第五章父母参与与台湾青少年的教育表现:双职工家庭与单职工家庭之比较

Y. Shih, Wen-Hsu Lin, C. Yi
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引用次数: 0

摘要

摘要本章旨在透过调查学校与家庭的具体实践,如学校选择、学校参与、在家准备学习场所、提供营养食物等,来描绘台湾家长参与的本土模式。我们使用台湾青年计划(2000年、2003年)的两波数据来检视双亲参与在双薪家庭与单薪家庭之间的差异,并进一步证明儿子与女儿在承认父母努力方面有不同的途径,以及孩子的主观评价如何促进他们的学习成绩。我们发现,双职工家庭比单职工家庭收入更高,受教育程度更高,孩子也更少。我们的多变量分析表明,父母的参与确实提高了孩子的基本能力测试(BCT)分数。然而,我们无法发现父母的就业状况对BCT分数有任何直接或间接的影响。进一步分析表明,父母学校参与与BCT成绩之间的关系仅在双职工家庭中显著,而在单职工家庭中不显著。此外,我们的多群体分析显示,儿子的BCT成绩受父母学校参与的影响更大,而女儿的BCT成绩受特殊家庭条件的影响更大。我们从青少年的主观反应中发现,与女儿相比,儿子对非家庭环境的反应可能更积极,而女儿对家庭条件的反应更积极。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Chapter 5 Parental Involvement and Educational Performance among Taiwanese Adolescents: Comparing Dual-Earner and Single-Earner Families
Abstract This chapter aims to delineate the indigenous pattern of parental involvement in Taiwan by investigating the effects of specific practices in schools and in the family, such as school selection, school involvement, preparing a study place at home, and providing nutritious food. We use two waves of data from the Taiwan Youth Project (2000, 2003) to examine how parental involvement varies between dual- and single-earner families, and we further demonstrate how sons and daughters have different access in terms of recognizing their parents’ effort, and how children’s subjective appraisals promote their academic performance with respect to test scores. We find that dual-earner families have higher incomes, higher educational levels, and have fewer children than single-earner ones. Our multivariate analyses show that parental involvement does increase youngsters’ Basic Competence Test (BCT) score. However, we are unable to find any direct or indirect effects from parental employment status on BCT scores. Further analysis indicates that the relationship between parental school involvement and BCT score is only significant among dual-earner families, but not for the single-earner ones. In addition, our multiple group analysis reveals that sons’ BCT scores are affected more by parents’ school involvement, whereas daughters’ are affected more by special home provision. Our findings from adolescents’ subjective responses imply that sons may be more responsive to a non-familial context in contrast with daughters, who react more positively to familial provision.
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