Explaining the School Performance of African-American Adolescents
- 1 January 1994
- journal article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Journal of Research on Adolescence
- Vol. 4 (1) , 21-44
- https://doi.org/10.1207/s15327795jra0401_3
Abstract
This study examined the hypothesis that African-American adolescents' school achievement is detrimentally influenced by their perception of a discriminatory "job ceiling" affecting their employment opportunities. As a consequence of these perceptions, African-American adolescents allegedly: (a) devalue the importance of educational achievements (b) perceive that they have low academic ability, and (c) develop a social or racial identity at odds with academic achievement. These predictions were examined in a sample of 344 African-American and White students attending public and Catholic high schools. Results consistent with the model revealed that the more aware of discrimination the African-American adolescents were, the less important they perceived academic achievement to be, and the less engaged they were in their school work. However, the adolescents' awareness of discrimination was unrelated to their serf-perceptions of their own academic abilities and their ethnic identity. Indeed, adolescents' ethn...Keywords
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