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Tyler, Kimberly A.; Johnson, Katherine A.; Brownridge, Douglas A. – Journal of Youth and Adolescence, 2008
The current study longitudinally examines the effects of child maltreatment, parenting, and disadvantaged neighborhood on victimization, delinquency, and well-being via running away and school engagement among a sample of 360 high-risk adolescents. Results of a path analysis revealed that parenting was associated with school engagement, running…
Descriptors: Neighborhoods, Physical Activities, Sexual Abuse, Delinquency
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Bean, Roy A.; Barber, Brian K.; Crane, D. Russell – Journal of Family Issues, 2006
Associations among three dimensions of parenting (support, behavioral control, psychological control) and measures of adolescent depression, delinquency, and academic achievement were assessed in a sample of African American youth. All data were adolescent self-reports by way of school-administered questionnaires in random samples of classrooms in…
Descriptors: Child Rearing, Path Analysis, Metropolitan Areas, Depression (Psychology)
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Lee, Sang Min; Smith-Adcock, Sondra – Professional School Counseling, 2005
Using a longitudinal national database, the authors conducted a path analysis of girls' school delinquency to determine the indirect and direct effects of socioeconomic status, parental involvement, bonding to school, and girls' self-perception of reputation on school delinquency during middle school and high school. Self-perception of reputation…
Descriptors: Reputation, Females, Socioeconomic Status, Parent Participation
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Free, Marvin D., Jr. – Youth and Society, 1993
Three models reflecting stages of substance abuse were tested using path analysis with subsamples of 626 to 850 subjects. Models indicate that measures of religiosity and religious conservatism help explain substance use. Results suggest that explanations of substance abuse can be enhanced through models using stage of drug involvement. (SLD)
Descriptors: College Students, Conservatism, Delinquency, Drinking