TY - JOUR PY - 2022// TI - Black-White Racial context and U.S. American youths' moral judgments of and responses to social exclusion bullying JO - Journal of genetic psychology A1 - Brenick, Alaina A1 - Margie, Nancy Geyelin A1 - Kelly, Megan Clark SP - ePub EP - ePub VL - ePub IS - ePub N2 - Bullied adolescents experience myriad poor outcomes, yet certain responses can have significant mitigatory effects. However, research has yet to examine how the racial context of these interactions affects adolescents' evaluations of and beliefs about responding to social-exclusionary bullying (SEB). The sample comprised 219 ninth-grade Black (N = 84; females = 46) and White (N = 135; females = 81) students (M(age) = 14.84, SD = 0.68; N(females)= 92) recruited from 5 schools in a large, racially diverse, middle-class Mid-Atlantic metropolitan area of the United States. Participants judged the wrongfulness of 4 scenarios of same- and cross-race SEB and selected how the victims should respond to the victimization. Responses were coded as aggressive, assertive, adult assistance-seeking, or avoidant. Gender, scenario, and response strategy main and interaction effects emerged. The Black-excluder and White-victim scenario was rated least wrong. Assertive responses were selected more often in scenarios with White-excluders; avoidant responses were selected more often in scenarios with Black-excluders.

RESULTS suggest that racial context relates significantly to adolescents' evaluations of and responses to SEB scenarios.

Language: en

LA - en SN - 0022-1325 UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00221325.2022.2083938 ID - ref1 ER -