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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Perceived Parental Ethnic-Racial Socialization as a Predictor of African American Youths' Racial Identity, Critical Conciousness, and Race-Related Stress

Collins, Dana Lang January 2016 (has links)
Thesis advisor: Janet E. Helms / African American parents engage in ethnic-racial socialization practices, which may foster their youths’ racial identity and critical consciousness development, each of which may decrease youths’ race-related stress. The few studies that have examined the relationships between African American youths’ perceived parental ethnic-racial socialization practices and their racial identity or critical consciousness have used inconsistent conceptualizations of racial identity. No studies have compared the effectiveness of different kinds of perceived parental socialization practices on critical consciousness development, nor has previous research demonstrated that critical consciousness is related to reduced stress. In the present study, the perceived parental strategies of Cultural Socialization and Preparation for Bias were investigated to determine how they were related to racial identity and critical consciousness development. Also, effects of racial identity and critical consciousness on racial stress were studied. African American youths, ages 18-24 years (N=139), completed a demographic questionnaire, perceived ethnic-racial socialization measures, a racial identity measure, critical consciousness measures and a measure of race-related stress. Multivariate multiple regression analyses revealed that parental Cultural Socialization was related to lower levels of Preencounter (conformity), Post-Encounter (confusion), and higher levels of Internalization (self-actualizing) racial identity statuses, and to critical consciousness dimensions of Critical Reflection and Political Efficacy, but lower levels of Critical Action. Parental Preparation for Bias only predicted Preencounter. Critical Reflection was related to high levels of Cultural Race-Related Stress, was negatively related to Institutional Race-Related Stress, and was not related to Individual Race-Related Stress. Each of the other critical consciousness dimensions was related to higher levels of at least one type of race-related stress, rather than lower levels. Immersion/Emersion was related to high levels of all three types of race-related stress. Implications of the findings are that (a) parental Cultural Socialization strategies may be most useful for promoting racial identity and critical consciousness, (b) parental strategies may encourage all aspects of critical consciousness except political action, and (c) with only a couple of exceptions, racial identity and critical consciousness were related to higher stress. / Thesis (PhD) — Boston College, 2016. / Submitted to: Boston College. Lynch School of Education. / Discipline: Counseling, Developmental and Educational Psychology.
2

Parent Sociocultural Characteristics and Parent-Child Relationships Influencing Early Adolescent Ethnic Identity, Religiosity, and Distal Academic-Related Outcomes

Joyce, Jeneka, Joyce, Jeneka January 2012 (has links)
I developed and tested a model of relationships between primary caregiver ethnic identity and religiosity, primary caregiver experiences of discrimination stress, parent-child relationships, adolescent ethnic identity and religiosity, and their impact over time on adolescent academic orientation and positive future outlook. The sample consisted of youth and their families participating in an ongoing family centered intervention trial in a northwest metropolitan area. The theoretical frameworks that guided this study were Bronfenbrenner's ecological systems theory, sociocultural theory, social identity theory, and critical race theory. The hypotheses regarding the relationships between key variables and supported by the aforementioned theoretical frameworks were evaluated using analysis of variance techniques and structural equation modeling. Study findings suggest that parental identity and cultural socialization influence adolescent religiosity and ethnic identity in early adolescence. Primary caregivers' sense of ethnic identity and religiosity directly impact cultural socialization of their children, which in turn influences adolescent identity development. The parent-child relationship plays a predominant role in positive youth outcomes (i.e., academic orientation and positive future outlook) above and beyond adolescent ethnic identity and religiosity considerations. Implications of the present study for both research and practice are discussed.
3

What do White parents teach their children about race?: A qualitative examination of White parents' ethnic racial socialization

Freeman, McKenna Ray 15 July 2021 (has links)
No description available.
4

The Intersect of Race and Gender: Paternal Messages and Approaches to Gendered-Racial Microaggressions with their African American Daughters

Johnson, Shawnice 04 April 2020 (has links)
Ethnic Racial Socialization (ERS) is a specific form of socialization that African-American parents use to respond to culturally specific challenges (James, Coard, Fine & Rudy, 2018). A large component of expanding the ERS process requires including Gendered Racial Socialization (GRS) dimensions by exploring gendered racial micro aggressions and discerning differences. Additionally, it is important to note that a thorough review of the ERS literature confirmed the lack of empirical research on ERS and paternal figures (Priest et al., 2016). As such, this pilot study, is an initial investigation to explore ways in which African American fathers are socializing their daughters to address gendered racial microaggressions. Through in-depth semi-structured interviews, results will include messages that are transmitted, modes of transmission and concerns pertaining to gendered racial microaggressions their daughters will experience. By shedding light on this construct, African-American fathers could be equipped with better effective ERS practices geared at the varied experiences their African American daughters endure.
5

Ethnic-Racial Socialization, Sociodemographic Factors, and Achievement among African American College Students

Lige, Quiera M. January 2017 (has links)
No description available.
6

Observed ethnic-racial socialization and early adolescent adjustment

Yasui, Miwa 06 1900 (has links)
xviii, 150 p. A print copy of this thesis is available through the UO Libraries. Search the library catalog for the location and call number. / This dissertation examined how cultural influences transmitted within the familial context impact the psychological adjustment of ethnic minority youth through the development of an observational measure of ethnic-racial socialization. Specifically, a behavioral observational paradigm and companion coding system were developed to examine ethnic-racial socialization processes among 140 American Indian, African American and European American adolescents and their families. Despite its interactional nature, to date there are no observational measures of ethnic-racial socialization, highlighting the important contributions of this study. This study was conducted in a series of phases. Phase I consisted of measurement development through use of qualitative data. Qualitative information from cultural informants was incorporated to develop two observational paradigms (observed family discussions on Family Culture and Coping with Discrimination) and an accompanying coding system. Phase II examined the underlying factor structure of this observational measure through confirmatory and exploratory factor analytic techniques. The Discrimination Paradigm derived the ethnic-racial socialization dimensions: (a) Proactive Preparation, (b) Racial Awareness, (c) Promotion of Mistrust, and (d) Other Group Orientation. The Family Culture paradigm derived: (a) Cultural Socialization, (b) Ethnic Heritage Exploration, (c) Family Centeredness, and (d) Spiritual Involvement. In Phase III correlational analyses supported convergent and ecological validity of the observed dimensions for American Indian and African American youth, but not European American youth. Phase IV examined the mediational effects of the observed measures, suggesting that among American Indian and African American youth, observed ethnic-racial socialization is central to the relationships between family context, discrimination, ethnic identity and youth adjustment. In Phase V, moderation effects indicated that only for American Indian youth, observed ethnic-racial socialization significantly reduced the impact of discrimination on youth adjustment. Last, Phase VI analyses revealed that observed dimensions uniquely contributed to adolescent problem behavior above and beyond the effect of discrimination and familial contextual factors among American Indian and African American youth. In sum, these findings support the reliability and validity of the observed ethnic-racial socialization measures, and suggest its promising capability to efficiently capture important, observable, transactional familial processes of ethnic-racial socialization that are integral to the development of cultural resilience. / Adviser: Thomas, J. Dishion
7

Measuring and Testing the Processes Underlying Young Mexican-origin Children’s Ethnic-Racial Identification

January 2016 (has links)
abstract: The overarching goal of this dissertation was to contribute to the field’s understanding of young children’s development of ethnic-racial identification. In particular, Study 1 presented the adaptation of three measures that are developmentally appropriate for assessing young children’s ethnic-racial attitudes, ethnic-racial centrality, and ethnic-racial knowledge, and tested the psychometric properties of each measure. Findings from Study 1 provided limited initial support for the construct validity and reliability of the measures; importantly, there were many differences in the descriptives and measurement properties based on the language in which children completed the measures. In addition to measurement of ethnic-racial identification, Study 2 used the measures developed in Study 1 and tested whether Mexican-origin mothers’ adaptive cultural characteristics (i.e., ERI affirmation, ethnic-racial centrality, and involvement in Mexican culture) when children were 3 years of age predicted greater cultural socialization efforts with children at 4 years of age and, in turn, children’s ethnic-racial identification (i.e., children’s ethnic-racial attitudes, ethnic-racial centrality, ethnic-racial knowledge, and identification as Mexican) at 5 years of age. Furthermore, children’s characteristics (i.e., gender and skin tone) were tested as moderators of these processes. Findings supported expected processes from mothers’ adaptive cultural characteristics to children’s ethnic-racial identification via mothers’ cultural socialization across boys and girls, however, relations varied by children’s skin tone. Findings highlight the important role of children’s individual characteristics in cultural socialization and young children’s developing ethnic-racial identification over time. Overall, given the paucity of studies that have examined ethnic-racial identification among young children, the results from Study 1 and Study 2 have the potential to stimulate growth of knowledge in this area. / Dissertation/Thesis / Doctoral Dissertation Family and Human Development 2016
8

Racial Identity Dimensions And Parental Academic Socialization As Promotive And Protective Factors For The Academic Success Of Black Students

Joseph, Stephanie, 0000-0003-0849-5151 08 1900 (has links)
The current study investigated the role of racial identity dimensions (racial centrality and private regard), academic identity, and parent socialization (specifically, academic and ethnic/racial socialization: cultural socialization and preparation for bias) in promoting success among a diverse sample of Black students. The study aimed to examine how parent socialization and academic identity mediated the relationship between racial identity dimensions and academic achievement. Data was collected nationwide from 685 Black students through an online survey conducted in Spring 2022. Path models were employed to explore the relationship between racial identity dimensions and academic achievement. To account for contextual factors, the analyses incorporated academic identity and parent socialization (academic and ethnic/racial socialization, including cultural socialization and preparation for bias) as mediators, while gender was considered as a moderator. However, the mediation analyses did not yield statistically significant results, highlighting the need for further research to investigate the nuanced relationship between these factors. In addition to the path models, supplementary analyses were conducted, including bivariate correlations and exploratory factor analyses of the scales used: Identification with Academics (IAS, Osborne, 1997), Identification with School Questionnaire (ISQ, Voelkl, 1996), Education Socialization Scale (ESS, Bempechat et al., 1999), and Parent Ethnic/Racial Socialization (PERS, Hughes & Chen, 1999). The results of the exploratory factor analyses and subsequent evaluation of psychometric properties revealed inconsistencies between the factor structures suggested by previous studies and the current study for the Identification with Academic, Identification with School Questionnaire, and Education Socialization Scale. This suggests the need for further refinement and validation of these measurement instruments. However, the exploratory factor analysis of the Parent Ethnic/Racial Socialization scale aligned with existing literature, indicating its appropriateness for use with Black students. Bivariate correlation analyses demonstrated small-to-moderate relationships that were consistently observed across most variables. Academic identity demonstrated a strong and significant correlation with private regard and a moderate and significant correlation with racial centrality. GPA demonstrated a moderate and significant correlation with academic identity and private regard and a small but significant correlation with racial centrality and parent academic socialization. Students who endorse a stronger academic identity and racial identity (private regard and racial centrality) are more likely to have better academic outcomes, including higher GPA. Furthermore, the findings related to parent academic socialization suggest that parental support and engagement may continue to have some influence on the academic performance of Black students, even in adulthood. The implications of the findings were such that fostering a strong academic identity and a positive racial identity contributed to better academic outcomes for Black students. Further, the findings highlight the sustained influence of parental support and engagement on the academic performance of Black students, even as they transition into adulthood. This underscores the significance of ongoing parental involvement throughout a student's educational journey. / School Psychology
9

Ethnic-Racial Socialization, Ethnic-Racial Identity, and Religious Identity in South Asian Americans

Hasan, Faraha 07 1900 (has links)
The current literature suggests that familial ethnic-racial socialization of ethnic-racial minority individuals is significantly associated with various aspects of ethnic-racial identity which in turn, is associated with their psychosocial well-being. However, little research attention has examined this indirect effect path for South Asian American adults. The current research explored the direct and indirect effects of familial ethnic-racial socialization on selected psychosocial well-being variables via ethnic-racial identity and religious identity variables in this understudied group—South Asian American adults. Potential participants were recruited through SONA and social media to complete an online research questionnaire that measured all variables of interest. After the data cleaning procedures and removal of those disqualified, a total of 178 South Asian American adults were included in the final sample for analyses. Hypotheses were investigated using exploratory factor analyses, path analyses, and moderated mediation analyses. Findings identified three specific indirect effect paths of familial ethnic-racial socialization on general self-efficacy and life satisfaction through different ethnic-racial identity and religious identity variables. Additionally, results of the exploratory factor analyses demonstrated that religious identity variables were integral and distinct components in the identity development of South Asian Americans by being a coherent yet distinct factor from the ethnic-racial identity variable. The hypothesized moderator effects of gender, family cohesion, and ethnic-racial composition of current and childhood social network on various paths of the indirect effect model were not significant. Limitations, future directions, and implications for counseling, diversity, and advocacy issues are outlined.
10

[en] MEMORIES ABOUT ETHNIC-RACIAL SOCIALIZATION OF BLACK FAMILIES / [pt] MEMÓRIAS SOBRE SOCIALIZAÇÃO ÉTNICO-RACIAL DE FAMÍLIAS NEGRAS

CLAUDINA DAMASCENA OZORIO 09 May 2024 (has links)
[pt] O presente estudo teve como objetivo geral investigar sobre trajetórias de socialização e socialização étnico-racial em famílias negras brasileiras, abrangendo interações dos filhos e filhas no ambiente familiar e no espaço escolar, desde a infância até o fim da adolescência. Para tanto, o trabalho foi dividido em três grandes eixos temáticos: O Eixo 1 apresentou as famílias negras em contexto sócio histórico brasileiro, narrando a história e a trajetória de cada família entrevistada. O Eixo 2 discorreu sobre trajetórias de socialização e socialização étnico-racial no ambiente familiar e escolar, com foco na infância e na adolescência dos filhos/as participantes. O Eixo 3 abordou os projetos educativos das famílias para a prole, buscando compreender como os filhos/as vivenciaram na prática os projetos educativos elaborados pelos seus cuidadores. Foram realizadas entrevistas semiestruturadas com 10 famílias, composta por 10 díades (10 mães e 6 filhas e 4 filhos), mais 1 mãe que deu o seu relato, porém o filho não pode participar, totalizando 11 mães participantes. Para a obtenção dos resultados foi feita a análise de conteúdo (Bardin, 2016) e pelo software IRaMuTeQ. Nos resultados encontrou-se que o investimento parental de cuidado extra maternal foi necessário na trajetória de socialização da prole, com ajuda fundamental da rede de apoio, especialmente das avós, irmãs, tias e vizinhas. No geral, os ambientes de cuidado das famílias entrevistadas envolveram múltiplos cuidadores, com diversas pessoas funcionando como parceiros de interação. Porém, a figura materna continuou sendo a referência principal de cuidado com a prole, sendo a figura paterna fonte de apoio secundário, mas quase sempre ausente ou indisponível. As histórias compartilhadas destacaram a importância atribuída à escolha da escola que está diretamente relacionada com as vivências na escola, mas tais vivências fogem do controle dos projetos educativos das mães, como racismo, discriminação, bullying e preconceito. Acredita-se que essa pesquisa contribui significativamente para a literatura sobre famílias negras, trajetórias de socialização e socialização étnico-racial, porém, o estudo tem limitações, como a multiplicidade temática, e necessita ser ampliado e aprofundado. Entretanto, oferece valiosas contribuições para as áreas de psicologia clínica, social e do desenvolvimento, promovendo reflexões sobre as complexidades em torno das famílias negras e da socialização étnico-racial nesse núcleo. Sugere-se, ainda, que seu material possa ser utilizado como referência na construção de ferramentas teórico-práticas de intervenção clínica e social. / [en] The overall objective of this study was to investigate the socialization trajectories and ethnic-racial socialization in Brazilian Black families, encompassing children s interactions in the familial and school environments from early childhood to the end of adolescence. To this end, the work was structured around three main thematic axes: Axis 1 delves into Black families in the Brazilian socio-historical context, narrating the history and trajectory of each interviewed family. Axis 2 discusses socialization trajectories and ethnic-racial socialization within both the family and school environments, focusing on the childhood and adolescence of the participating children. Axis 3 approaches the families educational projects for their offspring, seeking to understand how the children experienced the educational projects drawn up by their caregivers in practice. Semi-structured interviews were conducted with 10 families, consisting of 10 mother-child dyads (10 mothers and 6 daughters and 4 sons), in addition to 1 mother who gave her account despite her son s inability to participate, totaling 11 participating mothers. The results were obtained using content analysis (Bardin, 2016) and the IRaMuTeQ software. The findings underscored the necessity of parental investment in extra-maternal care within the offspring s socialization trajectory, with fundamental support from the support network, particularly grandmothers, sisters, aunts, and neighbors. In general, the caregiving environments of the interviewed families involved multiple caregivers, with various individuals acting as interaction partners. However, the maternal figure remained the primary caregiver, whereas the paternal figure was the secondary one, although almost always absent or inaccessible. The narratives emphasized the importance of school selection, which is directly linked to the experiences at school – albeit such experiences are beyond the control of the mothers educational projects –, such as racism, discrimination, bullying, and prejudice. Despite limitations, such as the multiplicity of themes approached and the need for further expansion and depth, this research contributes significantly to the literature on Black families, socialization trajectories, and ethnic-racial socialization of Black children. Nonetheless, it also provides valuable contributions to the fields of clinical, social, and developmental psychology, promoting reflections on the intricate dynamics within Black families and the ethnic-racial socialization among this group. Furthermore, it is also suggested that this research can be used as a reference for the construction and development of theoretical and practical tools for both clinical and social intervention.

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