The role of parenting and personal characteristics on deviant peer association among European American and Latino adolescents |
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Authors: | Laura M. Padilla-Walker Roy A. Bean Alexander L. Hsieh |
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Affiliation: | aHuman Development in the School of Family Life, Brigham Young University, United States |
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Abstract: | This study examined both mothers’ and fathers’ parenting (positive and negative) and adolescents’ personal characteristics (religiosity, social initiative, aggression, depression) in relation to perceived deviant peer association for European American and Latino adolescents. Using structural equation modeling, adolescents’ reports of positive or negative mothering and fathering were found to be related to adolescents’ personal characteristics, and these characteristics were, in turn, related to perceived deviant peer association. Ethnic differences in means were found in both parenting and outcome variables, with European American adolescents reporting higher levels of positive parenting and social initiative, and lower levels of perceived deviant peer association than Latino adolescents. Despite these mean differences, no ethnic differences were found in the overall measurement or structural model, suggesting that this process functions similarly for these two ethnic groups. |
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Keywords: | Latinos Parenting Deviant peer association Adolescents |
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