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The role of ethnic identity and self-construal in coping among African American and Caucasian American seventh graders: an exploratory analysis of within-group variance.
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2002
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EthnicityAfrican AmericanRacial PrejudiceEducationEthnic Group RelationMental HealthSocial SciencesPsychologyRaceIdentity Studies (Intersectionality Studies)African American StudiesDifferent Ethnic GroupsRacial GroupEthnic StudiesMinority StressSocial IdentitySchool PsychologyWithin-group VarianceApplied Social PsychologyEthnic IdentityPsychosocial ResearchMuch Coping ResearchCulture
Much coping research has been conducted comparing members of different ethnic groups using discrete racial classifications. However, the past two decades have seen the construct of ethnicity evolve into a complex variable that must be assessed in a more comprehensive way. This study explored how ethnicity, a discrete variable, and the continuous variables of a person's ethnic identity and self-construal contribute to the use of particular coping strategies across various situations. One hundred twelve seventh graders (67 African Americans and 45 Caucasian Americans) from three suburban middle schools completed questionnaires assessing ethnic identity, self-construal, and coping strategies for medical, test, and social criticism stressors. Results supported the hypothesis that ethnicity as a discrete variable is not associated with coping, but that ethnic identity and self-construal are. It was also found that high scores on the ethnic identity and self-construal scales were indicative of more positive psychological adjustment. Implications for future research and methodological considerations are discussed.