Title of article
PARENTS’ GOALS AND VALUES FOR CHILDREN Dimensions of Independence and Interdependence Across Four U.S. Ethnic Groups
Author/Authors
Marie-Anne Suizzo، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Pages
25
From page
506
To page
530
Abstract
Parents’ long-term goals and values for their children vary across U.S. ethnic groups. Researchers have
found that ethnic minority groups tend to promote interdependence, and European Americans tend to promote
independence, yet evidence of both orientations has also been found within each ethnic group. To
compare both the similarities and variations between ethnic groups, this study used a multiethnic questionnaire
measuring multiple dimensions of each orientation. A sample of 343 parents from four ethnic
groups completed a parental goals questionnaire, and exploratory factor analysis suggested five scales:
tradition and conformity, relatedness, benevolence and prosocial, agency and self-direction, and power
and achievement. All groups highly valued dimensions of both independence and interdependence, and
ethnicity explained differences in all five scales, controlling for parental education level. Using an ecocultural
perspective that views parent–child relationships within multiple intersecting ecologies, this
study provides evidence for the coexistence of dimensions of independence and interdependence in
parents’ cultural models in the United States.
Keywords
Cross-cultural , parental goals , Ethnicity , Socialization , European Americans , Mexican Americans , Maternal education , AfricanAmericans , Chinese Americans , Independence
Journal title
Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology
Serial Year
2007
Journal title
Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology
Record number
708984
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