Linking IEP Status to Parental Involvement for High School Students of First-Generation and Native-Born Families

IF 0.9 Q3 EDUCATION, SPECIAL
Jennifer A. Freeman, J. Jacob Kirksey
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

As educators and policymakers increasingly use parental involvement as a mechanism to increase student achievement, scholars know surprisingly little about the disparities in frequencies of parental involvement for first-generation immigrant compared to native-born parents as well as how involvement may differ for parents of students with Individualized Education Programs (IEPs). Using HSLS:2009, we compared parental involvement of first-generation immigrant parents and native-born parents of high school students with and without IEPs. Our descriptive results indicate that first-generation parents exhibit lower frequencies of school-based involvement compared to native-born parents. In our propensity score matching analysis, we found that IEP status is associated with an increase in school-based parental involvement for both first-generation immigrant and native-born families. We also found that IEP status was negatively associated with academic socialization for both first-generation immigrant and native-born families.
第一代和本土出生的高中生IEP状况与父母参与的关系
随着教育工作者和政策制定者越来越多地将父母参与作为提高学生成绩的一种机制,学者们对第一代移民与本土出生的父母参与频率的差异以及个性化教育计划(IEPs)学生的父母参与的差异知之甚少。采用HSLS:2009,我们比较了第一代移民父母和本地出生父母对有和没有iep的高中生的父母参与。我们的描述性结果表明,与本地出生的父母相比,第一代父母在学校参与的频率较低。在我们的倾向得分匹配分析中,我们发现,对于第一代移民和本土出生的家庭来说,IEP状态与学校家长参与的增加有关。我们还发现,在第一代移民和本土出生家庭中,IEP状况与学术社会化呈负相关。
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来源期刊
Teaching Exceptional Children
Teaching Exceptional Children EDUCATION, SPECIAL-
CiteScore
1.90
自引率
20.00%
发文量
75
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