School achievement differences among Chinese and Filipino American students: Acculturation and the family

Citation

Eng, Sothy; Kanitkar, Kirti; Cleveland, Harrington; H; Herbert, Richard; Fischer, Judith; Wiersma, Jacquelyn; & D (2008). School achievement differences among Chinese and Filipino American students: Acculturation and the family. Educational Psychology. vol. 28 (5) pp. 535-550

Abstract

The general belief that Asian American adolescents are successful has led researchers to ignore variations in Asian adolescents’ academic success. Using samples of Chinese and Filipino adolescents drawn from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health, this study examined whether differences between these two groups in acculturation, parent–adolescent attachment, and parental school involvement could account for academic achievement differences. Results revealed that Chinese adolescents generally performed better in school than their Filipino counterparts. Factors that predicted academic achievement were ethnicity, acculturation, and parents’ academic involvement. An interaction was found between ethnicity and acculturation, indicating that acculturation is a predictor of academic performance among Filipino youth but not among Chinese youth. Cultural values in parent–adolescent attachment, acculturation, and parents’ school involvement are discussed.

URL

http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/01443410701861308

Keyword(s)

School

Reference Type

Journal Article

Journal Title

Educational Psychology

Author(s)

Eng, Sothy
Kanitkar, Kirti
Cleveland, Harrington
H
Herbert, Richard
Fischer, Judith
Wiersma, Jacquelyn
D

Year Published

2008

Volume Number

28

Issue Number

5

Pages

535-550

DOI

10.1080/01443410701861308

Reference ID

8684