Abstract

Using data from the 1999 National Survey of America's Families (NSAF) on 11,809 boys and girls aged 12 to 17 years, the present study examined measures of adolescent social integration and the availability of community programs against the outcome measures of the Child Behavioral and Emotional Problems Scale (CBEPS) and the Child School Engagement Scale (CSES). On ordinary least squares regression analysis, adolescent participation in an organized activity, the adolescent's not changing schools, and a community program targeting adolescent pregnancy, drugs, or crime were significantly associated with higher scores on both scales. Adolescent employment was associated with a lower CSES score and had no effect on CBEPS. Neither residential stability (years in the home) nor parental religious attendance had any effect on the outcomes, but parental volunteerism was associated with a higher CSES score. The findings may be useful for the design of community programs targeting adolescents in particular because the NSAF has a focus on low-income families.

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