Children's relationships with nonparental adults: Sex-specific connections to early school success |
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Authors: | Dave Riley Moncrieff Cochran |
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Affiliation: | 1. University of Wisconsin—Madison, USA 3. Human Development and Family Studies, College of Human Ecology, MVR Hall, Cornell University, 14853, Ithaca, NY
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Abstract: | This report asks, Do the social networks of six-year-old girls and boys differ? It then extends previously reported findings by asking, Do different groups of nonparental adults affect the early school success of boys vs girls? Data were collected from the mothers of 162 six-year-olds, using a standard procedure. The networks of boys and girls in one-parent and two-parent households are contrasted throughout the presentation of results. The composition of networks was quite similar for boys and girls, except that each group had more same-sex than opposite-sex peers. In analyses predicting early school success, the number of adult male relatives who took the child on outings away from home was positively related to the child's report card score. This effect, however, was restricted to the subgroup of one-parent (mother-only) boys. This had been predicted, based on knowledge that single-parent boys are the most at-risk subgroup in the sample, the effect of social network resources are known to be accentuated by environmental press, and male adults represent the most salient models for young boys. |
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