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Publication


Featured researches published by Sara Douglass.


Cultural Diversity & Ethnic Minority Psychology | 2014

School diversity and racial discrimination among African-American adolescents

Eleanor K. Seaton; Sara Douglass

The study presented here examined school context as a moderator in the relation between daily perceptions of racial discrimination and depressive symptoms. The sample included 75 Black adolescents who completed daily surveys for 14 days. The results indicated that approximately 97% of adolescents reported experiencing at least one discriminatory experience over the 2-week period. During the daily diary period, the 2-week average was 26 discriminatory experiences with a daily average of 2.5 discriminatory events. The results indicated perceptions of racial discrimination were linked to increased depressive symptoms on the following day. This relation was apparent for Black youth attending predominantly Black and White high schools, but not for Black youth attending schools with no clear racial majority.


Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin | 2014

Feeling (Mis)Understood and Intergroup Friendships in Interracial Interactions

Nicole Shelton; Sara Douglass; Randi L. Garcia; Tiffany Yip; Thomas E. Trail

The present research investigated whether having out-group friends serves as a buffer for feeling misunderstood in interracial interactions. Across three experience sampling studies, we found that among ethnic minorities who have few White friends or are not interacting with White friends, daily interracial interactions are associated with feeling less understood. By contrast, we found that among ethnic minorities who have more White friends or are interacting with White friends, the relationship between daily interracial interactions and feeling understood is not significant. We did not find similar results for Whites; that is, having ethnic minority friends did not play a role in the relationship between daily interracial interactions and feeling understood. Together, these studies demonstrate the beneficial effects of intergroup friendships for ethnic minorities.


Identity | 2015

A Brief Form of the Ethnic Identity Scale: Development and Empirical Validation

Sara Douglass; Adriana J. Umaña-Taylor

Theory and research have long indicated that ethnic-racial identity is a complex and multifaceted construct. However, there is a paucity of brief, easily administered measures that adequately capture this multidimensionality. Two studies were conducted to develop an abbreviated version of the Ethnic Identity Scale (EIS) and to explore its psychometric properties in the United States. In Study 1, the use of item-reduction techniques with a sample of adolescent Latinos (n = 323) resulted in a 9-item brief version of the EIS (EIS-B), including subscales of Exploration, Resolution, and Affirmation; furthermore, longitudinal analyses provided initial support for the construct validity of the subscales. In Study 2, the factor structure of the EIS-B was examined among an ethnically diverse sample of college students (n = 9,492), and findings provided support for strong measurement invariance across ethnic groups for the EIS-B. Together, findings from both studies provided preliminary evidence for the validity and reliability of the EIS-B as a brief measure of the multidimensional construct of ethnic-racial identity, and indicated that the EIS-B assessed ethnic-racial identity in a comparable manner to the original version of the scale.


Developmental Psychology | 2017

Longitudinal relations between ethnic/racial identity process and content: Exploration, commitment, and salience among diverse adolescents.

Yijie Wang; Sara Douglass; Tiffany Yip

The present study bridges the process and content perspectives of ethnic/racial identity (ERI) by examining the longitudinal links between identity process (i.e., exploration, commitment) and a component of identity content, salience. Data were drawn from a 4-wave longitudinal study of 405 ethnically/racially diverse adolescents (63% female) from 9th to 10th grade. Results identified a transactional relation between identity process over the long-term and content in daily experiences: adolescents with stronger ERI commitment reported higher daily mean salience and less variability in salience 6 months later. At the same time, adolescents who reported more daily variability in salience engaged in more exploration 6 months later; this was particularly evident among youth who reported lower levels of mean salience. While centrality moderated some associations, most of the longitudinal associations did not vary by centrality. Building off long-standing theories of identity development that distinguish the independent effects of exploration and commitment, the data suggest that commitment predicts daily ethnic/racial salience experiences, while exploration is predicted by daily salience. Moreover, daily salience seems to serve as a developmental mechanism informing the construction of ERI over time. Implications for ERI development are discussed.


Archive | 2017

Developing an Ethnic-Racial Identity Intervention from a Developmental Perspective: Process, Content, and Implementation of the Identity Project

Adriana J. Umaña-Taylor; Sara Douglass

This chapter describes the process of developing an intervention grounded in developmental theory and focused on increasing adolescents’ ethnic-racial identity exploration and resolution. We begin by describing the impetus for the focus on ethnic-racial identity as a target for intervention, which includes a brief overview of prior research identifying consistent associations between developmental features of ethnic-racial identity and adolescents’ positive adjustment. We then review existing intervention efforts focused on identity, generally, and ethnic or cultural identity, specifically. In the second part of the chapter we present our approach for working with a community partner toward the development of the Identity Project intervention, discuss the mixed method (i.e., quantitative and qualitative) approach we used to develop the curriculum, and describe the curriculum. The chapter ends with a discussion of considerations for implementation, including the universal nature of the program and ideas regarding transportability.


Child Development | 2013

Daily Intragroup Contact in Diverse Settings: Implications for Asian Adolescents' Ethnic Identity

Tiffany Yip; Sara Douglass; J. Nicole Shelton


Journal of Youth and Adolescence | 2014

Intragroup Contact and Anxiety Among Ethnic Minority Adolescents: Considering Ethnic Identity and School Diversity Transitions

Sara Douglass; Tiffany Yip; J. Nicole Shelton


Cultural Diversity & Ethnic Minority Psychology | 2016

They were just making jokes: Ethnic/racial teasing and discrimination among adolescents.

Sara Douglass; Sheena Mirpuri; Devin English; Tiffany Yip


Archive | 2014

Ethnic and racial identity.

Tiffany Yip; Sara Douglass; Robert M. Sellers


Child Development Perspectives | 2013

The Application of Experience Sampling Approaches to the Study of Ethnic Identity: New Developmental Insights and Directions

Tiffany Yip; Sara Douglass

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Devin English

George Washington University

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Eleanor K. Seaton

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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