RMLE Online Vol. 31, No. 8 - Factors Associated with Perceived Parental Academic Monitoring in a Population of Low-Income, African American Young Adolescents
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RMLE Online - Research in Middle Level Education
2008 - Volume 31, Number 8
Editor, Micki M. Caskey, Ph.D., Portland State University

Factors Associated with Perceived Parental Academic Monitoring in a Population of Low-Income, African American Young Adolescents

Jessica Miller Rath
University of Maryland
College Park, MD

Andrea C. Gielen
Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health
Baltimore, MD

Denise L. Haynie
National Institute of Child Health and Human Development
Bethesda, MD

Barry S. Solomon
Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine
Baltimore, MD

Tina L. Cheng
Johns Hopkins University
Baltimore, MD

Bruce G. Simons-Morton
National Institute of Child Health and Human Development
Bethesda, MD

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Abstract

Adolescent academic achievement is closely linked to numerous health outcomes. Studies have demonstrated a positive relationship between parental academic monitoring and adolescent academic achievement. Less is known about factors associated with parental academic monitoring, and research is particularly lacking with low-income, African American young adolescents who are at high risk for school disengagement and underachievement.

Data were collected from a sample of incoming urban sixth graders using a computer- assisted questionnaire. Data were analyzed as cross-sectional using the responses of 111 African American adolescents, ages 10–14 years. The median responses of adolescents about perceptions of parental academic monitoring were used to classify adolescents into two groups, lower and higher perceived academic monitoring. Logistic regression and stratified analyses determined factors related to higher parental academic monitoring.

Adolescents' perceived parental general support (OR: 2.08, CI: 1.29–3.36) and friends' pro-social behavior (OR: 1.54, CI: 1.03–2.30), were significant factors in the multivariate model. Also, adolescents living with one biological parent and with other adults were more likely to report higher parental academic monitoring, compared to adolescents living with one biological parent and no other adults (OR: 3.58, CI: 1.00–12.83).

Perceptions of general parental support and peer groups offer insight into why parental academic monitoring allows only some African American urban youth to succeed academically. Parental support provides a context that influences youths' perceptions of their parents' academic monitoring and should be considered in future research. Results identify factors in a high-risk population that may help explain why some urban youth succeed academically while others do not.

ISSN 1940-4476


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