低收入社区学龄前儿童拉丁裔父母对父母参与的文化和背景理解:移民执法威胁、父母健康和社会人口统计学的作用

IF 3.2 1区 教育学 Q1 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH Early Childhood Research Quarterly Pub Date : 2024-10-01 DOI:10.1016/j.ecresq.2024.03.006
R. Gabriela Barajas-Gonzalez, Alexandra Ursache, Dimitra Kamboukos, Bo Gu, Keng-Yen Huang, Heliana Linares Torres, Sabrina Cheng, Laurie Miller Brotman, Spring Dawson-McClure
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引用次数: 0

摘要

帮助来自低收入家庭和移民家庭的拉丁裔儿童做好入学准备的努力重点是促进父母参与儿童教育。在评估家长参与程度时,大多数措施都是以学校为基础的活动为中心,与中产阶级和欧美主导规范保持一致,而忽略了拉丁家庭与孩子互动以支持他们的教育经历和发展的多种方式。此外,关于拉丁裔父母参与的预测因素的研究主要集中在父母人口统计和语言因素上,这限制了我们对如何公平地支持父母参与的理解。本研究采用对拉丁裔家庭文化情境化行为敏感的父母参与衡量标准,描述了在全国反移民、反拉丁裔的社会政治气候下,居住在纽约市历史上缺乏投资的社区的拉丁裔父母参与孩子在家和学校学习的方式。我们还研究了移民执法威胁和父母健康是否与拉丁裔家庭参与家庭和学校活动有关。数据来自对拉丁裔父母进行的一项更大的研究(n=103;42%是移民)。描述性结果表明,尽管社会政治背景紧张,但儿童教育和发展在多个领域的参与水平与开发商建立的平均水平相当。回归分析的结果表明,除了人口、语言和财政因素外,移民执法威胁和父母健康也与低收入社区拉丁裔家庭参与幼儿学习的各个方面有关。对政策和实践的影响进行了讨论。
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Cultural and contextual understanding of parent engagement among Latine parents of pre-K children in low-income neighborhoods: The role of immigration enforcement threat, parent health and sociodemographics
Efforts to bolster the school readiness of Latine children from low-income and immigrant homes have focused on fostering parent engagement in children's education. In assessing parent engagement, most measures center school-based activities in alignment with middle class, European American dominant norms, missing the multiple ways that Latine families engage with their children to support their educational experiences and development. Additionally, studies of predictors of Latine parent engagement have mainly focused on parent demographic and linguistic factors, limiting our understanding of how to support parent engagement equitably. Using a measure of parent engagement sensitive to culturally contextualized behaviors of Latine families, this study describes the ways Latine parents living in historically disinvested neighborhoods in New York City engage in their children's learning at home and in school during a nationally charged anti-immigrant, anti-Latine sociopolitical climate. We also examine whether immigration enforcement threat and parent health are associated with Latine family engagement in home and school-based activities. Data come from a larger study conducted with Latine parents (n=103; 42% immigrant) of pre-K children. Descriptive results indicate that despite a charged sociopolitical context, levels of engagement in children's education and development across multiple domains were comparable with mean levels established by the developers. Findings from regression analyses demonstrated that above and beyond demographic, linguistic and financial factors, immigration enforcement threat and parent health were associated with aspects of family engagement in young children's learning among Latine families in low-income communities. Implications for policy and practice are discussed.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
7.00
自引率
8.10%
发文量
109
期刊介绍: For over twenty years, Early Childhood Research Quarterly (ECRQ) has influenced the field of early childhood education and development through the publication of empirical research that meets the highest standards of scholarly and practical significance. ECRQ publishes predominantly empirical research (quantitative or qualitative methods) on issues of interest to early childhood development, theory, and educational practice (Birth through 8 years of age). The journal also occasionally publishes practitioner and/or policy perspectives, book reviews, and significant reviews of research. As an applied journal, we are interested in work that has social, policy, and educational relevance and implications and work that strengthens links between research and practice.
期刊最新文献
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