Parent and Teacher Support Among Latino Immigrant Youth: Effects on School Engagement and School Trouble Avoidance
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
5-15-2015
Journal / Book Title
Education and Urban Society
Abstract
While a significant portion of Latino immigrant youth are failing to meet their academic potential, many others have been able to acquire the resources needed to excel academically. This study examined social capital assets (i.e., parent and teacher supports) for school engagement and trouble avoidance among a sample of recently arrived, non-U.S. born, middle school Latino adolescents (n = 141) residing in a high-poverty community located in the northeastern United States. School outcomes were compared for students who reported different combinations of low and high teacher and parent support. Findings from this study provided evidence of the additive benefit of teacher and parent support on school engagement and trouble avoidance among middle school, Latino immigrant adolescents. Implications for school-based interventions for this underserved population are discussed.
DOI
10.1177/0013124513495278
MSU Digital Commons Citation
Garcia-Reid, Pauline; Peterson, Christina Hamme; and Reid, Robert, "Parent and Teacher Support Among Latino Immigrant Youth: Effects on School Engagement and School Trouble Avoidance" (2015). Department of Family Science and Human Development Scholarship and Creative Works. 117.
https://digitalcommons.montclair.edu/familysci-facpubs/117
Published Citation
Garcia-Reid, P., Peterson, C. H., & Reid, R. J. (2015). Parent and Teacher Support Among Latino Immigrant Youth: Effects on School Engagement and School Trouble Avoidance. Education and Urban Society, 47(3), 328-343. https://doi.org/10.1177/0013124513495278