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Educational Risk and Resilience in African-American Youth: Context, Self, Action, and Outcomes in School

611

Citations

22

References

1994

Year

Abstract

This study examined the empirical validity of a model of human motivation as it applies to school success and failure in 3 independent samples of 10- to 16-year-old African-American youth. Specifically, we assessed how indicators of context, self, and action relate to measures of risk and resilient outcomes in school in 3 different samples, using 3 different measurement strategies. Correlational and path analyses on the 3 data sets supported the empirical validity of the model. African-American youth's experience of their parents' school involvement predicted a composite of self-system processes, which in turn predicted the subjects' reports of their engagement in school. Engagement then predicted school performance and adjustment. The data supported a reciprocal path from action to context, suggesting that youth who show more disaffected patterns of behavior and emotion in school experience less support from their families than those reporting more engaged patterns of action. Implications for program and policy decisions are discussed.

References

YearCitations

1988

6.2K

1988

6K

1976

2.1K

1991

1.8K

1984

1.2K

1965

943

1990

831

1990

407

1990

347

1982

330

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