Can extracurricular activities reduce adolescent race/ethnic friendship segregation?

Citation

Schaefer, David R.; Simpkins, Sandra D.; & Ettekal, Andrea Vest (2018). Can extracurricular activities reduce adolescent race/ethnic friendship segregation?. In Alwin, Duane F. Felmlee Diane H. Kreager Derek A. (Ed.), Social Networks and the Life Course: Integrating the development of human lives and social relational networks (pp. 315-339). Cham, Switzerland: Springer International Publishing.

Abstract

High school extracurricular activities (ECAs) can bring diverse adolescents together and promote friendships that reduce outgroup prejudices. This chapter examines two seemingly contradictory processes and explain how, in fact, they can occur in tandem. At the macro level, ECAs can promote homophily (i.e., in-group friendship) by homogenizing the pool of available friends, whereas at the micro level, ECAs can decrease the relative salience of attributes such as race/ethnicity during friend selection. The analysis presented in this chapter uses data on friendships and participation in 30 ECAs from 108 schools in the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health. It is found that around 60% of the ECAs were more homogenous than the broader school context in which they are embedded. On average, ECAs did not predict preferences for homophily, but did predict the frequency of cross-group friendships. ECAs may thus provide many of the desired benefits of integration despite not producing short-term changes in friendship preferences.

URL

https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-71544-5_15

Reference Type

Book Chapter

Book Title

Social Networks and the Life Course: Integrating the development of human lives and social relational networks

Author(s)

Schaefer, David R.
Simpkins, Sandra D.
Ettekal, Andrea Vest

Editor(s)

Alwin, Duane F. Felmlee Diane H. Kreager Derek A.

Year Published

2018

Pages

315-339

Publisher

Springer International Publishing

City of Publication

Cham, Switzerland

ISSN/ISBN

978-3-319-71544-5

DOI

10.1007/978-3-319-71544-5_15

Reference ID

8469