Educational Values of Latino Families Participating in a School Readiness Intervention: Hopes and Implications for Pediatrics.

IF 1.8 3区 医学 Q3 BEHAVIORAL SCIENCES Journal of Developmental and Behavioral Pediatrics Pub Date : 2024-09-01 Epub Date: 2024-06-21 DOI:10.1097/DBP.0000000000001295
Jaime W Peterson, Alejandro Robles, Veronica Ilene Underwood Carrasco, Julia Zavala, Nicole Almanzar, Katharine E Zuckerman, Janine Bruce
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Abstract

Objective: To explore Latino parents' educational values and hopes for their preschool-aged children after a clinic school readiness (SR) intervention.

Methods: Qualitative analysis of semi-structured interviews of Latino parents regarding their perceptions of a novel SR coaching intervention (2016-2017). Parents who received the intervention were approached for interview (n = 74); 59 postintervention interviews were completed in English or Spanish, audio recorded, transcribed, and translated into English. Iterative team-based coding and inductive thematic analysis of 47 interviews were conducted by 3 team members using Dedoose.

Results: Children were on average 4.5 years old, with the majority speaking Spanish at home (57%), and having preschool experience (81%). Mothers mostly had no paid employment (53%) and limited formal education. Four domains emerged: 1) education is valued and seen as a pathway to a successful life for children, and 2) while structural and cultural barriers exist, 3) Latino families are motivated and 4) trust providers to offer SR support. Parents suggested pediatricians could provide more SR knowledge to families and offer programs within primary care. Integration of findings are summarized in a framework for clinical practice.

Conclusion: Latino parents' trust in their pediatric providers, combined with their strong educational aspirations for their children, offers the pediatric clinic an opportunity to partner with families to reduce systemic SR barriers. Pediatric providers can support Latino parents in preparing their children for school through culturally responsive, strengths-based approaches that build on their educational aspirations, value existing SR efforts, offer SR knowledge around early literacy and math, and build connections to early childhood programs.

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参与入学准备干预的拉丁裔家庭的教育价值观:对儿科的希望和影响》。
目的探讨拉丁裔家长在接受诊所入学准备(SR)干预后对其学龄前子女的教育价值观和希望:对拉丁裔家长进行半结构式访谈的定性分析,了解他们对一项新颖的入学准备辅导干预措施(2016-2017 年)的看法。接受干预的家长接受了访谈(n = 74);用英语或西班牙语完成了 59 次干预后访谈,进行了录音、转录并翻译成英语。3 名团队成员使用 Dedoose 对 47 个访谈进行了基于团队的迭代编码和归纳主题分析:儿童平均年龄为 4.5 岁,大多数儿童在家讲西班牙语(57%),有学前教育经验(81%)。母亲大多没有有偿工作(53%),受过的正规教育有限。研究发现了四个领域:1)教育受到重视,并被视为儿童走向成功人生的途径;2)虽然存在结构性和文化性障碍,但 3)拉丁裔家庭有积极性;4)信任服务提供者提供的性健康支持。家长们建议儿科医生向家庭提供更多的性健康知识,并在初级保健中提供相关计划。结论:拉美裔家长对其儿科医生的信任度很高:结论:拉丁裔家长对儿科医生的信任,加上他们对子女教育的强烈愿望,为儿科诊所提供了一个与家庭合作减少系统性SR障碍的机会。儿科医疗服务提供者可以支持拉丁裔家长为其子女入学做好准备,具体做法是通过文化响应、基于优势的方法,以他们的教育愿望为基础,重视现有的性健康教育工作,提供与早期识字和数学有关的性健康教育知识,并与儿童早期教育项目建立联系。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.10
自引率
8.30%
发文量
155
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: Journal of Developmental & Behavioral Pediatrics (JDBP) is a leading resource for clinicians, teachers, and researchers involved in pediatric healthcare and child development. This important journal covers some of the most challenging issues affecting child development and behavior.
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