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Chunyan Yang; Maedeh Golshirazi – School Psychology Review, 2024
Guided by coping theory, the social-ecological diathesis-stress model, and the theory of intersectionality, this study examined how social and emotional learning (SEL) competencies, gender, and immigrant status contributed to the heterogeneity of the association between school victimization and substance use among 2,795 Hispanic/Latinx adolescents…
Descriptors: High School Students, Hispanic American Students, Victims of Crime, Substance Abuse
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Yang, Chunyan; Manchanda, Sarah; Lin, Xueqin; Teng, Zhaojun – School Psychology Review, 2021
Guided by the theory of intersectionality and social identity theory, this study examined the interactive influences of both racial/ethnic majority status and immigrant status on students' school victimization experiences in predominantly Hispanic/Latinx high schools. Participants included 3,176 high school students in Grades 9 to 12 from four…
Descriptors: Race, Ethnicity, Immigrants, Victims
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Gerlinger, Julie – Education and Urban Society, 2022
The practice of temporarily removing students from school as a form of punishment (i.e., suspensions) remains quite common. This study uses longitudinal data from a large, urban school district in California to assess whether the use of suspensions improves school safety in the following school year. Additional analyses by student race and…
Descriptors: Discipline Policy, Crime, Suspension, School Policy