7 research outputs found
Person-environment fit and retention of racially minoritized college students: Recommendations for faculty, support staff, and administrators
Although colleges in the United States have become increasingly racially and ethnically diverse, degree attainment remains disproportionately low among students from underrepresented and minoritized racial backgrounds. In this paper, we discuss the interactive influence of both person and environment factors in shaping academic persistence and argue that college administrators, faculty, and student support staff can intervene and take specific steps to improve the academic experience of racially minoritized college students. To this end, we offer specific evidence-based recommendations for campus leaders and stakeholders on how to adapt their campus community to facilitate the requisite person-environment fit to maximize academic persistence
Future Directions on BIPOC Youth Mental Health: The Importance of Cultural Rituals in the COVID-19 Pandemic
Culture plays an important role in the development of mental health, especially during childhood
and adolescence. However, less is known about how participation in cultural rituals is related to the
wellbeing of youth who are Black, Indigenous, and People of Color (BIPOC), and part of the Global
Majority. This is crucial amid the COVID-19 pandemic, a global event that has disproportionally
affected BIPOC youth and disrupted participation in rituals. The goal of this paper is to promote
advances in clinical child and adolescent psychology focused on rituals. We begin by defining
culture and rituals and examining their role on development. We illustrate these issues with the
Lunar New Year in China, Maya rituals in MĂ©xico, Ramadan in Turkey, and Black graduations and
Latinx funerals in the United States. We discuss how the pandemic has affected participation in
these rituals and their potential impact on BIPOC children and adolescents’ mental health. We
propose future directions and recommendations for research
Reclaiming the Past and Transforming Our Future: Introduction to the Special Issue on Foundational Contributions of Black Scholars in Psychology
The contributions of Black scholars to psychology have been erased or marginalized within mainstream, U.S.-centered psychology. As such, psychologists and trainees have little exposure to strengths-based theories and schools of thought that center and humanize the experiences of people of African descent. This special issue intervenes on anti-Black racism at the epistemic level by curating a review of foundational contributions by diverse Black scholars in psychology and related fields. The special issue is organized around five integrative and overlapping themes: (a) Black scholars who have written on topics related to race, racism, and racial identity; (b) schools of thought that embody decolonial, liberation, and African psychologies and the scholars writing within these traditions; (c) scholars who have created new theories and approaches to conceptualizing the mental health of Black children, youth, and families; (d) Black scholars adopting an intersectional lens to research and practice; and (e) Black scholars creating spaces within existing organizations to theorize about and research the experiences of people of African descent. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2023 APA, all rights reserved)