Abstract
Latino/a children in migrant farmworker (LMFW) families are an underrepresented student subpopulation at high risk of school-dropout. To understand the factors that contribute to school competency in children in LMFW families, this mixed-method study examined academic mastery and explored perspectives from children, mothers, and Migrant Education Program (MEP) providers. Youth in LMFW families aged 8–18 (N = 65, Mage = 12.9, 52% male, 65% U.S. born, 51% moved 1-or-more times) were surveyed. Some youth aged 10–18 (n = 24, Mage = 13.9, 67% boys, 79% born in the U.S., 54% moved 1 or more times) were interviewed. One focus group was held with LMFW mothers (N = 9) and two with MEP (N = 18) providers (teachers and staff). Multivariate regression was used, and thematic analysis revealed three themes: (1) LMFW parents’ school involvement, (2) LMFW student-teacher relationships, and (3) mobility and LMFW students’ schooling. Triangulated results converged concerning mother school involvement and academic mastery. However, teacher attachment and mobility were quantitatively found to be insignificant, which diverged from qualitative findings. Unique qualitative findings related to non-traditional parental school involvement emerged. Findings have implications for efforts aimed at bolstering mastery orientation among youth in LMFW families.
Highlight
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This mixed-methods multi-reporter study examined mother school involvement, teacher attachment, and mobility to understand mastery orientation among youth in LMFW families.
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Triangulated data sources and methodologies revealed that LMFW parents practice both traditional and non-traditional school involvement.
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Qualitative results uncovered differences between providers in their views of parental involvement.
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Qualitative findings across participants revealed the impact of school interruptions on learning and abilities to meet graduation requirements among youth in LMFW families.
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High mobility hinders LMFW youth’s ability to create meaningful connections with teachers.
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Funding
This research was funded by grant 201700032 from the Spencer Foundation and grant 300061900 from the Agricultural Science and Extension for Economic Development (AgSEED) at Purdue University to Yumary Ruiz and Zoe E. Taylor.
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Ruiz, Y., Mena-Meléndez, L., Starkey, Z.P. et al. Examining Mastery Orientation Among Youth in Latino/a Migrant Farmworker Families. J Child Fam Stud (2024). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10826-024-02792-4
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10826-024-02792-4