Alberta Journal of Educational Research
Volume 51, Issue 4, 2005, Pages 342-353
A comparison of hispanic refugee parents' and adolescents' accuracy in judging family cultural views (Review)
Merali N.*
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a
University of Alberta, Canada, Counselling Psychology Graduate Program, Canada
Abstract
The Canadian school system requires refugee adolescents to develop the language, cross-cultural interaction skills, and direct modes of expression necessary for academic success. As peers become the agents of socialization into the host culture, adolescents may not attend to parents' differential levels of receptiveness to changes away from their cultural heritage. In this study 50 Hispanic refugee parent-adolescent dyads rated the acceptability of 24 cultural shifts from their own perspective and the perspective of the other family member. Adolescents were poorer judges of family cultural views than their parents, creating potential for family conflict when school-based changes occur at home.
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Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-33645333420&partnerID=40&md5=94e2eea6aca1e270b5a2e434d9ec6d10
ISSN: 00024805
Cited by: 1
Original Language: English