Family Processes and Adolescent Religiosity and Religious Practice: View From the NLSY97 |
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Authors: | Randal D. Day Hinckley Jones-Sanpei Jessica L. Smith Price Dennis K. Orthner Elizabeth C. Hair Kristin Anderson Moore |
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Affiliation: | 1. School of Family Life , Brigham Young University , Provo, Utah, USA day@byu.edu;3. Jordan Institute for Families , University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill , Chapel Hill, North Carolina, USA;4. Marriage, Family, and Human Development , Brigham Young University , Provo, Utah, USA;5. Jordan Institute for Families , University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill , Chapel Hill, North Carolina, USA;6. Child Trends Inc. , Washington, DC, USA |
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Abstract: | This article focuses on family processes and adolescent religious attendance and personal religiosity. We find that the closeness and quality of the marital relationship and relationship between adolescent and parents significantly contributes to the strength of adolescent religious conviction and practice. The study used data from the NLSY97 cohort. Predictors include parenting style, closeness, and parent–child closeness; family structure; income, employment, parental education, mother's age at first birth, and number of siblings; adolescent characteristics (e.g., age, gender, race/ethnicity, disability, lying or cheating); and environmental characteristics (e.g., region of country, urbanicity, and physical environment risk). Family religious attendance was dramatically influenced by race in adolescents aged 16 years. Adolescents living with married, biological parents in 1997 were 36% more likely to attend worship services than those living with stepfamilies. Adolescents living in more physically risky environments, with peers who belonged to gangs, cut classes, or had sex, were less likely to attend weekly worship services with their families. Finally, compared with adolescents whose parents had a high-quality marital relationship and who had good relationships with both parents, all other adolescents were less likely to attend weekly worship services with their families. |
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Keywords: | church attendance family processes NLSY97 religious practice teen religiosity |
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