An Examination of Family Cohesion and Self-Esteem as Mediators of Bilingualism and Reading Achievement in Second-Generation Immigrant Students

Date

2020-03-05

Authors

RAMOS SALAZAR, LESLIE
Diego-Medrano, Elsa
Castillo, Yvette
Nancy, Garcia

Journal Title

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Publisher

WTAMU Cornette Library

Abstract

Institutions in higher education have seen a rise in enrollment of second-generation Latino/a immigrant students due to the recent push to recruit more Latino/a students (Arbeit, Staklis, & Horn, 2016). As such, the purpose of the study is to examine family cohesion and self-esteem as possible mediators of the relationship between bilingual dominance and reading achievement. The study included 2,107 second-generation Latino youth participants enrolled in 8th and 9th grade who were born of immigrant parents. Regression and parallel mediation analyses were conducted to examine the study’s hypotheses. Findings revealed that both family cohesion and self-esteem mediated the relationship between bilingualism and reading score. The implications of this study can be used for faculty in K9-10 schools and institutions of higher education.

Description

We found support for a parallel mediation analysis model. We found that increased family cohesion and self-esteem mediated the relationship between bilingualism skills and students' reading achievement scores. Our findings can help educators understand second-generation immigrant students' reading achievement scores.

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