1. High family SES and youth adjustment: The case of Chinese youth who were adopted from orphanages into American families.
- Author
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Tan, Tony Xing, Yi, Zhiyao, and Camras, Linda A.
- Subjects
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FAMILIES , *ADAPTABILITY (Personality) , *ADOPTIVE parents , *ANALYSIS of variance , *CHILD behavior , *PSYCHOLOGY of adopted children , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *TEENAGERS' conduct of life , *SOCIOECONOMIC factors , *MULTITRAIT multimethod techniques , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
• Adopted Chinese youth scored more favorably on BASC-3 than non-adopted Chinese youth. • Adopted Chinese youth scored more favorably on BASC-3 than non-adopted US youth. • High adoptive family SES benefited adopted youth adjustment. • Testing measurement invariance is important for cross-cultural comparison. In this paper, we examined if high SES families had an effect on youth's adjustment by comparing 226 internationally adopted female Chinese youth who experienced pre-adoption institutionalization with 1059 non-adopted Chinese peers living in China, as well as 209 non-adopted American peers. On average, the adopted youth's families had a higher SES status than the two comparison groups. Survey data on behavioral problems and prosocial adjustment were collected with the third edition of the Behavioral Assessment for Children (BASC-3). We found the adopted Chinese youth outperformed their Chinese counterparts in all comparisons and their US counterparts in most comparisons. These results offer some evidence that a high family SES may compensate for the adoption-related risks such as earlier institutionalization. Possible mechanisms underlying the benefit of high SES were discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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