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Project 3.5 Final Report
Patricia Gándara
July 1997June 2001
3.5 Final Report
3.5 Executive Summary
Peer groups play an important role in the academic achievement of adolescents.
Functioning within the context of school, home, and community, peer groups
can affect the developmental trajectory of adolescents. CREDE researcher
Gandara examined how African American, Southeast Asian, Latino, and European
American adolescents from relatively low-income backgrounds form their
expectations about schooling and their post-secondary aspirations during
the four years of high school, focusing on how peers and families help
to shape these attitudes.
Both urban and rural high school contexts were included. Factors
affecting the formation and change of friendship groups included perceived
shared tastes and dispositions to school and social life, curricular tracking,
and language. Surprisingly, with regard to peer influence on academic
goals, typically students reported not talking to friends about
future plans or school-related plans. Over time, the relative importance
of peer groups shifted from closer friends to broader normative groups.
There were some notable consistencies and differences by ethnicity, geographic
context, and gender. Alarmingly, for all groups, grades went down as aspirations
went up from 8th through the 12th grade, indicating a mismatch about what
is required for postsecondary schooling and school performance. Rural
Latinas seemed particularly at-risk, with high percentages reporting no
clear post-high school plans. Black students and Asian females reported
the highest aspirations. White and Black students were most likely to
consult their parents about future plans, whereas SE Asian and Latino
students were much more dependent on others to provide this information.
Programs and policies that bring postsecondary planning into the foreground
for peers in school, home, and community contexts is clearly needed.
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