PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Latinos, Blacks less swayed by college-bound friends

2021-03-04
(Press-News.org) ITHACA, N.Y. - Close friends are important drivers of adolescent behavior, including college attendance, according to Steven Alvarado, assistant professor of sociology in the College of Arts and Sciences.

In new research published March 4 in American Educational Research Journal, Alvarado reports that having college-bound friends increases the likelihood that a student will enroll in college. However, the effect of having college-bound friends is diminished for Black and Latino students compared with white and Asian students, especially for males and especially for selective and highly selective colleges, due to structural and cultural processes.

"Black and Latino students certainly reap some benefits from having college-bound friends in high school," Alvarado said, "but the benefits are not as widespread for these students as they are for white and Asian students when it comes to college enrollment."

Black and Latino students demonstrate a clear and persistent disparity in their college enrollment rates relative to their white and Asian counterparts, Alvarado wrote, citing a 2020 study by the U.S. Department of Education National Center for Education Statistics. In 2018, the college enrollment rate was 59% for Asian young adults and 42% for white young adults; the rates were 36% for Latino young adults and 37% for Black young adults.

Alvarado said he has long been fascinated by the idea that placing disadvantaged and minority students in higher socioeconomic and achievement settings can help them excel in school. This study is part of a series of research papers that test whether having friends who plan to go to college is associated with college-going behavior.

"Friends may directly encourage and motivate one another to study hard, focus and remain on a college path throughout high school," Alvarado wrote. "Friends also provide companionship and camaraderie that may ease the oftentimes isolating academic path to college during adolescence."

However, Alvarado said, the key question is: Do friends influence college-going behavior, or are college-going students already internally motivated to go, regardless of their friends' input?

To quantify how much friendship influences college enrollment for specific groups, Alvarado analyzed data from the U.S. Department of Education's High School Longitudinal Study of 2009, a nationally representative survey of approximately 24,000 students who were followed and surveyed through college.

This survey asked students in 11th grade: "How many of your close friends plan to attend a four-year college?"

Alvarado found that for all students combined, having college-bound friends increased the probability of enrolling in any college by 6 percentage points. Yet, Black and Latino students benefited less than white and Asian students. The diminishment of benefit was starker for male students than female and as the colleges became more selective.

Alvarado theorized in the paper that structural and cultural forces mitigate the influence of friendship for Black and Latino males.

Alvarado wrote that Black and Latino students often internalize negative stereotypes from the wider society about their educational ability. They may also reject an educational system that often marginalizes them. In these ways, both the supply of and the demand for college-bound friends may be diminished by structural discrimination that Black and Latino students deal with every day.

The college-leaning influence of friends may also be tempered among Black and Latino students who grow up in communities that value family above the individual - a dynamic active in Latino immigrant communities and Black communities, as well, Alvarado wrote.

Among the potentially effective strategies for improving college enrollment rates for Black and Latino students is for schools to think of ways to better incorporate Black and Latino families in the college-going process, he said.

"Friendships," Alvarado said, "perhaps when combined with a culturally sensitive approach to college-going, may be one essential piece of the puzzle that is necessary to ameliorate racial and ethnic disparities in college enrollment."

INFORMATION:



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Can't solve a riddle? The answer might lie in knowing what doesn't work

2021-03-04
Ever get stuck trying to solve a puzzle? You look for a pattern, or a rule, and you just can't spot it. So you back up and start over. That's your brain recognizing that your current strategy isn't working, and that you need a new way to solve the problem, according to new research from the University of Washington. With the help of about 200 puzzle-takers, a computer model and functional MRI (fMRI) images, researchers have learned more about the processes of reasoning and decision-making, pinpointing the brain pathway that springs into action when problem-solving ...

Earth has a hot new neighbour -- and it's an astronomer's dream

Earth has a hot new neighbour -- and its an astronomers dream
2021-03-04
A newly discovered planet could be our best chance yet of studying rocky planet atmospheres outside the solar system, a new international study involving UNSW Sydney shows. The planet, called Gliese 486b (pronounced Glee-seh), is a 'super-Earth': that is, a rocky planet bigger than Earth but smaller than ice giants like Neptune and Uranus. It orbits a red dwarf star around 26 light-years away, making it a close neighbour - galactically speaking. With a piping-hot surface temperature of 430 degrees Celsius, Gliese 486b is too hot to support ...

A parental paradox for Black girls in the justice system

2021-03-04
COLUMBUS, Ohio - For Black girls in the juvenile justice system, attention from a caregiver might amount to too much of a bad thing, a recent study suggests. Though parental attentiveness would generally be considered beneficial to troubled youths, the finding hints at the possibility that a history of trauma in a household's adults may filter down to younger generations, researchers say. The study, examining how family and peer social support influenced post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) symptoms in Black girls who were in detention, found that lower self-esteem, less optimism about the future and higher negative behaviors by peers were associated with greater PTSD symptoms in these girls. But one more factor also correlated with those symptoms: a higher level of caregiver support. "This ...

Moms need guidance on what to eat when their breastfeeding infant has a food allergy

2021-03-04
ARLINGTON HEIGHTS, IL (March 4, 2021) - Many new mothers with infants want very much to breastfeed as it is the gold standard for early nutrition. What to do when you find out your young child has a food allergy, and you are breastfeeding? A new study in Annals of Allergy, Asthma and Immunology, the scientific journal of the American College of Allergy, Asthma and Immunology (ACAAI), found that more than 28% of the women were given no guidance on whether they could eat the same food their breastfeeding child was allergic to. "We found that guidance from healthcare practitioners for breastfeeding mothers in this situation ...

Field study shows icing can cost wind turbines up to 80% of power production

Field study shows icing can cost wind turbines up to 80% of power production
2021-03-04
AMES, Iowa - Wind turbine blades spinning through cold, wet conditions can collect ice nearly a foot thick on the yard-wide tips of their blades. That disrupts blade aerodynamics. That disrupts the balance of the entire turbine. And that can disrupt energy production by up to 80 percent, according to a recently published field study led by Hui Hu, Iowa State University's Martin C. Jischke Professor in Aerospace Engineering and director of the university's Aircraft Icing Physics and Anti-/De-icing Technology Laboratory. Hu has been doing laboratory studies of turbine-blade icing for about 10 years, including performing experiments ...

Study aims to help governments maximize profits from oil and gas auctions

2021-03-04
HOUSTON - (March 4, 2021) - Federal and state governments auction leases to oil and gas companies to extract natural resources from public land. A revamp of the auction system -- utilizing a new model developed by a Rice University economist -- could lead to more competitive bids and, ultimately, more money for governments. Yunmi Kong, an assistant professor of economics at Rice and the study's author, discussed her model in "Sequential Auctions with Synergy and Affiliation Across Auctions." The article appeared in the January 2021 edition of the Journal of Political Economy. "Much of the oil- and gas-producing ...

Scientists explore the action mechanism of a new antibiotic

Scientists explore the action mechanism of a new antibiotic
2021-03-04
Scientists from Skoltech and MSU have investigated antibiotic nybomycin that could prove effective against bacteria resistant to other antibiotics. Their research was published in the journal Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy. All bacterial cells contain topoisomerases, an important group of enzymes that help deal with spatial difficulties stemming from bacterial cell division associated with circular DNA replication. Topoisomerases can be of two types, I and II, depending on breaks they produce in DNA (one strand or double strand). Type II often acts as a target for antibiotics, including fluoroquinolones (FQ), a common group of antibiotics that comprises levofloxacin, ciprofloxacin, and others. Unfortunately, bacteria easily acquire resistance to ...

Failing to see the forest for the trees may prevent better cardiovascular outcomes

2021-03-04
Managing single risk factors like blood pressure rather than looking at overall risk may be wasting scarce resources in countries where cardiovascular disease (CVD) is on the rise, according to a new study. Researchers looked at country-specific levels of cardiovascular risk, associations with socio-demographic factors and whether WHO guidelines on the use of blood pressure medication were being followed across 45 low-income and middle-income countries (LMICs). They found a higher risk of CVD in lower educated and non-employed people, an overuse of medicines in people at lower levels of CVD risk and an underuse of medicines in people at higher risk across ...

Dramatic decline in western butterfly populations linked to fall warming

Dramatic decline in western butterfly populations linked to fall warming
2021-03-04
Western butterfly populations are declining at an estimated rate of 1.6% per year, according to a new report to be published this week in Science. The report looks at more than 450 butterfly species, including the western monarch, whose latest population count revealed a 99.9% decline since the 1980s. "The monarch population that winters along the West Coast plummeted from several hundred thousand just a few years ago to fewer than 2,000 this past year," said Katy Prudic, an assistant professor of citizen and data science in the University of Arizona School of Natural Resources and the Environment and a co-author of the report. "Essentially, the western monarch is on the brink of extinction, but what's most unsettling is they are situated in the middle of the pack, so to speak, ...

COVID-19 screening: A new model for assessing the efficiency of group testing

2021-03-04
How best to evaluate the performance of a group testing strategy for the SARS-CoV-2 virus, which involves pooling samples from multiple individuals in order to conduct a single RT-PCR test on the whole group? To do precisely that, scientists from the CNRS, l'université Grenoble Alpes, and l'université Sorbonne Paris Nord1 have developed a model that evaluates the efficiency of such tests. Their theoretical study accounts for both dilution effect and the detection limits of the RT-PCR test, in an effort to assess the number of potential false negatives based on pooled sample size, to optimize group size thereby minimizing epidemic risk, and finally to more accurately determine ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

First study of its kind finds deep-sea mining waste threatens life and foodwebs in the ocean’s dim “twilight zone”

Early-stage clinical trial demonstrates promise of intranasal influenza vaccine in generating broad immunity

Study identifies which patients benefit most from new schizophrenia drug

Maternal type 1 diabetes may protect children through epigenetic changes

Austrian satellite mission PRETTY continues under the leadership of Graz University of Technology

Trust and fairness are Brazil’s most powerful climate tools, finds new Earth4All analysis ahead of COP30

APA poll reveals a nation suffering from stress of societal division, loneliness

Landscapes that remember: clues show Indigenous Peoples have thrived in the southwestern Amazon for more than 1,000 years

World’s first demonstration of entanglement swapping using sum-frequency generation between single photons

A combination treatment may help cut lifelong ibrutinib for chronic lymphocytic leukemia

First precise altitude distribution observation of blue aurora using hyperspectral camera

Poorer heart health in middle age linked to increased dementia risk

Duckweed offers promise and caution as nature-based solution for rice paddy pollution

Medical evidence crucial in holding polluters accountable for harming health

Climate change and conflict pose a serious health threat, warn experts

Curb sales of SUVs to reduce harms to health and the environment, say experts

Greenness linked to fewer hospital stays for mental health conditions

Experts warn of wider health impact of tropical cyclones in a warming climate

Transforming UK eye health research by linking national data resources

First global survey highlights challenges faced by young women with advanced breast cancer

Advanced breast cancer patients living longer thanks to improvements in treatment and care

Landmark Global Decade Report reveals breakthroughs in advanced breast cancer but exposes a widening global equity gap

Island reptiles face extinction before they are even studied, warns global review

Universe's expansion 'is now slowing, not speeding up'

Nation topped goal of ‘one million more’ STEM graduates over the past decade

AI can speed antibody design to thwart novel viruses: study

The world’s highest honor in computational physics awarded to Stefano Baroni

Radiotherapy after mastectomy can be avoided, study finds

Donor kidneys perform better after machine perfusion

More than a hangover: Heavy drinking linked to earlier, more severe stroke

[Press-News.org] Latinos, Blacks less swayed by college-bound friends