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Bicultural competence and academic adjustment across Latino youth adaptation from high school to college.

M Dalal SafaMichaela S GusmanLeah D Doane
Published in: Child development (2022)
This study investigated the association between bicultural competence and academic adjustment (i.e., engagement, efficacy, achievement) among 193 Latino youth (65.3% female; 89.1% U.S.-born) followed from their senior high school year (M<sub>age</sub>  = 17.58 years, SD = 0.53) to their fifth college semester (2016-2019). Latent growth analyses revealed that youth's overall bicultural competence trajectory was moderately high and stable across this period. Youth who maintained or increased bicultural competence levels over time (slopes) demonstrated greater self-efficacy. Youth with greater high school bicultural competence (intercepts) demonstrated higher engagement but lower achievement. No other associations emerged. This study highlights that the promoting influence of bicultural competence may not extend to all indicators of academic adjustment but may depend upon the contexts and demands they navigate.
Keyphrases
  • high school
  • mental health
  • physical activity
  • young adults
  • social media
  • african american
  • high resolution
  • low birth weight
  • atomic force microscopy