PEER NETWORKS OF AFRICAN-AMERICAN STUDENTS IN INDEPENDENT SCHOOLS - AFFIRMING ACADEMIC-SUCCESS AND RACIAL IDENTITY

Authors
Citation
A. Datnow et R. Cooper, PEER NETWORKS OF AFRICAN-AMERICAN STUDENTS IN INDEPENDENT SCHOOLS - AFFIRMING ACADEMIC-SUCCESS AND RACIAL IDENTITY, The Journal of Negro education, 66(1), 1997, pp. 56-72
Citations number
26
ISSN journal
00222984
Volume
66
Issue
1
Year of publication
1997
Pages
56 - 72
Database
ISI
SICI code
0022-2984(1997)66:1<56:PNOASI>2.0.ZU;2-F
Abstract
Analysis of qualitative data reveals that the formal and informal peer networks of African American students in predominantly White elite in dependent schools support these students' academic success, create opp ortunities for them to reaffirm their racial identities, and facilitat e their adjustment to settings that are otherwise difficult for Blacks to fit into. Contrasted to research showing that adopting academicall y successful behaviors leads Black students to being labeled as ''acti ng White,'' the sampled students made social gains within school when they were academically successful. However, this success did not resul t in full acceptance by African American peers outside the school. The authors conclude that the dynamics and ideologies of African American peer groups are more complex than prior research has suggested.