Pulse Brain · Growing Health Evidence Index
Peer-reviewed

Cross-ethnic friendship self-efficacy: A new predictor of cross-ethnic friendships among children

Sabahat Çiğdem Bağci, Lindsey Cameron, Rhiannon N. Turner, Catarina Morais, Afiya Carby, Mirina Ndhlovu, Anaise Leney

Group Processes & Intergroup Relations · 2019

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Summary

Across two studies ( N Study 1 = 101; N Study 2 = 262) conducted among children in the UK, we incorporate Bandura’s (1986) self-efficacy theory to intergroup contact literature and introduce the new construct of cross-ethnic friendship self-efficacy (CEFSE), the belief that one can successfully form and maintain high-quality cross-ethnic friendships. Study 1 examined whether sources of CEFSE beliefs (prior contact, indirect contact, social norms, and intergroup anxiety) predicted higher quality cross-ethnic friendships through CEFSE. Study 2 replicated Study 1 and extended it by including perceived parental cross-ethnic friendship quality as a further predictor. In both studies, sources of self-efficacy beliefs (except social norms) were related to CEFSE, which predicted higher quality cro

Source type
Peer-reviewed study
DOI
10.1177/1368430219879219
Catalogue ID
SNmojmgkcn-16rbfl
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