Social support characteristics among nonclinical African-American and Filipino-American parents with school-age children

1996 ◽  
Vol 18 (8) ◽  
pp. 659-692 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cheryl A. Richey ◽  
Vanessa G. Hodges ◽  
Pauline Agbayani-Siewert ◽  
Kimberly Petitt
2021 ◽  
Vol 52 (1) ◽  
pp. 51-63 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jamie Mahurin-Smith ◽  
Monique T. Mills ◽  
Rong Chang

Purpose This study was designed to assess the utility of a tool for automated analysis of rare vocabulary use in the spoken narratives of a group of school-age children from low-income communities. Method We evaluated personal and fictional narratives from 76 school-age children from low-income communities ( M age = 9;3 [years;months]). We analyzed children's use of rare vocabulary in their narratives, with the goal of evaluating relationships among rare vocabulary use, performance on standardized language tests, language sample measures, sex, and use of African American English. Results Use of rare vocabulary in school-age children is robustly correlated with established language sample measures. Male sex was also significantly associated with more frequent rare vocabulary use. There was no association between rare vocabulary use and use of African American English. Discussion Evaluation of rare vocabulary use in school-age children may be a culturally fair assessment strategy that aligns well with existing language sample measures.


2019 ◽  
Vol 20 (1) ◽  
pp. 47-62
Author(s):  
Whitney Key ◽  
Jang Ho Park ◽  
Philip Young P Hong

Non-cognitive skills are known to be influenced by the environment, especially regarding health and social support. One emerging non-cognitive skill is grit that can be defined as a success measure among low-income adults. It has been studied mostly among school-age children as it relates to academic success however little attention has paid to grit in workforce development. This is important to recognize as two identifiers for workforce success are social support and health. This paper aims to investigate the effects of health and social support on grit. Regression analysis was completed on 520 low-income, job seeking adults. A series of multiple regression results indicate that social support and health—physical, emotional, and general—have statistically significant independently and combined effects on grit. This finding is important for workforce development practitioners to understand when working with job seeking clients who are having difficulty in demonstrating the necessary tenacity to continue the path to achieve employment goals. 


2014 ◽  
Vol 32 (31_suppl) ◽  
pp. 233-233 ◽  
Author(s):  
Faith Young ◽  
Maureen Davey

233 Background: 1.2 million African American (AA) parents/guardians of school age children may be diagnosed with cancer in 2014. AAs have a disproportionate burden and mortality from solid tumor cancers. However, AAs are poorly represented in distress intervention studies, and psychosocial oncology support services may not be designed for culturally diverse populations. The goal of this pilot study was to gather feasibility data from a sample of AA medical providers and from a sample of 100 cancer patients. This approach aided development of effective structures and procedures to recruit AA cancer patients/guardians raising school-age children for a culturally sensitive family intervention program. Methods: We developed a focus group guide for AA medical providers to define best practices for recruiting AA cancer patients into an intervention program. The focus group of AA providers (4 oncologists, 3 primary care, and 3 family practitioners) first reviewed the treatment manual for cultural content. We then conducted an anonymous patient needs assessment, broadly sampling cancer patients from outpatient and inpatient settings (n=100). Results: Providers and patients identified transportation support, refreshments, and onsite care for young children as important. Both groups recommended targeting AA parents/guardians within the first months of diagnosis, when coping with a cancer diagnosis is acute. Parents/guardians who had current concerns about their children more often reported an interest in family support, and patients felt that a location other than the cancer center would be most comfortable for their children. Conclusions: Effective treatments to help children and adolescents cope with the impact of parental cancer are critical, particularly those targeting low-income AA populations. The provider focus group and patient needs assessment identified recruitment barriers in anticipation of a randomized control trial designed to address family distress after parental cancer diagnosis. This approach has the potential to impact the nature of treatment support options available to a group that is overrepresented and underserved by existing interventions.


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