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Article
Reward Differences Between Adolescents from a Native American Community and Adolescents from a Non-Native American Community
Journal of Indigenous Research
  • Mark Guthmiller, Prior Lake School District, MN
  • Daniel Houlihan, Minnesota State University - Mankato
  • Liesa A. Klein, Minnesota State University - Mankato
  • Kendra J. Homan, Utah State University
  • Tammy J. Jollie-Trottier, Neuropsychiatric Research Institute, ND
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
1-1-2012
Abstract

Differences in preferred rewards of male and female Native American and non-Native America adolescents were examined using the Native American version of the Survey of Rewards for Teens (SORT-NA). The SORT-NA is a self-report survey which examines preferences across eight domains: sports, food, entertainment, excursions, interests and hobbies, social activities, social related activities, and a miscellaneous category. Results indicated significant differences in reward preference across culture in two domains, and across gender in five domains.

Disciplines
Creative Commons License
Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International
Citation Information
Guthmiller, Mark; Houlihan, Daniel D. Ph.D.; Klein, Liesa A.; Homan, Kendra J.; and Jollie-Trottier, Tammy J. (2012) "Reward Differences Between Adolescents From A Native American Community And Adolescents From A Non-Native American Community," Journal of Indigenous Research: Vol. 1: Iss. 2, Article 5. Available at: http://digitalcommons.usu.edu/kicjir/vol1/iss2/5