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Parent and Sibling Science Support for Latinx Adolescents

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Abstract

Although previous literature indicates that parents and siblings each provide key support for Latinx adolescents’ academic success, most studies have not considered how parents and siblings work as a system to support adolescents in science. Informed by theories on family systems and family influence on youth’s achievement and education, this study aimed to (a) identify what Latinx adolescents believed were the most helpful ways that parents and siblings supported them in science, and (b) explore whether family science support varied based on parents’ science education. Using a qualitative approach, semi-structured interviews from 90 Latinx adolescents (mean age = 15.54 years; 38% girls; 84% born in the U.S.) were analyzed using inductive and deductive approaches. We found that parents and siblings supported Latinx adolescents in science through various home-based strategies: active engagement (classwork help and monitoring), academic socialization (encouragement, conversations about the future, and advice) and providing resources (material and social resources). Adolescents mentioned their older siblings were particularly helpful in providing class-specific support based on the science classes that they had previously taken. Additionally, our findings suggest that siblings relied more on classwork help from only older siblings in families where parents did not take any high school science classes compared to families where parents took some high school science classes. Overall, this study highlights the complementary science support that parents and siblings provide Latinx adolescents and the valuable role that siblings can play in Latinx families when parents have limited science education.

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Notes

  1. Latinx refers to people of Latin American origin or descent, such as Mexican descent. Latinx was used over Latino/a because it is a gender-neutral and gender-inclusive term as opposed to Latino/a, in which the gender binary is implicit.

  2. All participant names are pseudonyms.

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Funding

This research was supported by the National Science Foundation (NSF), through grants awarded to Simpkins, S. D. (DRL-1054798 & DRL-1560889) and Simpkins, S. D. (principal investigator) & Eccles, J. (DRL-1760757).

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Correspondence to Perla Ramos Carranza.

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All authors report there are no conflicts of interests.

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Data was collected through grants awarded to Dr. Simpkins, who is the second author of this manuscript, and is not currently publicly available.

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Ramos Carranza, P., Simpkins, S.D. Parent and Sibling Science Support for Latinx Adolescents. Soc Psychol Educ 24, 511–535 (2021). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11218-021-09620-3

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s11218-021-09620-3

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