Conflicts and communication between high-achieving Chinese American adolescents and their parents.
New Dir Child Adolesc Dev. 2012 Spring; 2012(135):35-57.ND

Abstract

Drawing on in-depth interview data collected on 18 high-achieving Chinese American students, the authors examine domains of acculturation-based conflicts, parent and child internal conflicts, and conflict resolution in their families. Their analyses show that well-established negative communication patterns in educational expectations, divergent attitudes toward other races and country of origin, and cultural and language barriers contributed to parent-child conflicts. Their findings also illustrate important internal conflicts both adolescents and parents had along the cultural tightrope of autonomy and relatedness. Finally, the vertical in-group conflict resolution style that was evidenced in youths' accounts raises questions about cultural differences in constructive versus destructive conflict resolution styles.

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Authors+Show Affiliations

Qin DB
Michigan State University, East Lansing, USA. dqin@msu.edu
Chang TF
No affiliation info available
Han EJ
No affiliation info available
Chee G
No affiliation info available

MeSH

AdolescentAdultAsian AmericansConflict, PsychologicalEducational StatusFamily RelationsFemaleHumansMaleNegotiatingParent-Child RelationsUnited States

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

Language

eng

PubMed ID

22407881