The purpose of this study is to see how Mexican American parents’ parenting style is influenced by their perceived neighborhood danger and their cultural values. It was a cross-sectional research study that looks at how the parents' cultural values and perceived neighborhood danger along with their levels of demand and responsiveness increase the chance of one parenting style of the other. They did not measure autonomy granting. The authors of this article also state that it’s possible for new parenting styles to appear from the parents' experience with ecological challenges like living in dangerous neighborhoods and their traditional cultural values. This is an important ecological challenge to investigate because those types of …show more content…
Their final hypothesis is that either both of the responsiveness level and demand will be affected by neighborhood danger or that there will be a higher level of harsh parenting, acceptance, and demand. The study the researchers use for this article is a sub-sample from a larger one with a sample size of 749 of families with 5th grade students in schools that are located “in a large metropolitan area of the southwestern U.S”. This sub-sample focuses on students in 5th grade who had both parents participating in a sample size of 466. However, four were missing data, so the final study included information from 462 families. It’s also important to note that 79.9% and 78.6% of fathers and mothers respectively were born in Mexico and lived on average of 15 and 12.3 in the United states for fathers and mothers respectively.According to the conductors of this study, Mexican Americans are more likely to have two-parent families which is why the researchers study two-parent Mexican American families. The researchers then analyze the parenting using a person-centered approach to discover which “unique variable patterns” appear naturally instead of the traditional parenting styles. They were measuring responsiveness which is the parents ‘attention and affection for the needs of the child and demands which is the level of rule enforcement, control, and …show more content…
The father’s parenting style in a dangerous neighborhood had a higher chance of being “ moderately involved” compared to authoritative and with his cultural values, there was a lower chance of him being “moderately involved” compared to authoritative. The authors of this article said that these finding could be explained by a lack of financial, material, other resources which are parental stressors that can occur in neighborhoods that are dangerous or disadvantaged. In the end, the researchers found that most of the mothers and fathers adhered to the well-known authoritative parenting since their demandingness and responsiveness was in line with that parenting
But it has been much harder to disentangle whether these neighborhoods cause the later disadvantage, or whether the hardships that lead families to bad neighborhoods are the problem.” (Wolfers) This points out that the environment children grow up in and things they see around will influence them. Living in a neighborhood that has troubled all the time will lead others to follow that same path. For example, Yummy lives in a neighborhood that is full of crimes, by seeing what others do causes Yummy to do the same.
This is why most Mexicans consider it their responsibility and duty to help family members. For example, they will help one another with financial problems, health, and any other life issue. Another important aspect of Mexican families is the roles of family members at home. In most Mexican households it is traditional that the male figure such as the father is the head of the household. The father tends to dictate big family issues and decisions.
“A generation ago, an American child could reasonably expect to grow up with his or her father (1). The culture of fatherhood in American has drastically changed since the 1950’s, with a decline of fathers involved in their children’s lives. This journal article questions the role of fatherhood, but also highlights the importance of fatherhood. It raises these questions: Is the role of a father beneficial for the child? Does a father’s physical or emotional absence have harmful effects, or no effect, on the development of the
When talking about gender roles in Hispanic culture, you will likely encounter the fact that mother's’ role is to be passive and must be willing to dedicate themselves for their families. ”(source:http://nlcatp.org/gender-roles-in-hispanic-culture/).Which means that in the Latino culture the women are seen to be beas responsible,caring about their religion as a whole,and etc. So they are seen to always trying to give up things and to take care of the family but this
Born and raised in Santa Barbra California, Peter Giovani Petatan have lived 21 years of his life in the U.S. along with his mother and father who were born and raised in Mexico. Although born and raised in California Peter and his family currently reside in Macon, GA. Now as a college student this has been the first time he has ever lived outside of home. Nevertheless, he feels as if he’s able to adapt to this new environment effortlessly in terms of the university and community.
United states of america have been seen in the history trayectory as the prosperous land. People from all the world had immigrate to this country. They had fight for this land. Latinos had contributed to the formation of the U.S. they have the right to reside in it. They arent anymore from other country.
In many hispanic families the father is the main head of the family, and the mother is responsible for the home. Individuals within the family have moral responsibilities such as helping other family members that are in need of aid, or financial problems for example if part of a family is living in the united states and the other half is living in mexico and one is sick it is the moral responsibility if the the family living in the united states to send
As the child of Mexican immigrants, I have always felt the pressure and responsibility of making my parents’ sacrifices worthwhile. Growing up, I understood that my childhood was significantly different from that of my parents. My parents parted from their families, lost touch with friends, and surrendered careers in order to give my brothers and me the opportunity of an education without barriers. The sacrifices my parents made changed every aspect of their lives and shaped the direction of mine. The memory of my oldest brother’s graduation and the overjoyed tears welled up in my parents’ eyes motivates me to fulfill my parents’ American dream, the reason they abandoned their aspirations in order for me to achieve mine.
Segmented assimilation is a sociological model that shapes the lives of many children with immigrant parents. Raised in a different environment from their parents, these children have a choice to either pick on new cultural values or leaving some of their parent’s culture behind. In many of the cases immigrant parents have a big role in their children 's life to maintain cultural values over new cultural values being adapted from the new society they now live in. This brings upon a mixture of confusion and loss of identification between the two cultures that surround the children 's life, affecting their way they perceive themselves. Struggling to keep the culture they are raised in and the new culture they now live in can create a
The children are taught to have strong bonds and frequent interactions among a wide range of kin. Generally speaking, Hispanic American children and adolescents learn to show respect for authority, the patriarchal family structure, and extended family members. Hispanic children learn early the importance of a deep sense of family responsibility, rigid definitions of sex roles, respectful and reverent treatment of the elderly, and the male's position of respect and authority in the family. Although some of the male's authority appears to be relaxing as the woman's role is redefined, women in the Hispanic culture continue to occupy a subordinate position. Stereotyped sex roles tend to exist among many Latinos: the male is perceived as dominant and strong, whereas the female is perceived as nurturing and
A study investigated this exact scenario by comparing the parenting attitudes of Asian Indian mothers living in the United States with those living in India in a pool of fifty-seven mothers, 23 of which were living in the United, and 34 living in India (JAMBUNATHAN et al., 2016). The results from this study showed Asian Indian immigrant parents adopted an authoritative parenting style. This is because they believed by maintaining an authoritarian parenting style in the United States, they may be causing their child to accrue social disabilities associated with such parenting style. Also, the parents found European American parenting style balanced their traditional cultural expectations and values with the demands of the new, majority
In what ways do Mexican Americans and Asian Americans share similar parenting challenges? One of the biggest dilemmas that they face is the redirection of familistic living. Asian and Mexican Americans have traditionally lived in homes with generational members all under one roof. Family members did not live in separate homes neither did they practice “living the nest” manners as native Americans do. Children are encouraged to live at home until they found a spouse and were ready to marry.
The foundation of this value is La Famila and the principles of familismo. Traditionally in Mexico, family life is organized in a patriarchal arrangement. (Baron-Mckeagney, woods & D’Souza, 2002). This arrangement lends itself to the idea that the elderly hold the greatest amount of power and respect with in the family unit (Bacalio, & Smokowski, 2007). Machismo represents the male gender construct and stands as the leadership positon in which the father protects and provides for the family members, uses just authority and respects the role that both the wife and children play with in the family.
We live in a complex, unpredictable world, filled with an array of family styles and personalities. Whether or not we recognize it, the family in which one is raised or currently resides plays a pivotal role in their development and opportunities. While we should not blame our circumstance on where we came from, it is crucial that we understand how our childhood influences why we are the way we are. One phenomenon that affects several families, particularly ones with low-income, is parentification. Parentification, also known as the role-reversal of a parent and a child, is not inherently harmful for a child, but it is important to look at the situation objectively and consider the risk-factors.
He is in charge to make the earnings and the mother is the one who stays at home. She cooks amazing dishes, cleans, and checks up on the children’s etiquette. This constructs the typical Mexican family