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Family Functioning, Identity Commitments, and School Value among Ethnic Minority and Ethnic Majority Adolescents. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • - Ethnic minority youth struggle more with school adjustment compared to their majority peers, and the study investigates if this is influenced by family functioning and identity commitments over time.
  • - The research involved 205 minority and 480 majority adolescents over three time points, revealing that stronger identity commitments negatively affected school value among minorities but not majorities.
  • - The findings indicate that minority youth showed a complex relationship where higher school value led to increased identity commitments, while the opposite was true for majority youth, suggesting different pathways to school adjustment based on ethnic background.

Article Abstract

Ethnic minority youth show worse school adjustment than their ethnic majority peers. Yet, it remains unclear whether this gap can be explained by differences in family functioning and consequent identity commitments. This study examined (1) whether family functioning relates to identity commitments over time and (2) whether identity commitments impact later school value (3) among minority and majority adolescents. Minority (N = 205, M = 16.25 years, 31.1% girls) and majority adolescents (N = 480, M = 15.73 years, 47.9% girls) participated in this preregistered three-wave longitudinal study (T1: March-April 2012; T2: October 2012; T3: March-April 2013). Dynamic Panel Models revealed that most within-person cross-lagged associations were not significant in the total sample. Yet, multigroup analyses revealed differences between groups: Stronger identity commitments related to lower school value among minority adolescents, but were unrelated to school value among majority adolescents over time. Additionally, higher school value increased identity commitments among minority youth, yet it decreased identity commitments among majority youth over time. The findings highlight the differential interplay between identity commitments and school adjustment for minority and majority adolescents, with important implications for their future life chances.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11045604PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10964-024-01972-1DOI Listing

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