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Likeness, Comfort, and Tolerance: Examining African American Adolescents’ Sense of School Belonging

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Abstract

This study investigated sense of school belonging in a sample of 13 African American high school students. Findings suggest that students felt a stronger sense of connection to their school community when they perceived fewer differences between themselves and others in the school body. In addition, student responses revealed that feelings of comfort and tolerance were essential to personal descriptions of belongingness. Although, likeness and comfort were important when students discussed school belongingness, the same was not true of factors related to academic performance. Limitations of the study and directions for future work are addressed.

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Correspondence to Keonya C. Booker.

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Keonya Booker, Ph.D. is an assistant professor of educational psychology in the Curry School of Education at the University of Virginia. Dr. Booker graduated from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill with a concentration in educational psychology, measurement, and evaluation. Her primary research interests focus on the relationship between school belonging, motivation, teacher caring, and academic performance for African American high school and college students. A secondary research line involves leadership development in young women. She teaches courses in adolescent development, advanced child development, and qualitative research methods.

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Booker, K.C. Likeness, Comfort, and Tolerance: Examining African American Adolescents’ Sense of School Belonging. Urban Rev 39, 301–317 (2007). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11256-007-0053-y

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