A Longitudinal Study of Academic Identification Among African American Males and Females

Disidentification hypothesis researchers have proposed that African American students start school academically identified; however, over time, African American boys tend to disidentify while girls tend to remain identified. This is the first report to follow up a disidentification study of a group...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of black psychology 2016-12, Vol.42 (6), p.508-529
Hauptverfasser: McMillian, M. Monique, Carr, Marvin, Hodnett, Gentry, Campbell, Frances A.
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Disidentification hypothesis researchers have proposed that African American students start school academically identified; however, over time, African American boys tend to disidentify while girls tend to remain identified. This is the first report to follow up a disidentification study of a group of children first examined during elementary school. The current study aimed to determine whether gender differences in discounting, devaluing, and full-blown disidentification had developed among these 94 African Americans by midadolescence. Multiple regression analyses revealed no gender differences in either discounting or full-blown disidentification; however, the evidence indicated that girls valued academics more than boys.
ISSN:0095-7984
1552-4558
DOI:10.1177/0095798415603845