A person-centered analysis of ethnic-racial socialization patterns and their identity correlates in multiracial college students.


Journal article


N. K. Christophe, G. Stein
Cultural diversity & ethnic minority psychology, 2021

Semantic Scholar DOI PubMed
Cite

Cite

APA   Click to copy
Christophe, N. K., & Stein, G. (2021). A person-centered analysis of ethnic-racial socialization patterns and their identity correlates in multiracial college students. Cultural Diversity &Amp; Ethnic Minority Psychology.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Christophe, N. K., and G. Stein. “A Person-Centered Analysis of Ethnic-Racial Socialization Patterns and Their Identity Correlates in Multiracial College Students.” Cultural diversity & ethnic minority psychology (2021).


MLA   Click to copy
Christophe, N. K., and G. Stein. “A Person-Centered Analysis of Ethnic-Racial Socialization Patterns and Their Identity Correlates in Multiracial College Students.” Cultural Diversity &Amp; Ethnic Minority Psychology, 2021.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{n2021a,
  title = {A person-centered analysis of ethnic-racial socialization patterns and their identity correlates in multiracial college students.},
  year = {2021},
  journal = {Cultural diversity & ethnic minority psychology},
  author = {Christophe, N. K. and Stein, G.}
}

Abstract

OBJECTIVES Little is understood about how Multiracial individuals are socialized around race and ethnicity, and how these socialization messages are related to ethnic-racial identity development.

METHOD This study utilizes a person-centered framework with a diverse sample of 286 Multiracial college students to examine the patterns of ethnic-racial socialization messages individuals received from their primary caregiver.

RESULTS A latent profile analysis of caregivers' socialization messages produced a four-profile solution: Typical Messages (socialization messages with average frequency), Minority Messages (frequent cultural socialization and preparation for bias geared toward minority group membership), High Mistrust (frequent promotion of mistrust messages), and Low Frequency (all socialization messages at low frequency). Overall, profile differences were evident with respect to ethnic-racial identity endorsement, where participants in the Minority Messages profile endorsed the greatest levels of ethnic/racial exploration. In addition, individuals in the Minority Messages profile also endorsed higher levels of ethnic/racial identity resolution and affirmation than the High Mistrust and Low Frequency Messages profile. Individuals in the High Mistrust profile endorsed greater levels of identity conflict than the Minority Messages profile.

CONCLUSIONS The current study provides evidence that the pattern of socialization messages Multiracial participants received growing up impact their ethnic-racial identity endorsement. Results highlight the need for continued quantitative and person-centered work when studying socialization and identity in Multiracials. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2021 APA, all rights reserved).


Share


Follow this website


You need to create an Owlstown account to follow this website.


Sign up

Already an Owlstown member?

Log in