.
Department of Sociology, University of Minnesota.
Dev Psychol. 2021 Sep;57(9):1540-1558. doi: 10.1037/dev0001238.
Expectations about the future direct effort in goal-oriented action and may influence a range of life course outcomes, including educational attainment. Here we investigate whether such expectations are implicated in the dynamics underlying the persistence of educational advantage across family generations, and whether such dynamics have changed in recent decades in view of historical change. Focusing on the role of domain-specific (educational) and general (optimism and control) expectations, we examine parallels across parent-child cohorts in (a) the relationships between parental socioeconomic status (SES) and children's future expectations and (b) the associations between children's future expectations and their academic achievement. We estimate structural equation models using data from the prospective multigenerational Youth Development Study (N = 422 three-generation triads [G1-G2-G3]; G1 Mage in 1988 = 41.0 years, G2 Mage in 1989 = 14.7 years, G3 Mage in 2011 = 15.8 years; G2 White in 1989 = 66.4%, G3 White in 2011 = 64.4%; G1 mean annual household income, converted to 2008 equivalents = $41,687, G2 mean annual household income in 2008 dollars = $42,962; G1 mode of educational attainment = high school, G2 mode of educational attainment = some college). We find intergenerational similarity in the relationships between parental educational attainment and children's future expectations. Children's educational expectations strongly predicted their academic achievement in the second generation, but not in the third generation. With educational expansion, the more recent cohort had higher educational expectations that were less strongly related to achievement. Overall, the findings reveal dynamics underlying the persistence of educational success across generations. The role of future expectations in this intergenerational process varies across historical time, confirming a central conclusion of life span developmental psychology and life course sociological research that individual functioning is influenced by sociocultural contexts. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2021 APA, all rights reserved).
对未来目标导向行动的期望可能会影响一系列人生轨迹的结果,包括教育程度。在这里,我们研究这些期望是否与跨代际教育优势持续存在的潜在动态有关,以及鉴于历史变化,这种动态在最近几十年是否发生了变化。我们专注于特定领域(教育)和一般(乐观和控制)期望的作用,研究了父母-子女两代人之间的相似性:(a)父母社会经济地位(SES)与孩子未来期望之间的关系,以及(b)孩子未来期望与他们学业成绩之间的关联。我们使用前瞻性多代青年发展研究(N = 422 个三代三重关系 [G1-G2-G3];G1 在 1988 年的年龄为 41.0 岁,G2 在 1989 年的年龄为 14.7 岁,G3 在 2011 年的年龄为 15.8 岁;G2 在 1989 年的白人为 66.4%,G3 在 2011 年的白人为 64.4%;G1 的平均家庭年收入,转换为 2008 年的等价物=41687 美元,G2 在 2008 年的平均家庭年收入=42962 美元;G1 的教育程度模式=高中,G2 的教育程度模式=大专)的数据,估计结构方程模型。我们发现父母教育程度与孩子未来期望之间的关系存在代际相似性。孩子的教育期望强烈预测了他们在第二代的学业成绩,但在第三代则没有。随着教育的扩张,最近的一代有更高的教育期望,这些期望与成就的关系较弱。总的来说,研究结果揭示了代际间教育成功持续存在的潜在动态。在这种代际过程中,未来期望的作用因历史时期而异,这证实了生命历程发展心理学和生命历程社会学研究的一个核心结论,即个体功能受社会文化背景的影响。(PsycInfo 数据库记录(c)2021 APA,保留所有权利)。