Social Support and Neighborhood Stressors Among African American Youth: Networks and Relations to Self-Worth
Open Access
- 13 July 2010
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Journal of Child and Family Studies
- Vol. 20 (3), 255-262
- https://doi.org/10.1007/s10826-010-9386-3
Abstract
Although neighborhood stressors have a negative impact on youth, and social support can play a protective role, it is unclear what types and sources of social support may contribute to positive outcomes among at-risk youth. We examined the influences of neighborhood disadvantage and social support on global self-worth among low-income, urban African American youth, both concurrently and longitudinally. We examined social support from both a structural and functional perspective, and tested the main-effects and the stress-buffering models of social support. Participants included 82–130 youth, in 6th–8th grade, who completed self-report measures. Network support results suggest participants received emotional, tangible, and informational support most often from mothers and other female relatives, with friends, fathers, and teachers also playing important roles. Model testing accounted for neighborhood stressors and support from various sources, revealing support from close friends was associated with concurrent self-worth; whereas, parent support predicted self-worth longitudinally, above and beyond initial levels of self-worth. The findings provide evidence for the main-effects model of social support and not the stress-buffering model. Our findings illustrate the importance of extended family networks and the types of support that youth rely upon in African American impoverished communities, as well as how support contributes to global self-worth. Implications and suggestions for future research and intervention are discussed.Keywords
This publication has 41 references indexed in Scilit:
- Social competence, social support, and academic achievement in minority, low-income, urban elementary school children.School Psychology Quarterly, 2008
- Exposure to violence and aggression: protective roles of social support among urban African American youthJournal of Community Psychology, 2008
- Monthly Changes in the Composition of Friendship Networks in Early AdolescenceMerrill-Palmer Quarterly, 2007
- Predicting Interpersonal Competence and Self-Worth From Adolescent Relationships and Relationship Networks: Variable-Centered and Person-Centered PerspectivesMerrill-Palmer Quarterly, 2006
- Availability of family support as a moderator of exposure to community violenceJournal of Clinical Child Psychology, 1999
- Life Stressors, Neighborhood Disadvantage, and Resources: A Focus on Inner-City Children's AdjustmentJournal of Clinical Child Psychology, 1997
- Evaluating the Nature of Perceived Support and its Relation to Perceived Self-Worth in AdolescentsJournal of Research on Adolescence, 1995
- Vulnerability and Resilience: A Study of High-Risk AdolescentsChild Development, 1991
- Assessing Social Support in Elementary School Children: The Survey of Children's Social SupportJournal of Clinical Child Psychology, 1989
- Stress, social support, and the buffering hypothesis.Psychological Bulletin, 1985