The growing ethnoracial diversity of the U.S. youth population (e.g., U.S. Census Bureau,
2021) underscores the importance of fostering ERI development because of its promotive and protective consequences for youth adjustment (Umaña-Taylor & Rivas-Drake,
2021). Informed by cultural-ecological models of minoritized youth development (García Coll et al.,
1996; Hughes et al.,
2016; Spencer,
2006) and the lifespan model of ERI (Williams et al.,
2020), this study examined how friend and school ethnoracial socialization was associated with ERI development, and whether developmental period and ethnoracial minoritized/majority status moderated these associations. The current findings add to the literature by documenting similarities and differences in friend and school predictors of ERI exploration, resolution, and negative affect between ethnoracially minoritized and White youth. Specifically, friend cultural socialization was positively associated with ERI exploration only for ethnoracially minoritized youth, whereas school critical consciousness socialization was positively linked with ERI exploration only for White youth. Findings also indicated some similarities in the associations among friend ethnoracial socialization with ERI resolution for both groups. Specifically, friend cultural socialization and friend network’s levels of ERI resolution were positively associated with ERI resolution across ethnoracial groups and developmental periods (i.e., early versus middle adolescence). These friend and school socialization associations were documented above and beyond significant contributions of personal experiences of ethnoracial discrimination to ERI exploration and negative affect for both ethnoracially minoritized and White youth, which has tended to be the focus of past work (Brittian et al.,
2015; Pahl & Way,
2006). Finally, these associations were tested while accounting for significant heterogeneity in ERI developmental processes by gender (Umaña-Taylor & Guimond,
2010) and immigrant generational status (Umaña-Taylor et al.,
2013). With respect to these socio-demographic controls, gender was unrelated to ERI dimensions, whereas youth with an increasing number of generations in the U.S. reported lower ERI exploration and resolution levels, which replicates prior research. These findings, although awaiting replication with a more rigorous design, show that friend and school ethnoracial socialization processes uniquely inform ERI development and underscore the need to examine how socio-contextual dynamics shape ERI development across ethnoracially minoritized and White youth (Syed et al.,
2018; Rogers et al.,
2020; Williams et al.,
2020).
Contributions of Friend Network Characteristics to ERI Exploration and Resolution
Due to the proximal and salient nature of friends in adolescence (Brown & Larson,
2009) and their role in cultural and ethno-racial socialization (García Coll et al.,
1996; Hughes et al.,
2016; Spencer,
2006), it was anticipated that friend’s cultural socialization and friends’ ERI dimensions would each be positively associated with adolescents’ respective ERI dimensions. Further, friends’ experiences with ethnoracial discrimination (i.e., vicarious discrimination) were expected to be positively associated with ERI exploration and resolution. Finally, this study explored whether being embedded in friendship networks composed of a higher proportion of same-group friends with respect to ethnoracial background was linked to ERI developmental outcomes. The present findings provide evidence in partial support of these hypotheses and document some similarities and differences in the associations between friend socialization processes and ERI development for ethnoracially-minoritized and White youth.
Considering ERI exploration, the promotive effect of friend cultural socialization (i.e., discussing events and figures and reading books about one’s ethnic group) was detected only for ethnoracially minoritized youth, and not White youth. This suggests that for ethnoracial minoritized youth the extent to which they had explored their ERI was positively informed by their friends’ higher levels of engagement in activities to learn about the meaning of their ethnoracial group for their self-concept. This finding aligns with developmental models of ERI (e.g., Williams et al.,
2020) and replicates past evidence from focus groups with ethnoracially minoritized youth for whom ERI exploration entails behavioral, affective, and cognitive engagement in learning though cultural events and activities, which is done in the company of friends (Sladek et al.,
2022). This finding extends past research by documenting that youth are agentic in learning about their heritage culture in the company of their peers and friends, who play a vital role in transmitting cultural knowledge (Wang & Lin,
2023).
Interestingly, the association between friend cultural socialization and ERI exploration was nonsignificant for White youth in the present sample. Although the bivariate association between these constructs was significant and positive, when simultaneously considered with multiple friend and school predictors of ERI dimensions, it appeared that other factors (i.e., school critical consciousness socialization) were more important in catalyzing ERI exploration for White youth. Little is known about ERI development among White youth (e.g., Satterthwaite-Freiman & Umaña-Taylor,
2023) and the role of friends in ethnoracial socialization of White youth. Future work is needed to measure and identify the precise nature of socialization behaviors and messages exchanged among White friends because they are expected to differ from ethnoracial minoritized youth in their meaning-making of their ERI (e.g., focus on heritage or national identities rather than race). Such differences likely emerge due to society’s emphasis on white normativity perpetuating a perspective that White youth’s experiences are normative and require no interrogation and exploration (Moffit & Rogers,
2022).
Considering ERI resolution, results documented that having friends with whom youth frequently engaged in cultural socialization activities was consistently associated with higher levels of ERI resolution for all youth in the sample. These results lend quantitative support for prior qualitative findings from adolescent focus groups (Sladek et al.,
2022). Taken together, these patterns underscore a potent role of friends in promoting heritage culture socialization, leading to increased behavioral and social engagement in learning about the meaning of one’s group membership (ERI exploration) as well as to increased clarity in the personal meaning of what one’s ethnoracial group membership means for one’s sense of self (ERI resolution). Although the documented association is consistent with insights regarding friend socialization and enactment of one’s ERI (Moffit & Syed,
2021; Sladek et al.,
2022), the current findings are unique in their ability to link friend heritage cultural socialization mechanisms to adolescent ERI exploration and resolution, while accounting for multiple friendship and school factors as well as personal experiences of ethnoracial discrimination.
As expected, results showed a positive association between friend network’s ERI resolution and focal adolescent’s levels of ERI resolution. This association was consistent between ethnoracially minoritized and White youth and suggests that as adolescents were increasingly gaining clarity about the personal meaning of their ethnoracial group membership for their sense of self, they were also more likely to have friends who were reporting higher levels of ERI resolution. Whereas identity is a psychological construct that taps into an internal and private construction of the self-concept (Umaña-Taylor et al.,
2014), ERI resolution may be communicated to friends via increased sense of confidence, agency, and comfort (Umaña-Taylor,
2016), which may explain the observed positive associations between higher levels of ERI resolution among friends and that of the focal individual. Although the present study did not examine social network dynamics of peer selection or influence, this pattern of positive associations among friend networks’ ERI resolution resonates with prior evidence from social network-informed studies of ERI development (Rivas-Drake et al.,
2017).
In contrast, findings did not provide evidence that friend cultural socialization and friend network levels of ERI negative affect were associated with focal individual’s ERI negative affect. Given that this content dimension of ERI is relational and comparative in nature (Umaña-Taylor,
2024), it was hypothesized that messages adolescents receive from their salient and valued friends about how friends feel toward their own ethnoracial group could inform the degree to which focal youth have negative feelings about their own ERI. The present findings provide no support to these suppositions. Considering friend effects, it is possible that the cross-sectional nature of the data precluded this study from identifying the linkages between friends’ negative ERI and that of the focal adolescent because of its inability to test reciprocal associations between ERI and friend dynamics (i.e., ERI negative affect is associated with friend selection and friends influence each other’s ERI negative affect). Theoretically, negative ERI is expected to adversely impact self-concept, which could lead to a profile of psychological vulnerability and pose challenges in interpersonal relationships (Umaña-Taylor,
2024). This means that youth with higher levels of ERI negative affect could be less secure and confident, which can have an adverse impact on their ability to create and sustain their friendships (i.e., friend selection process). Future work needs to tease out the impact of ERI negative affect on friend networks selection and influence processes using longitudinal research designs.
Finally, given competing theoretical perspectives (Syed et al.,
2018) and a mixed pattern of evidence on the role of friends ethnoracial composition in ERI development, the present study explored how proportion of same-ethnoracial group friends were related to any of the three ERI dimensions. Results indicated that the proportion of same-group friends was unrelated to ERI exploration, resolution, and negative affect. This lack of associations is not entirely surprising given that the present study examined more proximal and salient friend characteristics (e.g., friends’ socialization, friends’ ERI), which may be more impactful than structural features such as proportion of same-group friends that may represent a relatively more superficial aspect of friendship network context. In contrast to structural features captured by proportion of same-group friends, examining friend socialization and ERI captures a heterogeneous array of behaviors, messages, socialization inputs, and developmental processes that are exchanged among friends, in general, and same-group friends. As noted in the intergroup contact literature, though contact is a necessary feature, what is more significant for changing attitudes is the content of those peer interactions and relationships (Yip et al.,
2019a). Applied to the current findings, having same-group friends may be important for informing ERI but it is the nature of engagement with those friends that ultimately may have the most impact (Wang & Lin,
2023). Thus, increasing specificity when conceptualizing and measuring
how peers and friends of same- and different-ethnoracial groups shape adolescent ERI development is needed in future work.
Contributions of School Socialization to ERI Exploration
Findings indicated that school critical consciousness socialization was promotive of ERI exploration among White, but not ethnoracially minoritized youth. This means that when White youth are provided with opportunities to engage with diverse peers and learn from school resources (e.g., events, educational sources) about group differences in power, privilege, and systems of oppression, they are more likely to be engaged in exploring and learning about the meaning of their ERI for their self-concept. These findings replicate and extend previous evidence documented among minoritized and White youth (Byrd,
2016). Although critical consciousness has been examined as a protective factor for the psychological and academic adjustment of ethnoracially minoritized youth (Heberle et al.,
2020), when it comes to ERI development, the present results suggest that it is also critical for White youth. Documenting the association of school critical consciousness socialization is especially relevant for White youth because they might otherwise have limited opportunities for critical consciousness socialization in their family and community settings because White families often rely on schools to provide their children with ethnic-racial socialization experiences (Loyd & Gaither,
2018; Hamm,
2001). Further, this finding provides further evidence of the benefits of attending ethnoracially diverse schools for White students’ ethnic identity development (Brown et al.,
2010). It is noteworthy that the association between school critical consciousness socialization and ethnoracially minoritized youth’s ERI exploration was positive and significant at a bivariate level, and decreased in the magnitude in the multivariate models. Taken together, these results suggest a relative greater importance of school critical consciousness socialization for ERI exploration among White youth, whereas cultural socialization with friends might be a stronger predictor for ethnoracially minoritized youth, as it likely builds upon earlier ethnoracial socialization in the family (Umaña-Taylor & Hill,
2020). Future research needs to disentangle developmental trajectories and cascades of ethnoracial socialization across multiple agents (i.e., family, peers, schools).
The present results indicated that school promotion of cultural competence was unrelated to ERI exploration, resolution, and negative affect. This is somewhat contrary to theoretical propositions that as youth receive more messages about the importance of being aware of diverse cultures in school they are more likely to engage in activities to explore and gain clarity in the personal meaning of their own ethnoracial group membership (Williams et al.,
2020). Although school promotion of cultural competence was positively associated with ERI exploration at the bivariate level, it became nonsignificant when other friend and school predictors were considered. Perhaps the current measure of school promotion of cultural competence used, which focused on learning about other cultures and developing intercultural competence, is capturing a construct that would be more consequential for adolescents’ intergroup contact attitudes than their ERI development (Byrd & Legette,
2022). Indeed, Byrd and Legette (
2022) also reported null associations between school promotion of cultural competence and ERI exploration and resolution, but significant and positive associations between this construct and adolescents’ other group orientation. It is possible that school promotion of cultural competence could be less effective in promoting one’s ERI development if this approach does not also integrate a recognition of the structural constraints faced by ethnoracially marginalized youth or discussions of commonalities in power struggles across groups that could help youth make sense of their ERI (Byrd & Legette,
2022).
Finally, it is plausible that the promotion of cultural competence measure does not capture an unmeasured heterogeneity in its delivery by school staff and the varied experiences that youth have in school, which could moderate its impact on ERI development. For instance, the quality of the teacher-student relationship may moderate the degree to which teachers are effective in promoting cultural competence, as it has been shown for ethnic-racial socialization processes in other proximal relationships, such as parent-adolescent dyads (Hernández et al.,
2014). Another potential moderator entails student’s perspectives on whether the examples of promotion of cultural competence in the classroom are meaningful and engaging to adolescents (e.g., “tied to specific holidays/”heritage months,” or reactive – in response to events in the school or broader ethnic-racial climate; Byrd & Hope,
2020), as well as whether they are integrated into the curriculum in a culturally sustaining manner. Future research needs to further probe these aspects of the teacher-student relationship and students’ daily experiences and perspectives on school promotion of cultural competence to better understand the nuances of the effectiveness of school ethnoracial socialization.
Developmental Implications
Despite a well-established literature noting the developmental significance of ERI and the role of parents in ethnoracial socialization processes (e.g., Huguley et al.,
2019; Umaña-Taylor et al.,
2014; Umaña-Taylor & Hill,
2020), the role of friends and schools in ERI development has been less clear. The present work shows that youth draw on cultural, racial, and social justice-related messages and knowledge transmitted by their friends and, to a lesser extent, schools to inform their feelings about, exploration, and finding clarity in what it means to be a member of their ethnoracial group. This study extends past research by documenting that youth are agentic in learning about their heritage culture in the company of their peers and friends, who play a vital role in transmitting cultural knowledge (Wang & Lin,
2023). The present study also provides preliminary evidence suggesting a relatively greater impact of school critical consciousness socialization for ERI exploration among White relative to ethnoracial minoritized youth, whereas cultural socialization with friends might be a stronger predictor for ethnoracial minoritized relative to White youth perhaps because it builds upon earlier ethnoracial socialization in the family (Umaña-Taylor & Hill,
2020). Future research needs to better understand that impact of developmental timing and unique socialization agents (i.e., school, peers, social media) for ERI exploration among White and ethnoracial minoritized youth.
This study underscores the potential influence of school-based friends in ERI development by highlighting that it may not necessarily be
who the friends are that matters, but
what youth are doing with their friends (in terms of engaging in behaviors, conversations, learning about cultural traditions, and celebrations) that is associated with higher ERI exploration and resolution levels. As such, these findings resonate with youth-centered accounts emerging from focus groups that reveal the rich and multifaceted role of friends in cultural socialization (e.g., Golden et al.,
2022; Sladek et al.,
2022). Indeed, friends and peers are theorized to play multiple roles in ERI development, including establishing and reinforcing behavioral norms, providing support and resources to cope with and resist ethnoracial discrimination, and participating in cultural activities and events, among others (Hughes et al.,
2011; Wang & Lin,
2023). To properly characterize these many roles and interpersonal mechanisms underlying peer ethnic-racial socialization, developmental research needs to move beyond thinking of peers and friends merely from the perspective of interpersonal and structural diversity (i.e., proportion of same/cross group friends or peers in school; Yip et al.,
2019a) to focus on specific
relational provisions through which friends and peers facilitate or interfere with ERI development (Kornienko & Rivas-Drake,
2022; Kornienko et al.,
2022) and ethnic-racial socialization (Wang & Lin,
2023). These goals could be accomplished by using advanced methods of social network analysis (e.g., Kornienko,
2024) and ecological momentary sampling and daily diary studies (e.g., Wang,
2020) to capture the rich tapestry and dynamics of peer relational provisions in adolescent lives.
Translational Implications
The present findings have translational implications for educators, mentors, and school staff who need to cultivate social contexts in which youth could benefit from friend ethnoracial socialization. These findings suggest that schools and educators could intentionally create space for youth to engage with their peers, friends, and teachers in conversations and activities to learn and share about their cultural heritage and traditions. Given the null associations between the structural characteristics of friend groups and ERI development, it is not simply the promotion of other- vs. same-race/ethnicity friends that are promotive of ERI development, but the support of culturally specific exploration, engagement, and experiences related to their cultural identities that youth have together with friends and peers. When designing such school-based programs, educators need to use evidence-based developmental practices to ensure that these programs are not top-down, adult-led endeavors but rather are youth-centered to meet adolescent needs for autonomy, social status, and respect (Hoffman & Umaña-Taylor,
2023; Yeager et al.,
2018). Finally, recognizing the importance of peer group norms and peer influence as promotive of ethnic-racial socialization is likely to be another component on which school staff need to be trained to counter widely accepted negative views of peer influence in youth development (Telzer et al.,
2022).
Specific to youth of the ethnoracial majority, results indicated that school critical consciousness socialization was linked with higher ERI exploration for White youth; this suggests that interventions aimed at promoting critical consciousness socialization may be beneficial for ERI exploration among White students in multi-ethnic school settings. Furthermore, there was no evidence that this or other aspects of school cultural socialization were associated with ERI negative affect among White youth, which has been a concern in the current sociopolitical climate in which opponents of discussing race or ethnicity in the classroom, including critical race consciousness, argue that it promotes guilt and racial self-hatred among White youth (McGee, White, & Parker,
2021). As such, the current findings hold particular importance in the present sociohistorical context in the U.S. A robust body of evidence has shown that ERI development is a promotive and protective asset for minoritized youth (for meta-analytic evidence, see Miller-Coto & Byrnes,
2016; Yip et al.,
2019b). Furthermore, these are vital developmental processes that occur within schools and support adolescent developmental needs for ethnic-racial identity development, relatedness, authentic school connection, academic success, future readiness, and health and wellbeing. Yet, even in settings in which schools and communities, including youth, are supportive of school-based opportunities to support students’ ERI development (e.g., Cabrera et al.,
2013), state and federal policies can prohibit these efforts (Umaña-Taylor,
in press). Thus, it will be critical to identify strategies to support educators, community, and youth who see the value of engaging in this work and want to embed it in school practices.
Limitations and Future Directions
This study had a few limitations that represent directions for future research. First, participants only nominated friends who were part of their grade, so the results are generalizable only to school-based friend socialization of ERI development (except for frequency of cultural socialization that was measured for all peers). This network boundary prevented the study from incorporating important friendships that adolescents may have across grades or outside of school (Neal,
2020). Nonetheless, school-based friendships provide an opportunity to examine a peer context that is salient for youth, given the substantial amount of time that they spend together (Brown & Larson,
2009). It is important to underscore the scope of generalizability of the present results that are tied to a specific social, regional, and temporal context (i.e., predominantly Latinx public middle and high schools from the southwestern U.S. in 2019–2020, prior to COVID-19 pandemic). Future research needs to replicate the present findings and explore whether the strength of friend and school ERI socialization processes may vary for youth who are embedded in different contexts. In other words, sampling schools and geographic locales with differing ethnic-racial compositions compared to this study is needed to advance the knowledge of ERI socialization processes for youth from other ethnoracial backgrounds than predominantly Latinx context in the Southwest U.S. considered in this study. Finally, due to the cross-sectional nature of this study, the present study was unable to examine reciprocal and transactional associations between friend and school socialization and ERI development over time and future studies using longitudinal panel designs will need to replicate and elaborate on the present findings.
Future research will benefit from a stronger focus on interpersonal mechanisms unfolding among peers and friends that inform ERI development, including explicit (e.g., peer pressure, reinforcement, antagonistic teasing) and implicit (e.g., display of desired behaviors and creating opportunities for engagement with culture) peer socialization mechanisms (Hughes et al.,
2011). In addition to these
social learning mechanisms, more concerted efforts need to test
identity-based mechanisms of how peers shape ERI development that entail emulation of valued others and adherence to social norms of a valued reference group (Brechwald & Prinstein,
2011). Because peer feedback and acceptance provide the foundation for a sense of self and identity development (Brechwald & Prinstein,
2011), the noted social learning and identity-based mechanisms can differentially impact exploring, resolving, and having negative affect about the meaning of one’s ethnic and racial group membership. For example, peer pressure and ethnoracial teasing may thwart ERI exploration and lead to ERI negative affect, whereas being embedded in a peer context that encourages engagement in cultural activities can catalyze ERI exploration and lead to ERI positive affect.
Future studies should more thoroughly attend to the distinct nature of school and peer socialization processes. Unlike socialization from peers and friends, where youth have more of a choice in whom they befriend and who they interact with, youth have relatively less choice in the schools they attend, where there is less opportunity for youth to select their teachers and school staff (e.g., counselors). Although friendships can be relatively more voluntary and egalitarian, relationships with educators are imbued with power differentials (Laursen & Bukowski,
1997), which may have implications for the strength and direction of ERI socialization effects. Clarifying these interpersonal mechanisms is necessary to advance developmental theory and inform interventions in ERI development.