La. Hirschfeld, THE INHERITABILITY OF IDENTITY - CHILDRENS UNDERSTANDING OF THE CULTURAL BIOLOGY OF RACE, Child development, 66(5), 1995, pp. 1418-1437
4 experiments explored adult and grade school children's beliefs about
inheritability of identity, particularly the ''one-drop rule'' that d
efines children of mixed-race parents as belonging to the racial categ
ory of the minority parent. In Study 1, 8- and 12-year-olds (N = 32) a
nd adults (N = 43) were asked the category membership of mixed-race ch
ildren and the degree to which they resembled each parent. Study 2 inv
estigated whether the same-aged children (N = 36) and adults (N = 18)
expected mixed-race children to have white, black, or intermediate fea
tures. Study 3 explored children's (N = 46) expectations about the inh
eritability of the same properties in animals. Older children, like ad
ults, were found to believe that mixed-race children have black racial
features. Adults additionally believe that such children inherit the
categorical identity of the minority parent. Study 4 repeated the same
tasks with black and white children (N = 39) attending an integrated
school. Unlike children attending a predominantly white school, childr
en in the integrated school (regardless of race) expect mixed-race chi
ldren to have intermediate racial features.