基于地的发展研究:在情境中研究青年发展的概念和方法进展。

IF 9.4 1区 心理学 Q1 PSYCHOLOGY, DEVELOPMENTAL
Dawn P Witherspoon, Rebecca M B White, Mayra Y Bámaca, Christopher R Browning, Tamara G J Leech, Tama Leventhal, Stephen A Matthews, Nicolo Pinchak, Amanda L Roy, Naomi Sugie, Erin N Winkler
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引用次数: 0

摘要

一段时间以来,科学家们已经认识到,发展在许多环境中展开,包括家庭、学校、社区以及有组织和无组织的活动环境。自20世纪初以来,主流社区效应研究的主体大量借鉴了20世纪初芝加哥社会学学派的框架,并一直将发展置于社区背景中,并努力确定社区对一系列发展结果,特别是成就、行为和情感问题以及性活动产生影响的结构和过程。从这些工作中,出现了两个新的发展学术领域。这两个领域都有望促进对儿童发展的理解。首先,文化发展社区研究人员正在推进社区效应研究,明确认识到种族、民族、文化和移民社会地位对社区环境和青少年发展需求、能力、经验和能力的影响。这项工作极大地扩展了邻里效应研究中研究的发展结果的范围,以认识到规范的身体、情感、认知、行为、社会和文化能力,这些能力在很大程度上被邻里效应研究所忽视,而邻里效应研究支持一种更加色盲的发展方法。第二,活动空间社区研究人员认识到,住宅区对更广泛的活动空间或青少年经常接触的地点和环境具有重要意义,例如,学校,工作,有组织的活动和闲逛。他们正在使用更新的技术和地理框架来评估居民社区和社区外环境的暴露程度。这些观点认识到,时间(即从微观时间到中观时间)和地点是有严格限制的,暴露可以在生态系统的许多层面(即从微观系统到宏观系统)进行操作。这些框架通过解决选择和暴露问题,解决了背景研究中先验发展的重要限制。解决选择问题涉及到认识到家庭在选择环境时有一定程度的选择,预测家庭选择的变量(例如,收入)也预测发展。考虑暴露包括认识到不同的参与者或居民经历不同数量的共享和非共享暴露,从而导致对情境效应的低估和高估。活动空间学者将接触到的社区环境,也包括青少年经常接触的其他地点和环境,如学校、课后环境、工作场所和聚会场所。不幸的是,文化发展和活动空间流都是从20世纪早期关于社区对发展影响的研究中产生的,它们在很大程度上是独立发展的。因此,本专著的总体目标是整合关于住宅社区、文化发展和活动空间的学术研究,以推进一个框架,以支持更好地理解不同群体背景下的发展。在第一章和第二章中,我们介绍了理论、概念和方法研究三种流派的历史背景。我们还提出了一个全面的文化发展活动空间框架,用于研究不同民族、种族和文化背景下儿童、青年和家庭的发展。该框架积极承认民族、种族、移民和社会经济社会地位的多样性。在第三章至第五章中,我们提出了该框架的具体特征,重点关注:(1)可以用活动空间方法捕获和操作的嵌套和非嵌套生态系统的不同层次;(2)可以用活动空间方法捕获和操作的时间和暴露或经验的不同维度;(3)环境结构和社会过程对于识别环境对发展影响的潜在机制的重要性。结构是与人员和机构的组成和空间安排有关的设定特征(例如,社会经济劣势、民族/种族组成)。社会过程代表了发生在环境中的集体社会动态,如社会互动、群体活动、与当地机构的经历、社会控制机制或共同信仰。在第六章中,我们强调了一系列来自美国的方法和经验范例,这些范例由我们的综合文化发展活动空间框架提供信息。这些例子的特点是定量和定性方法,包括方法混合。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Place-Based Developmental Research: Conceptual and Methodological Advances in Studying Youth Development in Context.

Scientists have, for some time, recognized that development unfolds in numerous settings, including families, schools, neighborhoods, and organized and unorganized activity settings. Since the turn of the 20th century, the body of mainstream neighborhood effects scholarship draws heavily from the early 20th century Chicago School of Sociology frameworks and have been situating development in neighborhood contexts and working to identify the structures and processes via which neighborhoods matter for a range of developmental outcomes, especially achievement, behavioral and emotional problems, and sexual activity. From this body of work, two new areas of developmental scholarship are emerging. Both areas are promising for advancing an understanding of child development in context. First, cultural-developmental neighborhood researchers are advancing neighborhood effects research that explicitly recognizes the ways that racial, ethnic, cultural, and immigrant social positions matter for neighborhood environments and for youths' developmental demands, affordances, experiences, and competencies. This body of work substantially expands the range of developmental outcomes examined in neighborhood effects scholarship to recognize normative physical, emotional, cognitive, behavioral, social, and cultural competencies that have largely been overlooked in neighborhood effects scholarship that espoused a more color-blind developmental approach. Second, activity space neighborhood researchers are recognizing that residential neighborhoods have important implications for broader activity spaces-or the set of locations and settings to which youth are regularly exposed, including, for example, schools, work, organized activities, and hang-outs. They are using newer technologies and geographic frameworks to assess exposure to residential neighborhood and extra-neighborhood environments. These perspectives recognize that time (i.e., from microtime to mesotime) and place are critically bound and that exposures can be operationalized at numerous levels of the ecological system (i.e., from microsystems to macrosystems). These frameworks address important limitations of prior development in context scholarship by addressing selection and exposure. Addressing selection involves recognizing that families have some degree of choice when selecting into settings and variables that predict families' choices (e.g., income) also predict development. Considering exposure involves recognizing that different participants or residents experience different amounts of shared and nonshared exposures, resulting in both under-and over-estimation of contextual effects. Activity space scholars incorporate exposure to the residential neighborhood environments, but also to other locations and settings to which youth are regularly exposed, like schools, after-school settings, work, and hang-outs. Unfortunately, the cultural-development and activity space streams, which have both emerged from early 20th century work on neighborhood effects on development, have been advancing largely independently. Thus, the overarching aim of this monograph is to integrate scholarship on residential neighborhoods, cultural development, and activity spaces to advance a framework that can support a better understanding of development in context for diverse groups. In Chapters I and II we present the historical context of the three streams of theoretical, conceptual, and methodological research. We also advance a comprehensive cultural-developmental activity space framework for studying development in context among children, youth, and families that are ethnically, racially, and culturally heterogeneous. This framework actively recognized diversity in ethnic, racial, immigrant, and socioeconomic social positions. In Chapters III-V we advance specific features of the framework, focusing on: (1) the different levels of nested and nonnested ecological systems that can be captured and operationalized with activity space methods, (2) the different dimensions of time and exposures or experiences that can be captured and operationalized by activity space methods, and (3) the importance of settings structures and social processes for identifying underlying mechanisms of contextual effects on development. Structures are setting features related to the composition and spatial arrangement of people and institutions (e.g., socioeconomic disadvantage, ethnic/racial compositions). Social processes represent the collective social dynamics that take place in settings, like social interactions, group activities, experiences with local institutions, mechanisms of social control, or shared beliefs. In Chapter VI, we highlight a range of methodological and empirical exemplars from the United States that are informed by our comprehensive cultural-developmental activity space framework. These exemplars feature both quantitative and qualitative methods, including method mixing. These exemplars feature both quantitative and qualitative methods, including method mixing. The exemplars also highlight the application of the framework across four different samples from populations that vary in terms of race, ethnicity, gender, age, socioeconomic status (SES), geographic region, and urbanicity. They capture activity space characteristics and features in a variety of ways, in addition to incorporating family shared and nonshared activity space exposures. Finally, in Chapter VII we summarize the contributions of the framework for advancing a more comprehensive science of development in context, one that better realizes major developmental theories emphasizing persons, processes, contexts, and time. Additionally, we offer a place-based, culturally informed developmental research agenda to meet the needs of an increasingly diverse population.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
16.30
自引率
0.00%
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0
期刊介绍: Since 1935, Monographs of the Society for Research in Child Development has been a platform for presenting in-depth research studies and significant findings in child development and related disciplines. Each issue features a single study or a collection of papers on a unified theme, often complemented by commentary and discussion. In alignment with all Society for Research in Child Development (SRCD) publications, the Monographs facilitate the exchange of data, techniques, research methods, and conclusions among development specialists across diverse disciplines. Subscribing to the Monographs series also includes a full subscription (6 issues) to Child Development, the flagship journal of the SRCD, and Child Development Perspectives, the newest journal from the SRCD.
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