Effects of students’ perception of teachers’ ethnic-racial socialization on students’ ethnic identity and mental health in rural China’s schools
Effects of students’ perception of teachers’ ethnic-racial socialization on students’ ethnic identity and mental health in rural China’s schools
Introduction: using students in the Liangshan Yi autonomous prefectures of southwestern China (n = 585; 13–15 years old), we examined (i) the effects of students’ perception of their teachers’ ethnic-racial socialization on their ethnic identity and mental health outcomes of depressive and stress symptoms; (ii) the effects of students’ ethnic identity on their depressive and stress symptoms; (iii) the differential associations among these factors in Yi ethnic minority versus Han cultural majority students.
Methods: we conducted a cross-sectional survey and used multistage sampling to collect the information. Chinese-validated standardized measures were used: the Patient Health Questionaires-9, Children’s Revised Impact of Event Scale-8, Multigroup Ethnic Identity Measure, Cultural Socialization Scale, and Teachers’ Attitude on Adoption of Cultural Diversity Scale. Multigroup confirmatory factor analysis and multigroup structural equation modeling were employed.
Results: comparing the findings in Yi and Han students, their perception of teachers’ ethnic-racial socialization had dissimilar effects on their ethnic identity and mental health outcomes. Three key findings comparing the differences between Yi and Han students were as follows: (i) students’ perception of their teachers’ multicultural socialization practices positively affected the ethnic identity of both Yi and Han young people; however, their perception of their teachers’ socializing them to their own cultures did not exert any effect; (ii) students’ perception of teachers’ multicultural socialization practices had different mental health effects on Yi versus Han students; and (iii) ethnic identity affected the mental health of Yi ethnic minority students only.
Conclusion: the findings underscore the importance of teachers’ multicultural socialization in the ethnic identity development of both Yi ethnic minority and Han majority students. Ethnic identity serves as a linking variable bridging perceived teachers’ multicultural socialization practices and mental health in Yi ethnic minority students but not among the Han cultural majority youths. Research, practice, and policy implications relevant to the global context are also discussed.
Lai, Angel Hor Yan
363687d0-ea63-4969-90b1-b2d49e27c299
Lam, Jason K.H.
2452121a-ca5d-4b3a-8f50-f7523be61c43
Yao, Hong
12d6b54c-38ac-4ae5-80b2-cbe6dbc7ea8c
Tsui, Elaine
a38ed7a4-8f83-45a1-82ae-542c5c648ebc
Leung, Cynthia
06bddbb1-94ea-43bb-b018-0cfde3ac955e
15 February 2024
Lai, Angel Hor Yan
363687d0-ea63-4969-90b1-b2d49e27c299
Lam, Jason K.H.
2452121a-ca5d-4b3a-8f50-f7523be61c43
Yao, Hong
12d6b54c-38ac-4ae5-80b2-cbe6dbc7ea8c
Tsui, Elaine
a38ed7a4-8f83-45a1-82ae-542c5c648ebc
Leung, Cynthia
06bddbb1-94ea-43bb-b018-0cfde3ac955e
Lai, Angel Hor Yan, Lam, Jason K.H., Yao, Hong, Tsui, Elaine and Leung, Cynthia
(2024)
Effects of students’ perception of teachers’ ethnic-racial socialization on students’ ethnic identity and mental health in rural China’s schools.
Frontiers in Psychology, 14, [1275367].
(doi:10.3389/fpsyg.2023.1275367).
Abstract
Introduction: using students in the Liangshan Yi autonomous prefectures of southwestern China (n = 585; 13–15 years old), we examined (i) the effects of students’ perception of their teachers’ ethnic-racial socialization on their ethnic identity and mental health outcomes of depressive and stress symptoms; (ii) the effects of students’ ethnic identity on their depressive and stress symptoms; (iii) the differential associations among these factors in Yi ethnic minority versus Han cultural majority students.
Methods: we conducted a cross-sectional survey and used multistage sampling to collect the information. Chinese-validated standardized measures were used: the Patient Health Questionaires-9, Children’s Revised Impact of Event Scale-8, Multigroup Ethnic Identity Measure, Cultural Socialization Scale, and Teachers’ Attitude on Adoption of Cultural Diversity Scale. Multigroup confirmatory factor analysis and multigroup structural equation modeling were employed.
Results: comparing the findings in Yi and Han students, their perception of teachers’ ethnic-racial socialization had dissimilar effects on their ethnic identity and mental health outcomes. Three key findings comparing the differences between Yi and Han students were as follows: (i) students’ perception of their teachers’ multicultural socialization practices positively affected the ethnic identity of both Yi and Han young people; however, their perception of their teachers’ socializing them to their own cultures did not exert any effect; (ii) students’ perception of teachers’ multicultural socialization practices had different mental health effects on Yi versus Han students; and (iii) ethnic identity affected the mental health of Yi ethnic minority students only.
Conclusion: the findings underscore the importance of teachers’ multicultural socialization in the ethnic identity development of both Yi ethnic minority and Han majority students. Ethnic identity serves as a linking variable bridging perceived teachers’ multicultural socialization practices and mental health in Yi ethnic minority students but not among the Han cultural majority youths. Research, practice, and policy implications relevant to the global context are also discussed.
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fpsyg-14-1275367
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Accepted/In Press date: 7 December 2023
Published date: 15 February 2024
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Local EPrints ID: 499677
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/499677
ISSN: 1664-1078
PURE UUID: c57a15ec-ec2d-44ec-b2de-4ad544c1f0ed
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Date deposited: 31 Mar 2025 16:41
Last modified: 22 Aug 2025 02:40
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Author:
Angel Hor Yan Lai
Author:
Jason K.H. Lam
Author:
Hong Yao
Author:
Elaine Tsui
Author:
Cynthia Leung
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