The Influence of the Family on Adolescent Academic Achievement

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2012-01-01
Authors
Abbott, Krystyna
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Janet Melby
Jennifer Margrett
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Human Development and Family Studies

The Department of Human Development and Family Studies focuses on the interactions among individuals, families, and their resources and environments throughout their lifespans. It consists of three majors: Child, Adult, and Family Services (preparing students to work for agencies serving children, youth, adults, and families); Family Finance, Housing, and Policy (preparing students for work as financial counselors, insurance agents, loan-officers, lobbyists, policy experts, etc); and Early Childhood Education (preparing students to teach and work with young children and their families).

History


The Department of Human Development and Family Studies was formed in 1991 from the merger of the Department of Family Environment and the Department of Child Development.

Dates of Existence
1991-present

Related Units

  • College of Human Sciences (parent college)
  • Department of Child Development (predecessor)
  • Department of Family Environment (predecessor)

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Human Development and Family Studies
Abstract

This study investigated the relationship between specific family factors and adolescent academic achievement. Secondary data was used from the Iowa Youth and Family Project data set, a longitudinal project which at inception in 1989 consisted of White families from rural counties of Iowa with married parents, one target 7th grader, and a sibling within four years of the target's age (Family Transitions Project, 2011). Data for this thesis are from 1991, 1992, and 1994. A logistic regression analysis was used to analyze the relationship between parental alcohol use, selected family characteristics, and adolescent academic achievement. Multiple regression analyses were used to further describe the relationship between achievement and the three predictor blocks. In this sample, parental alcohol use did not have a significant relationship with achievement, but income per capita, target sex, and father marital happiness did. Furthermore, these results may have been impacted by the manner in which the data were analyzed (i.e., using the entire spectrum of alcohol use instead of high alcohol use only) and by the manner in which achieving was defined (i.e., a grade point average above 3.00 as achieving, and a grade point average below 3.00 as non-achieving). Future research can focus on identifying resiliency factors within families where both high drinking and academic achievement are present.

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Sun Jan 01 00:00:00 UTC 2012