Publication | Closed Access
Negotiating Boundaries and Bonds: Frequency of Young Children’s Socialization to Their Ethnic/Racial Heritage
75
Citations
21
References
2010
Year
EthnicityTheir Ethnic/racial HeritageEducationEarly Childhood EducationEthnic Group RelationU.s. FamiliesSocial SciencesRaceFamily StudiesCultural IdentityAfrican American StudiesCultural DiversityEarly Childhood ExperienceYoung Children ’Racial GroupEthnic StudiesRepresentative Survey DataFamily RelationshipsRacial EquityFamily DiversitySocial IdentityEarly Childhood DevelopmentChild DevelopmentInterracial RelationshipCultureSociologyYoung ChildrenRace Relation
This study addressed intergroup differences in how often U.S. families socialized young children to their ethnic/racial heritage using nationally representative survey data gathered as part of the Early Childhood Longitudinal Study, Kindergarten Class of 1998-1999 (ECLS-K).The sample ( N = 18,827) included young White, Black, Hispanic, Asian, Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islander, American Indian, and multiracial children. Among other things, the authors found that families raising young American Indian children were likely to socialize them frequently to their ethnic/racial heritage. Also, most intergroup differences in frequency of ethnic/racial socialization were robust across child gender and parental education.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1