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Gepubliceerd in: Child Psychiatry & Human Development 2/2013

01-04-2013 | Original Article

The Role of Parental Language Acculturation in the Formation of Social Capital: Differential Effects on High-risk Children

Auteurs: Carmen R. Valdez, Monique T. Mills, Amanda J. Bohlig, David Kaplan

Gepubliceerd in: Child Psychiatry & Human Development | Uitgave 2/2013

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Abstract

This person-centered study examines the extent to which parents’ language dominance influences the effects of an after school, multi-family group intervention, FAST, on low-income children’s emotional and behavioral outcomes via parents’ relations with other parents and with school staff. Social capital resides in relationships of trust and shared expectations, which are highly dependent on whether parents share the language of other parents and teachers. This study is based on a community epidemiologically-defined sample of Latino families (N = 3,091) in San Antonio, Texas and Phoenix, Arizona. Latent profile analyses revealed three language profiles of parents across the two cities: English-dominant, Spanish-dominant, and bilingual. Path models revealed that FAST did not have a direct or indirect effect on children’s emotional and behavior functioning, although FAST increased parent–parent and parent-school social capital among Spanish-dominant parents in Arizona and these parent–parent relations were associated with better child outcomes. Implications for interventions are discussed.
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Metagegevens
Titel
The Role of Parental Language Acculturation in the Formation of Social Capital: Differential Effects on High-risk Children
Auteurs
Carmen R. Valdez
Monique T. Mills
Amanda J. Bohlig
David Kaplan
Publicatiedatum
01-04-2013
Uitgeverij
Springer US
Gepubliceerd in
Child Psychiatry & Human Development / Uitgave 2/2013
Print ISSN: 0009-398X
Elektronisch ISSN: 1573-3327
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10578-012-0328-8

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