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Racial differences in parents' emotion socialization behaviors: Role of racial socialization goals

We examined the role of racial socialization goals in explaining differences in Black American and White American parents' responses to their children's emotions. Black (n = 67) and White (n = 90) parents of young adolescents (9–14 years old) completed measures assessing their racial and e...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of applied developmental psychology 2024-11, Vol.95, p.101695, Article 101695
Main Authors: Logan, Faith, Montague, Diana P.F., Lozada, Fantasy T., Fingerhut, Randy
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:We examined the role of racial socialization goals in explaining differences in Black American and White American parents' responses to their children's emotions. Black (n = 67) and White (n = 90) parents of young adolescents (9–14 years old) completed measures assessing their racial and emotion socialization goals and responses to their adolescent's negative emotions. Black parents rated preparation for bias and protective emotion socialization goals more frequently and endorsed greater likelihood of emotion suppressive responses—minimizing (e.g., tell my child not to make a big deal of it), punitive (e.g., send my child to their room to cool off), and distress (e.g., get upset with my child)—than White parents. Preparation for bias goals were associated with punitive and distress responses and accounted for racial differences in punitive responses. We argue for integrating emotion and racial socialization to support the advancement of culturally sensitive research and clinical practice for Black families. •Black parents endorse more emotion suppressive responses than White parents•Black parents prioritize bias preparation and protection more than White parents•Bias preparation and protection goals predict parents' emotion suppressive responses•Bias preparation partially accounts for race differences in emotion suppressive responses•Considering racial and emotion goals are important for supporting Black families
ISSN:0193-3973
DOI:10.1016/j.appdev.2024.101695