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Introduction: The present research examined whether Black and Latine adolescents' academic persistence could be promoted through two novel strength-based reflection activities, providing them an opportunity to experience a sense of school belonging and to form meaningful connections between their racial/ethnic identity and their ideal future identity they aspired for.
Methods: A randomized-controlled experiment was conducted in the U.S. with Black and Latine adolescents (n = 278, including 134 girls and 117 boys, M = 14.05 years old). Academic persistence was assessed by examining two markers: how much adolescents were engaged in school, as well as how much they interpreted school difficulties as indicating the importance of school.
Results: Black and Latina girls assigned to the 'community resourcefulness reflection' who were invited to reflect on strategies and advice from their racial/ethnic communities (vs. their peers who were not) saw their racial/ethnic and ideal career identities as more aligned, which in turn was associated with increased academic engagement and increased likelihood of interpreting school difficulties as indicating school importance. Moreover, Black and Latine adolescents assigned to the "voice reflection" who were invited to reflect on how their voice could play a powerful role in spaces where they are underrepresented (vs. their peers who were not) reported more school belonging, which in turn was associated with increased academic engagement and increased likelihood of interpreting school difficulties as indicating school importance.
Conclusions: These findings indicate that approaches focused on racial/ethnic strengths foster positive identity connections, school belonging, and academic persistence for adolescents of color.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/jad.70049 | DOI Listing |
J Adolesc
September 2025
California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo, California, USA.
Introduction: The present research examined whether Black and Latine adolescents' academic persistence could be promoted through two novel strength-based reflection activities, providing them an opportunity to experience a sense of school belonging and to form meaningful connections between their racial/ethnic identity and their ideal future identity they aspired for.
Methods: A randomized-controlled experiment was conducted in the U.S.
Soc Sci Med
September 2025
Indiana University, Department of Sociology, 1020 E. Kirkwood Ave., Bloomington, IN, 47405, USA.
COVID-19 unleashed a bereavement crisis on a scale unseen in over a century. While evidence suggests COVID-19 deaths are acutely damaging to well-being, it is unclear how multiple losses affect mental health, whether there are ethnoracial differences in cumulative loss, or if the association between multiple COVID-related deaths and psychological distress varies by race-ethnicity. Using national survey data (n = 1810) collected following the Omicron surge in the United States, we estimate a series of regression models to assess the association between multiple COVID-19 losses and psychological distress, racial-ethnic differences in aggregate death exposure, and differential vulnerability to multiple losses across racial-ethnic groups.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAIDS Educ Prev
August 2025
School of Nursing, Rutgers University, Newark, New Jersey.
Introduction: Black, Latine, and Caribbean (BLC) sexual and gender minorities (SGM) face structural HIV inequities. Sociocentric interventions may address these barriers, but it is unclear if respondent-driven sampling (RDS) can recruit existing BLC SGM friendship groups or if sociocentric HIV prevention interventions are feasible.
Methods: Using an exploratory mixed-methods design (August/2022-January/2024, New York, NY), we recruited participants into a sociocentric RDS group (sRDS) or an individual-level peer referral (PR) group, with qualitative interviews drawn from quantitative participants.