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Dive into the research topics where Dawn Witherspoon is active.

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Featured researches published by Dawn Witherspoon.


Cultural Diversity & Ethnic Minority Psychology | 2009

Received ethnic-racial socialization messages and youths' academic and behavioral outcomes: examining the mediating role of ethnic identity and self-esteem.

Diane Hughes; Dawn Witherspoon; Deborah Rivas-Drake; Nia West-Bey

The authors examined relationships between cultural socialization and preparation for bias and youth outcomes. Using data from 805 African American and White early adolescents attending school in an integrated middle-class suburban school district in the northeastern United States, the authors hypothesized that ethnic affirmation and self-esteem would mediate relations between ethnic-racial socialization and more distal academic and behavioral outcomes. Cultural socialization was positively associated with academic and behavioral outcomes, and these associations were partially mediated by ethnic affirmation and self-esteem. Preparation for bias was associated with more negative academic outcomes, and these relationships were fully mediated by ethnic affirmation and self-esteem. Relationships of preparation for bias to youth outcomes were generally stronger for White compared with African American youths. The risks and benefits of different socialization messages for youths in various ecological contexts are discussed.


Journal of Youth and Adolescence | 2011

Stability and Change in Rural Youths’ Educational Outcomes Through the Middle and High School Years

Dawn Witherspoon; Susan T. Ennett

There is a dearth of literature that examines rural youths’ school transition and adaptation over the middle and high school years. Given rural education challenges, this study examines rural youths’ developmental trajectories of self-reported grades and affective and behavioral educational outcomes (i.e., school belonging, value of education, school misbehavior, and extracurricular activity participation). The cohort-sequential study consisted of 3,312 African American and White youth (50% female) who were surveyed over three and a half years, including the transition to high school. The results reveal significant changes in the outcomes from sixth to twelfth grade. For example, on average, school misbehavior increased over time while perceived school belonging decreased over time. Gender and race differences emerged; African American youth reported placing higher importance on education and less participation in school activities than White youth. The discussion focuses on the importance of examining rural adolescents’ educational pathways during the high school transition.


Child Development | 2013

Racial Identity From Adolescence to Young Adulthood: Does Prior Neighborhood Experience Matter?

Deborah Rivas-Drake; Dawn Witherspoon

This study examined the influence of earlier neighborhood experiences on trajectories of racial centrality and regard among Black youth. Data were drawn from a sample of Black 11- to 14-year-old youth (N = 718) in the Maryland Adolescent Development in Context Study, a data set that permits the examination of structural and subjective neighborhood influences. Results suggest that centrality increases, whereas public regard remains relatively stable, across the transition to adulthood. Seventh graders who resided in neighborhoods in which adults were less willing to intervene or respond to problematic situations reported lower public regard in 11th grade. In addition, the trajectory of private regard varied according to the types of neighborhoods youth experienced in early adolescence.


Journal of Early Adolescence | 2016

Longitudinal Associations of Language Brokering and Parent-Adolescent Closeness in Immigrant Latino Families

Emile M. Tilghman-Osborne; Mayra Y. Bámaca-Colbert; Dawn Witherspoon; Martha E. Wadsworth; Michael L. Hecht

Language brokering is a common practice for Latino youth with immigrant parents. Yet little is known about how youth’s feelings about this responsibility contribute to the parent-adolescent relationship. In this study, we examined the longitudinal associations between language brokering attitudes and parent-adolescent closeness in a sample of Latino early adolescents (n = 813, Maget1 = 12.32, SDt1 = .59), while taking into account language brokering frequency and the possible moderating role of sex. Results suggested that sex of the adolescent was a moderator. Specifically, younger males who felt closer to their parents had more positive attitudes toward language brokering, which dissipated as they aged. Furthermore, language brokering frequency had a delayed positive contribution to language brokering attitudes and parent-adolescent closeness, which was stronger for males than females. Results are discussed in terms of how age and gender cultural norms contribute to the relation between language brokering and parent-adolescent closeness.


Journal of Early Adolescence | 2014

Early Adolescent Perceptions of Neighborhood: Strengths, Structural Disadvantage, and Relations to Outcomes

Dawn Witherspoon; Diane Hughes

Considerable evidence shows the detriments of neighborhood social disorganization for urban youth. Researchers have focused less on potential neighborhood strengths or on the interplay of neighborhood perceptions and objective neighborhood characteristics. The authors examined the presence and perception of positive and negative neighborhood characteristics among urban ethnically diverse families, the similarity in early adolescents’ and mothers’ perceptions, and the association between sociodemographic characteristics, perceptions, and youth outcomes. The sample consisted of 608 ethnically diverse early adolescents and 128 mother–adolescent dyads. Adolescents’ reports of positive and negative neighborhood characteristics were empirically distinct and moderately correlated. Mothers and adolescents viewed their neighborhoods differently. Census measures of neighborhood disadvantage were positively associated with adolescents’ and mothers’ perceptions of negative neighborhood characteristics but differently associated with positive neighborhood characteristics. Neighborhood characteristics were differentially associated with youth outcomes. The authors discuss the importance of the neighborhood context, particularly positive neighborhood characteristics, for urban families.


Journal of Youth and Adolescence | 2017

Examining Socio-Cultural and Neighborhood Factors Associated with Trajectories of Mexican-Origin Mothers’ Education-Related Involvement

Sakshi Bhargava; Mayra Y. Bámaca-Colbert; Dawn Witherspoon; Eva M. Pomerantz; Richard W. Robins

Parental involvement in education is an important determinant of youth’s academic success. Yet, there is limited knowledge on how Latino parents’ education-related involvement changes over time. Using data from a longitudinal study of 674 Mexican-origin families (mother-adolescent dyad; Mage of child at Wave 1=10.4, SD = 0.60), we examined trajectories of parental involvement from 5th to 11th grade and the effects of socio-cultural (e.g., family SES and acculturation) and contextual (e.g., neighborhood) factors on these trajectories. Results showed that mothers reduced two aspects of the educational involvement: home-based involvement and academic aspirations, but increased on a third aspect of involvement, resource seeking. Furthermore, family SES, acculturation, and neighborhood context were differentially associated with mothers’ involvement at 5th grade and predicted changes in involvement across elementary and high school.


Applied Developmental Science | 2009

Connecting the Dots: How Connectedness to Multiple Contexts Influences the Psychological and Academic Adjustment of Urban Youth

Dawn Witherspoon; Marieka Schotland; Niobe Way; Diane Hughes


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2005

Thyroid hormone can increase estrogen-mediated transcription from a consensus estrogen response element in neuroblastoma cells.

Xing Zhao; Heather Lorenc; Heather Stephenson; Yunjiao Joy Wang; Dawn Witherspoon; Benita S. Katzenellenbogen; Donald W. Pfaff; Nandini Vasudevan


Journal of Youth and Adolescence | 2011

An Examination of Social Disorganization and Pluralistic Neighborhood Theories with Rural Mothers and Their Adolescents

Dawn Witherspoon; Susan T. Ennett


Journal of Youth and Adolescence | 2015

Parental Involvement Across Middle and High School: Exploring Contributions of Individual and Neighborhood Characteristics

Sakshi Bhargava; Dawn Witherspoon

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Emilie Phillips Smith

Pennsylvania State University

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Deborah Bartz

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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Sakshi Bhargava

Pennsylvania State University

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Susan T. Ennett

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Cady Berkel

Arizona State University

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