The Role of Family Obligations and School Adjustment in Explaining the Immigrant Paradox
β Scribed by Mitch van Geel; Paul Vedder
- Publisher
- Springer US
- Year
- 2009
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 207 KB
- Volume
- 40
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0047-2891
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β¦ Synopsis
This study examined the role of family obligations and school adjustment in explaining immigrant adolescentsβ adaptation. Despite a relatively low socio-economic status, immigrant adolescents have been found to have a pattern of adaptation superior to that of national adolescents. Immigrant adolescentsβ strong sense of family obligations and positive school adjustment have been used to explain these positive adaptation outcomes. Using self-reports in a sample of 277 national adolescents (45.5% female) and a sample of 175 non-western immigrant adolescents (58.9% female), both samples with a mean age of 15Β years, it was found that despite a lower socio-economic status, the adaptation of immigrant adolescents was as good as the nationalsβ adaptation. Immigrant adolescents scored higher on family obligations and school adjustment. Family obligations and school adjustment were found positively related to adaptation outcomes in the national and the immigrant adolescent sample. Findings suggest that, in underprivileged environments, a strong sense of family obligations may help immigrants as well as national adolescents achieve a positive pattern of adaptation.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
School counselors are poised to play a significant role within comprehensive school counseling programs in addressing the needs of immigrant children in schools. The authors describe how school counselors can have a positive impact on the adjustment of immigrant students by building crossβcultural b