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Dive into the research topics where Nancy Darling is active.

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Featured researches published by Nancy Darling.


Journal of Leisure Research | 2005

Participation in School-Based Extracurricular Activities and Adolescent Adjustment

Nancy Darling; Linda L. Caldwell; Robert W. M. Smith

This paper examines the association between participation in school-based extracurricular activities (ECAs) and adolescent adjustment (drinking, marijuana use, grades, academic attitudes and academic aspirations) among students from six high schools. Three major issues were addressed: the potential confounding of selective EGA participation by better adjusted students and measures of adjustment, variability in the strength of the association between ECA participation and adjustment as a function of adolescent demographic characteristics and activity type, and the role of peers as mediators of the association between ECA participation and adjustment. Adolescents who participated in ECAs reported higher grades, more positive attitudes toward schools, and higher academic aspirations once demographic characteristics and prior adjustment were controlled. Alcohol and marijuana use were not independently associated with ECA participation. The ECA-adjustment association did not vary by demographic characteristics and did not appear to be mediated by peer characteristics. Those who participated in non-sport ECAs reported consistently better adjustment than those who did not participate in ECAs and those who participate in sports.


Journal of Leisure Research | 1999

Why are you bored?: an examination of psychological and social control causes of boredom among adolescents.

Linda L. Caldwell; Nancy Darling; Laura L. Payne; Bonnie B. Dowdy

The purpose of this study was to better understand the causes of boredom using psychologically based and social control models of boredom. For this study, 82 8th grade students completed two questi...


American Journal of Community Psychology | 2002

Naturally occurring mentoring in Japan and the United States: social roles and correlates.

Nancy Darling; Stephen F. Hamilton; Teru Toyokawa; Sei Matsuda

Although the word “mentor” has traditionally been used to describe a relationship between an older adult and a younger person, recent work has extended its usage to relationships with peers and groups rather than with individuals and uncoupled the instrumental and affective qualities of the role. This paper examines (a) the extent to which adolescents relationships with significant others in different social roles are characterized by mentoring and (b) the extent to which mentoring and other relationship functions covary. Adolescents naturally occurring social relationships are explored in two very different contexts—Japan and the United States—that differ in the norms and patterning of social interactions. College students (N = 365) used questionnaires to describe the extent to which relations with significant others were characterized by mentoring. Results indicate striking similarity in the patterning of results in the two countries and support the traditional view of mentoring. Mentoring is most likely to occur in relationships with adults (especially parents), rather than with peers, and with same-gender, rather than other-gender associates. Mentoring by parents appears to covary with other aspects of positive relationships, but be more independent in relationships with unrelated adults or peers. Although more of the variability in experienced mentoring is attributed to differences between associates than to differences between adolescents in both the United States and Japan, this is especially true of the United States. Results suggest that although “classic” mentoring is most common in both countries, mentoring is somewhat less constrained by social role differences in Japan than is in the United States.


Journal of Youth and Adolescence | 1999

Mixed-Sex Settings and the Perception of Competence

Nancy Darling; Bonnie B. Dowdy; M. Lee Van Horn; Linda L. Caldwell

This study examines the association of self-perceptions with sixth to eighth graders exposure to mixed-sex and dating contexts. It contrasts two hypotheses: the stress hypothesis, which suggests that the transition to romantic relationships will be associated with declines in self-esteem, especially for girls, and the leisure hypothesis, which suggests that movement into a desired role in an emotionally positive social context will be associated with positive emotions and higher self-esteem. Results indicate that adolescents experience mixed-sex settings positively, and that comfort with the other sex (for girls) and more time spent with the other sex (for boys) are predictive of more positive self-perceptions. Activity diary data suggest that these differences are due to differences in the emotional climate of same- and mixed-sex settings, rather than to the activities adolescents engage in with same- and mixed-sex groups. Dating boys who are less interested in dating experience lower self-esteem. Results are discussed in light of the transitional nature of mixed-sex relationships in early adolescence and the preparatory role played by same-sex friendships.


Addiction | 2003

Theory, measurement, and methods in the study of family influences on adolescent smoking

Nancy Darling; Patricio Cumsille


Archive | 1994

Adolescents' relations with adults outside the family.

Nancy Darling; Stephen F. Hamilton; Starr Niego


New Directions for Child and Adolescent Development | 2005

Rules, legitimacy of parental authority, and obligation to obey in Chile, the Philippines, and the United States

Nancy Darling; Patricio Cumsille; Liane Peña‐Alampay


Blackwell Handbook of Adolescence | 2008

Relationships Outside the Family: Unrelated Adults

Nancy Darling; Stephen F. Hamilton; Katherine Hames Shaver


Journal of Career Development | 2005

Predictive Relationships between Web and Human Resource Use and Middle School Students' Interest in Science Careers: An Exploratory Analysis

Tiffany A. Koszalka; Barbara L. Grabowski; Nancy Darling


Archive | 2014

Análisis Psicométrico de la Escala Parental Breve (EPB): Invarianza Demográfica y Longitudinal en Adolescentes Chilenos Psychometric Analysis of the Escala Parental Breve (EPB): Demographic Invariance in Chilean Adolescents

Patricio Cumsille; María Loreto Martínez; Viviana Rodríguez; Nancy Darling

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Linda L. Caldwell

Pennsylvania State University

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Patricio Cumsille

Pontifical Catholic University of Chile

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Barbara L. Grabowski

Pennsylvania State University

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M. Lee Van Horn

University of South Carolina

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Robert W. M. Smith

Pennsylvania State University

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Teru Toyokawa

Pennsylvania State University

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