2006
DOI: 10.1111/j.1467-8624.2006.00948.x
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The Nature and Correlates of Mexican‐American Adolescents' Time With Parents and Peers

Abstract: Drawing on cultural -ecological and person -environment fit perspectives, this study examined links among Mexican-American adolescents' time with peers and parents, parents' cultural orientations, and adolescents' psychosocial adjustment and cultural orientations. Participants were 492 MexicanAmerican adolescents (Ms = 15.7 and 12.8 years for older siblings and younger siblings) and their parents in 246 families. Family members described their family relationships, cultural orientations, and psychosocial funct… Show more

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Cited by 69 publications
(83 citation statements)
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References 43 publications
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“…The period from late childhood through young adulthood coincides with a major shift from parents as the primary audiences for personal storytelling to friends as an additional, and very important audience for such stories [Buhrmeister, 1996;Cooper, 1999;Hartup, 1996;Hazan & Zeifman, 1994;McLean, 2005;Updegraff, McHale, & Whiteman, 2006]. Nevertheless, there is little empirical work bearing on friends' influences that is specifically focused on moral development.…”
Section: Contextual Factorsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The period from late childhood through young adulthood coincides with a major shift from parents as the primary audiences for personal storytelling to friends as an additional, and very important audience for such stories [Buhrmeister, 1996;Cooper, 1999;Hartup, 1996;Hazan & Zeifman, 1994;McLean, 2005;Updegraff, McHale, & Whiteman, 2006]. Nevertheless, there is little empirical work bearing on friends' influences that is specifically focused on moral development.…”
Section: Contextual Factorsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Nevertheless, part of the value of the ecological approach is that it acknowledges the multiple environmental factors that impact and interact with individual characteristics to influence developmental processes and outcomes. Because individuals spend increasingly more time with their peers and less time with family during adolescence (Updegraff et al, 2006), and adolescents also tend to place a greater importance on their peers during this time (Harter, 1999), it will be important for future research to consider the role that peers play in adolescents' ethnic identity formation. It also will be important to examine how messages from peers regarding ethnicity interact with messages from the family to inform adolescents' ethnic identity.…”
Section: Conclusion Limitations and Directions For Future Researchmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The association was signifi cant, but weaker, in families where mothers and adolescents described similar levels of Mexican orientations, and signifi cant but weakest, in families where mothers were more Mexican-oriented than adolescents. One interpretation is that families characterized by adolescents who have stronger Mexican orientations than their mothers are nonnormative (i.e., less common) in this cultural context (Updegraff et al, 2006), and thus, have more limited social support for handling the stressors in their relationships, strengthening the association between mother-daughter confl ict and adolescent adjustment problems. Predictions about normative patterns of cultural adaptation lead to the expectation that parents will retain stronger ties to Mexican culture than their offspring (Portes & Rumbaut, 2001;Szapocznik & Kurtines, 1980, suggesting that families characterized by more Mexican-oriented mothers than daughters may be normative.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Much less is known about mismatches that are thought to be less common, and thus nonnormative, such as when parents have stronger ties to U.S. culture than youth or when youth maintain stronger ties to Mexican culture than their parents. Some evidence suggests that youths' high levels of involvement in Mexican culture in combination with parents' strong ties to mainstream culture, place youth at risk for adjustment problems (e.g., Updegraff, McHale, Whiteman, Thayer, & Crouter, 2006). In this study, we investigated whether intergenerational discrepancies in Mexican and Anglo cultural orientations exacerbated negative associations between confl ict and adjustment.…”
Section: Mother-daughter Discrepancies In Cultural Orientationsmentioning
confidence: 96%
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