Department of Psychology, Lewis & Clark College, Portland, Oregon, USA.
School of Education, University of California, Irvine, California, USA.
J Adolesc. 2024 Aug;96(6):1182-1197. doi: 10.1002/jad.12328. Epub 2024 Apr 14.
Parents' science support and adolescents' motivational beliefs are associated with adolescents' expectations for their future occupations; however, these associations have been mostly investigated among White, middle-class samples. Framed by situated expectancy-value theory, the current study investigated: (1) the associations between parents' science support in 9th grade and Latine adolescents' science intrinsic value, utility value, and STEM career expectations in 11th grade, and (2) whether these indicators and the relations among them differed by adolescents' gender and parents' education.
Study participants included Latine adolescents (n = 3060; M = 14.4 years old; 49% female) in the United States from the High School Longitudinal Study of 2009.
Analyses revealed a significant, positive association between parents' science support and Latine adolescents' science utility value. Additionally, there was a significant, positive association between parents' science support and Latinas' science intrinsic value, but not for Latinos' science intrinsic value. Latine adolescents' science utility value, but not their science intrinsic value, predicted their concurrent STEM career expectations. Though there were no significant mean level differences in adolescents' science utility value or parents' science support based on adolescents' gender, the measure of adolescents' science intrinsic value varied across girls and boys. Finally, adolescents whose parents had a college degree received greater science support from parents compared to adolescents whose parents had less education than a college degree.
Findings suggest parents' science support and adolescents' intrinsic and utility values have potential associations with Latine adolescents' STEM career expectations near the end of high school.
父母的科学支持和青少年的动机信念与青少年对未来职业的期望有关;然而,这些关联大多是在白人和中产阶级的样本中进行调查的。本研究以情境期望价值理论为框架,调查了:(1)9 年级父母的科学支持与拉丁裔青少年 11 年级的科学内在价值、实用价值和 STEM 职业期望之间的关系;(2)这些指标以及它们之间的关系是否因青少年的性别和父母的教育程度而不同。
研究参与者包括来自美国 2009 年高中纵向研究的 3060 名拉丁裔青少年(M=14.4 岁,49%为女性)。
分析显示,父母的科学支持与拉丁裔青少年的科学实用价值之间存在显著的正相关。此外,父母的科学支持与拉丁裔少女的科学内在价值之间存在显著的正相关,但与拉丁裔男孩的科学内在价值无关。拉丁裔青少年的科学实用价值,而不是他们的科学内在价值,预测了他们当前的 STEM 职业期望。尽管青少年的科学实用价值或父母的科学支持在性别上没有显著的平均水平差异,但青少年的科学内在价值衡量标准在女孩和男孩之间有所不同。最后,与父母受教育程度低于大学的青少年相比,父母拥有大学学历的青少年从父母那里获得了更多的科学支持。
研究结果表明,父母的科学支持以及青少年的内在价值和实用价值与拉丁裔青少年高中即将结束时的 STEM 职业期望有潜在的关联。