家长、教师及同伴学业支持对香港青少年学业成就的影响:学业投入的中介作用。

Jennifer Jun-Li Chen
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引用次数: 259

摘要

作者测试了一个模型,假设学生自我感知的学术支持(来自父母、老师和同龄人)通过他们自己感知的学术参与直接或间接地与他们的成就相关。研究对象为香港一所中学3个年级(中3-5,相当于美国的9-11年级)的270名青少年(年龄15.41岁,范围14-20岁)。学校校长和教师根据这些青少年对自我报告问卷的回答帮助收集数据,该问卷包括人口统计资料和4个量表,评估他们对父母、老师和同伴支持程度的自我认知,以及他们自己的学业投入。学业成绩是通过自我报告的数学、英语和语文成绩来衡量的。结构方程模型分析表明,青少年感知到的父母、教师和同伴支持均通过自身感知到的学业投入间接影响其学业成就。然而,这种关系的强度因支持系统而异,感知到的教师对成就的支持是最强的,紧随其后的是感知到的父母支持,然后是感知到的同伴支持。此外,感知到的父母支持和感知到的老师支持都与学业成绩直接相关。然而,感知到的教师支持对学生的成绩做出了最全面的(直接和间接)贡献。感知同伴支持与学业成绩的间接关系最小,但却很重要。然而,感知同伴支持的负面、直接影响抵消了其对学业成绩的积极、间接影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Relation of academic support from parents, teachers, and peers to Hong Kong adolescents' academic achievement: the mediating role of academic engagement.

The author tested a model hypothesizing that students' self-perceived academic support (from parents, teachers, and peers) is related to their achievement directly and indirectly through their own perceived academic engagement. The participants were 270 adolescents (M age = 15.41 years, range = 14-20 years) from 3 grade levels (Forms 3-5, equivalent to Grades 9-11 in the United States) in a Hong Kong secondary school. The school principal and teachers helped to collect data based on these adolescents' responses to a self-report questionnaire, consisting of a demographic profile and 4 scales assessing their self-perceptions of the extent of parental, teacher, and peer support, and their own academic engagement. Academic achievement was measured by self-reported grades in math, English, and Chinese. Structural equation modeling analyses revealed that adolescents' perceived parental, teacher, and peer support were all indirectly related to their academic achievement mediated by their own perceived academic engagement. The strength of the relationships, however, varied by support system, with perceived teacher support to achievement being the strongest, followed closely by perceived parental support, and then perceived peer support. In addition, both perceived parental support and perceived teacher support were directly related to academic achievement. However, perceived teacher support made the most total (direct and indirect) contribution to student achievement. Perceived peer support had the smallest, nonetheless significant, indirect relationship to academic achievement. However, the negative, direct influence of perceived peer support canceled out its positive, indirect influence on academic achievement.

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