» Articles » PMID: 38949674

Psychological and Academic Adaptation Through Universal Ethnic Studies Classes: Results of a Natural Experiment

Overview
Journal J Youth Adolesc
Date 2024 Jul 1
PMID 38949674
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Schools in the United States are increasingly offering ethnic studies classes, which focus on exploring students' ethnic-racial identities (ERI) and critical analysis of systemic racism, to their diverse student bodies, yet scant research exists on their effectiveness for students of different ethnic-racial backgrounds in multiracial classrooms. A policy change to require all high school students in one school district to take an ethnic studies class facilitated a natural experiment for comparing the effects of quasi-random assignment to an ethnic studies class (treatment) relative to a traditional social studies class (control; e.g., U.S. Government, Human Geography). Student surveys and school administrative data were used to compare students' ERI development, well-being, and academic outcomes across ethnic studies and control classes. Participants (N = 535 9th graders; 66.1% ethnic studies) had diverse ethnic-racial (33.5% non-Latine White, 29.5% Black, 21.1% Latine, 10.7% biracial, 2.8% Asian, 2.2% Native American) and gender identities (44.7% female, 7.1% non-binary). Ethnic studies students reported marginally higher ERI exploration and resolution than controls, and sensitivity analyses showed a statistically significant effect on ERI among participants with complete midpoint surveys. Higher resolution was associated with better psychological well-being for all students and higher attendance for White students. Students with low middle school grades (GPA < 2.0) had better high school grades in core subjects when enrolled in ethnic studies than the control class. Overall, the results of this natural experiment provide preliminary support for ethnic studies classes as a method for promoting ERI development, well-being, attendance, and academic achievement for students from diverse ethnic-racial backgrounds.

Citing Articles

Identifying Culturally Relevant School Support Profiles and Links to Academic Functioning in Adolescents.

Hernandez M, Kornienko O, Figueroa J, Coker M, Paredes K, Toth C J Youth Adolesc. 2024; 54(3):785-806.

PMID: 39384665 PMC: 11846714. DOI: 10.1007/s10964-024-02098-0.

References
1.
Altschul I, Oyserman D, Bybee D . Racial-ethnic identity in mid-adolescence: content and change as predictors of academic achievement. Child Dev. 2006; 77(5):1155-69. DOI: 10.1111/j.1467-8624.2006.00926.x. View

2.
Di Pietro G . The impact of Covid-19 on student achievement: Evidence from a recent meta-analysis. Educ Res Rev. 2023; 39:100530. PMC: 10028259. DOI: 10.1016/j.edurev.2023.100530. View

3.
Fritz M, MacKinnon D . Required sample size to detect the mediated effect. Psychol Sci. 2007; 18(3):233-9. PMC: 2843527. DOI: 10.1111/j.1467-9280.2007.01882.x. View

4.
Hoffman A, Agi A, Rivas-Drake D, Jagers R . Peer support development among Black American and Latinx adolescents: The role of ethnic-racial centrality. Dev Psychol. 2019; 55(12):2637-2648. DOI: 10.1037/dev0000829. View

5.
Hughes D, Rodriguez J, Smith E, Johnson D, Stevenson H, Spicer P . Parents' ethnic-racial socialization practices: a review of research and directions for future study. Dev Psychol. 2006; 42(5):747-70. DOI: 10.1037/0012-1649.42.5.747. View