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Journal Article

Citation

Williams JL, Hamm JV. J. Early Adolesc. 2018; 38(6): 795-823.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2018, SAGE Publishing)

DOI

10.1177/0272431617699945

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

This study examines concurrent and short-term longitudinal (i.e., academic year) relations between peer network racial/ethnic diversity and indicators of social and academic competence in a sample of African American, Latino, Native American, and White sixth-grade students attending rural schools (N = 481; 50% female).

RESULTS from two-level hierarchical linear models indicated that in the fall of sixth grade, peer network diversity was positively related to teacher-rated interpersonal competence for Native American youth and to peer protection from bullying for White youth. Students in more diverse peer groups had higher teacher-reported social and academic competence in the spring of sixth grade; these associations were moderated by racial/ethnic group, emerging most consistently for students of color.

RESULTS suggest benefits of peer network diversity in early adolescence and also highlight a need to understand mechanisms through which these benefits are incurred.


Language: en

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