Parenting in African American families: Profiles of general and culturally specific dimensions of parent–adolescent relationships during late adolescence

Author:

Smith Naila A.1ORCID,McDonald Ashley2ORCID,Ferrone Carly Trakofler34,Johnson Shadane5,Witherspoon Dawn P.2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Education and Human Development University of Virginia Charlottesville Virginia USA

2. Department of Psychology The Pennsylvania State University University Park Pennsylvania USA

3. Department of Public Policy Oregon State University Corvallis Oregon USA

4. Allegheny HealthChoices Pittsburgh Pennsylvania USA

5. Department of Psychology Fordham University New York New York USA

Abstract

AbstractDevelopmental and parenting frameworks suggest that factors at the individual‐level and multiple levels of adolescents' contexts are important determinants of how African American parents prepare their children to live in a racially stratified society. Using a person‐centered approach, this study explored heterogeneity in profiles of African American parent–adolescent relationships (PARs) using indicators of parent‐reported ethnic‐racial socialization (cultural socialization, preparation for bias), general parenting practices (autonomy support, monitoring, behavioral control), and relationship quality (warmth, communication, conflict). We also examined how adolescents' characteristics, parents' personal and psychological resources, and contextual sources of stress and support contributed to profile membership. Data were from the Maryland Adolescent Development in Context Study (1991–2000) and consisted of 589 African American caregiver–adolescent dyads (caregivers: 89% female; 57.2% married; adolescents: 50.7% female; Mage = 17, SD = 0.64, range = 15–19 years old). Latent profile analysis revealed four profiles: (a) No‐Nonsense High Socializers, (b) Indulgent Average Socializers, (c) Unengaged Silent Socializers, and (d) Authoritative Cultural Socializers. Adolescent characteristics (gender, depression, and problem behavior), parents' personal and psychological resources (parenting self‐efficacy, centrality, private regard, and depression), and contextual sources of stress and support (stress: economic hardship, family stress, neighborhood disadvantage and support: marital status, family cohesion, family organization) were correlated with profile membership. Findings suggest that variability in African American PARs is shaped by an extensive set of individual and contextual factors related to adolescents and the family and neighborhood context. These findings have important implications for future research and how to target multiple potential levers for change in African American parenting practice.

Publisher

Wiley

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