Is Knowledge of (Normative) Racial Identity Development Necessary?: White Transracial Adoptive Parents' Intentions to Promote Black Adoptees’ Racial Identity

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Pettis, Shardé B., M.A.
Language:English
Published: Xavier University Psychology / OhioLINK 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=xupsy1617055421189483
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spelling ndltd-OhioLink-oai-etd.ohiolink.edu-xupsy16170554211894832021-08-03T07:16:59Z Is Knowledge of (Normative) Racial Identity Development Necessary?: White Transracial Adoptive Parents' Intentions to Promote Black Adoptees’ Racial Identity Pettis, Shardé B., M.A. Psychology Social Psychology Developmental Psychology transracial adoption adoption racial-ethnic identity racial-ethnic socialization White transracial adoptive parent Black adoptee theory of planned behavior attitudes subjective norms perceived behavioral control knowledge The prevalence of transracial adoptions of Black children by White parents in the United States is rapidly increasing, and currently the adoption of Black children by White parents is the most frequent transracial adoptee-parent combination (Lee, 2003; Marr, 2017). With the increase of transracial adoptions in the U.S., questions arise about White transracial adoptive parents’ capability to promote the racial-ethnic identity of their adopted Black child(ren), specifically with regard to their knowledge about how to promote the healthy racial-ethnic identity of racially diverse youth. The current study examined if White transracial adoptive parents’ knowledge of how racial-ethnic identity develops impacts their intentions to promote their adopted Black children’s racial-ethnic identity in the context of the theory of planned behavior. Caucasian parents (both mothers and fathers) who have adopted, or were in the process of adopting, Black or African American child(ren) (n = 199) completed measures examining their factual knowledge of normative racial-ethnic identity development and their attitudes, perceived subjective norms, perceived behavioral control, and intentions related to engaging in the racial-ethnic socialization process. Results revealed that parents’ knowledge of normative racial-ethnic identity development was negatively correlated with their intentions to engage in the racial-ethnic socialization of their Black child; however, parents’ intentions were positively correlated with their attitudes toward, subjective norms for, and perceived behavioral control of the racial-ethnic socialization of their adopted Black child(ren). Further, knowledge was not an incremental predictor of parents’ intentions to engage in the racial-ethnic socialization process beyond the components of the theory of planned behavior. Finally, results revealed that parents who perceived greater subjective norms for and greater behavioral control of racial-ethnic socialization reported greater intentions to promote the racial-ethnic identity of their adopted Black child(ren), and these relationships were particularly strong among parents with relatively low knowledge. These findings demonstrate that White transracial adoptive parents’ knowledge of racial-ethnic identity development may be neither necessary nor sufficient in predicting their intentions to engage in the racial-ethnic socialization process. Rather, parents’ attitudes toward, subjective norms for, and perceived behavioral control of the racial-ethnic socialization process are strong predictors of their intentions and, potentially, their actual behavior. 2021-03-31 English text Xavier University Psychology / OhioLINK http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=xupsy1617055421189483 http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=xupsy1617055421189483 unrestricted This thesis or dissertation is protected by copyright: all rights reserved. It may not be copied or redistributed beyond the terms of applicable copyright laws.
collection NDLTD
language English
sources NDLTD
topic Psychology
Social Psychology
Developmental Psychology
transracial adoption
adoption
racial-ethnic identity
racial-ethnic socialization
White transracial adoptive parent
Black adoptee
theory of planned behavior
attitudes
subjective norms
perceived behavioral control
knowledge
spellingShingle Psychology
Social Psychology
Developmental Psychology
transracial adoption
adoption
racial-ethnic identity
racial-ethnic socialization
White transracial adoptive parent
Black adoptee
theory of planned behavior
attitudes
subjective norms
perceived behavioral control
knowledge
Pettis, Shardé B., M.A.
Is Knowledge of (Normative) Racial Identity Development Necessary?: White Transracial Adoptive Parents' Intentions to Promote Black Adoptees’ Racial Identity
author Pettis, Shardé B., M.A.
author_facet Pettis, Shardé B., M.A.
author_sort Pettis, Shardé B., M.A.
title Is Knowledge of (Normative) Racial Identity Development Necessary?: White Transracial Adoptive Parents' Intentions to Promote Black Adoptees’ Racial Identity
title_short Is Knowledge of (Normative) Racial Identity Development Necessary?: White Transracial Adoptive Parents' Intentions to Promote Black Adoptees’ Racial Identity
title_full Is Knowledge of (Normative) Racial Identity Development Necessary?: White Transracial Adoptive Parents' Intentions to Promote Black Adoptees’ Racial Identity
title_fullStr Is Knowledge of (Normative) Racial Identity Development Necessary?: White Transracial Adoptive Parents' Intentions to Promote Black Adoptees’ Racial Identity
title_full_unstemmed Is Knowledge of (Normative) Racial Identity Development Necessary?: White Transracial Adoptive Parents' Intentions to Promote Black Adoptees’ Racial Identity
title_sort is knowledge of (normative) racial identity development necessary?: white transracial adoptive parents' intentions to promote black adoptees’ racial identity
publisher Xavier University Psychology / OhioLINK
publishDate 2021
url http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=xupsy1617055421189483
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