This study examined patterns of: (1) racial socialization messages in dyadic discussions between 111 African American mothers and adolescents (M age = 15.50) and (2) mothers’ positive emotions displayed during the discussion. Mothers gave more total racial socialization responses to a hypothetical dilemma involving potential mistreatment by a White teacher than a dilemma involving rude treatment by a White salesperson. Mothers displayed more advocacy on behalf of their adolescents in response to the teacher dilemma than to the salesperson dilemma. Mothers displayed consistent emotional support of adolescents’ problem solving across both dilemmas but lower warmth in response to the salesperson dilemma. The role of adolescent gender in mother...
Racial socialization is a complex family process associated with important child outcomes such as po...
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/98194/1/cdev12021.pd
Researchers have called for increased evaluation of the processes that contribute to African America...
This study examined patterns of: (1) racial socialization messages in dyadic discussions between 111...
The purpose of this study was to explore Black mothers' beliefs about socializing their children to ...
Racial socialization messages were examined within a particular ecological niche: two-parent, Africa...
This dissertation examines the relations among adolescent perceived racial socialization messages an...
This study was the first to examine whether African American parents’ past experiences with racism a...
African American parents commonly socialize their adolescent children about race, ethnicity, and int...
We explored how mothers of biracial youth prepare their children to navigate diverse racial ecologie...
African Americans living in the United States face unique stressors as a result of being part of a m...
Objectives: Parents experiencing racial discrimination are likely to transmit racial socialization m...
As our society becomes increasingly multiracial, it is imperative that parents, teachers, counselors...
Parents\u27 racial socialization messages, including messages focused on awareness, preparation, and...
A number of social scientists have studied the phenomenon of racial socialization (Bowman & Howard, ...
Racial socialization is a complex family process associated with important child outcomes such as po...
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/98194/1/cdev12021.pd
Researchers have called for increased evaluation of the processes that contribute to African America...
This study examined patterns of: (1) racial socialization messages in dyadic discussions between 111...
The purpose of this study was to explore Black mothers' beliefs about socializing their children to ...
Racial socialization messages were examined within a particular ecological niche: two-parent, Africa...
This dissertation examines the relations among adolescent perceived racial socialization messages an...
This study was the first to examine whether African American parents’ past experiences with racism a...
African American parents commonly socialize their adolescent children about race, ethnicity, and int...
We explored how mothers of biracial youth prepare their children to navigate diverse racial ecologie...
African Americans living in the United States face unique stressors as a result of being part of a m...
Objectives: Parents experiencing racial discrimination are likely to transmit racial socialization m...
As our society becomes increasingly multiracial, it is imperative that parents, teachers, counselors...
Parents\u27 racial socialization messages, including messages focused on awareness, preparation, and...
A number of social scientists have studied the phenomenon of racial socialization (Bowman & Howard, ...
Racial socialization is a complex family process associated with important child outcomes such as po...
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/98194/1/cdev12021.pd
Researchers have called for increased evaluation of the processes that contribute to African America...