Racial Micro-Affirmations: Latinx Close Friendships and Ethnic Identity Development
Abstract
:1. Hispanic-Serving Institutions (HSIs)
2. What It Means to Be a Recent Hispanic-Serving Research Institution
3. Latinx Students and Ethnoracial Identity Development
4. Conceptual Framework: Racial Micro-Affirmations in Higher Education
5. Methodology
5.1. Positionality
5.2. Setting
6. Data Analyses
7. Findings
7.1. The Support of Friends
Him (my friend) being Latino, it made me also kind of also get out of that comfort zone that I was sinking into…sinking down into depression…it made me come out of it and be “you know what, let’s start fresh” and I started working with him, and that’s when I just kept going. (ID506)
My friend Karina she lived in the eighth floor last year in the residence hall, and now she moved. We always hang out, we’re really close, and she was helping me out last June because I had a breakup with my ex-girlfriend, and I was really bummed out about it because we had been dating for three years, and she’s really supportive, she’ll help me out, like “oh it’s okay you don’t need her”, she’ll tell me there’s other people, she’s really supportive about it because I was going through a rough time. She told me “get up, finals are coming, you can be depressed after but right now you have to get your stuff”… so she was really supportive. (ID 545)
I do have someone I can talk to, like let’s say if it’s like midterms and then knowing that last year I didn’t have anyone, like my family members, they were like busy, so like they had to sleep, obviously, but now we stay up at night like doing homework, or we go out to eat or to just State Street, so it’s like nice to know that I have a network now that I can rely on than last year. (ID 528)
My closest friend here, she kind of knows how to do Gold finding classes and stuff, so I ever have a question, I always ask her first. (ID 500)
I actually ended up meeting someone from the same town just that he went to a different high school, and he’s studying mechanical engineering too, and he’s a Latino student too so… we clicked, and then, you know, I guess we’ve been friends ever since, and we study together and do other stuff. The people I’m close to…really close to are mostly Latino males…we usually play Fortnite (laughs) or play some other games…go play soccer…we either go out and do something…the people I surround myself, usually we share common things that we like… (ID 540)
7.2. The Importance of a Latinx Friend Group for Ethnic Identity Development
My mom, I remember she reminded me “remember that literally almost a year ago you were crying to me on the phone that you couldn’t make friends and look at you now…you know…you have your Latino friend group, you have your whole friends, and it’s not just Latinos, it’s like you have a wide span of friends.” (ID 506)
When I got here, and I got to that group of Latinos that really helped me out because it just feels so empowering and so good to find a community of people like you because you fit in, it’s like you never left home, it’s your little close-knit circle. (ID 543)
But, luckily, since my brother had just left a year prior, a lot of his friends when they found out I was coming, they would hit up my brother like, “oh, I want to meet your little brother, I want to meet him”. I got to know a lot of his older friends and they kind of took me under their wing and introduced me to a lot more people. (ID 547)
I feel like I can talk about it with my friends just because we’re majority Latinas and Latinos in college and just our experiences, if we feel comfortable enough with each other and to talk about things that have happened, like what I mentioned with my English teacher things like that, but yeah, I feel like just with close friends and support groups that each student has that they can feel comfortable talking about their experiences in those settings… we came from a lot of similar backgrounds, and we share a lot of experiences and foods growing up and just things like that, things we did from our past that translate into who we are now. (ID 523)
Most of them are in the same ethnic group as I am, so most of the friends that I do hang out with, but I think from the things we all have in common is we’re all passionate over the same thing, whether even if we’re in different disciplines here in campus major-wise, we’re all passionate about the same things, we all have a common goal of helping other people in different forms. (ID514)
It’s so weird how you tend to connect to people who come from similar backgrounds as you… my freshman year, I lived on the seventh floor, some of them lived on the third floor, and then some of them lived on the second or fifth floor and we had—I don’t want to say we had mutual friends, but they were there, so I can’t deny that fact, but we just ended up coming toward one another… there was just this attraction of we got along because we came from similar communities, we have similar financial standing… we were just friends. (552)
They’re my roommates, one of them was a roommate last year, the other was a hallmate, they’re both Latina I think, they both identify as Mexican, we mostly study together, we party together, we eat together, we even work together, I mean, we pretty much do everything together. (ID500)
Like I mentioned, I joined fraternities, so that was a whole another network of support that I had, especially because they were also Hispanic like me, so that’s a whole another community that had my back whenever I needed them aside from the friends that I already had my first year and my family at home… Just a struggle, like they are all, well, most of my fraternity brothers are also first-generation, so that’s definitely something we got going, and it, then with my housemates, it’s just like just struggling to be a college student, you know, here at the university. (ID 553)
I was very involved with SACNAS, which is the Society for the Advancement of Chicanos and Native Americans in Science, and I used to attend all their meetings and all their study hours, so that was very…a really nice community… yeah, and Los Ingenieros as well. They paired me up with another Latina undergrad in physics, and she has been extremely helpful, to this day she’s been so very supportive since my first year. My mentor Jimena who was also an undergraduate, she is now still an undergraduate, and she… every time I needed help on just talking about how my day was stressful or just as another friend and almost like an older sibling, so she has been very supportive…. they’re not judgmental about the fact that I’m Latina, like I’ll speak in Spanish to them, and they know a little bit so they’ll go back to it, and I’ll bring them snacks like Mexican candy, or even I’ve taken them plates of Mexican food from my parent’s house, and they are very happy to share that, so they’re just very…they’re very open-minded and I think that’s not always the case, and they’re not very arrogant. (ID 518)
7.3. Theme 2: Ethnoracial Identity Development through Curricular Micro-Affirmations
I took Chicana/o courses, like the intro to Chicana/o studies, with a woman-of-color professor, which was amazing. I fell in love with that class. I took that in the summer, and these courses have very much made me want to get into be a Chicana/o Studies major or Feminist Studies minor. It’s enlightening to know that I get to relive my life and see that I’m not the only person going through this and that everyone else or at least the professor understands what I am going through. (ID506)
It helped me learn more about our culture and helped me build a better sense of self identity and actually made me be more proud to know this is what we came from, and we started, and we’re just growing. To be able to say I wasn’t a dropout. I did it. I’m brown. I graduated as an engineer. (ID547)
Here, my first time taking ethnic studies, it really empowered me and taught me like, don’t be apologetic about who you are. Speaking in Spanish, even though I am not very good at speaking Spanish, it’s just, don’t feel bad about it. Taking a course made me feel empowered, now it’s like, I don’t care what people think. Think about who I am as Mexican and think about who I am and just because I speak Spanish. (ID538).
I’ve always been prideful of my identity and who I am and my ethnicity, it’s never really been questioned, but it helped me think that they’re really putting our history and stuff on paper, and its making known and its being written in the books so, for future generations, I know that it’ll be more known about what Chicanos Studies is, and there will be more research done into it and stuff like that, that Chicano’s Studies field will develop more as time comes. (ID523)
I am taking an Asian American Studies class right now. We did talk a lot about how the social movements of different races helped them to try to find self-determination. It gives me a more empowering feel to myself, especially as part of a minority group. Even though I am Latina, it enhanced my identity. (ID520)
Public education didn’t really educate me about my history, about my parents’ history, and not even that. I felt like there was so much discrimination towards Mexican and in general towards anybody who is not White because my school is majority Indian and majority Mexican. And I felt a lot of discrimination going on, and then on top of that, we weren’t allowed to speak Spanish in class, and I remember it was in elementary school that I felt like that shaped the way I thought. And so since elementary and on, I never spoke Spanish in class because of that one experience. (ID533)
I fell in love with my first Chicana/o Studies class, and it really made me feel very empowered because in your K–12 you don’t really learn about what is Mexican or who is Mexican or why we are here. Like you don’t really learn much of our history, and so taking that, I felt so empowered, and I really felt like they have so much to offer. Because of what I learned, I felt like I can offer so much to my community, and so I felt more empowered, and I was like, I’m proud to be a Chicana/o Studies major. (ID539)
I’ve experienced the education system and felt it failed my siblings, and knowing that my brothers and sisters could have had this same opportunity make me want to fight harder for them every day. They just didn’t think they were worth it, and they didn’t feel valued. And so, my brothers dropped out, and the only way they got through is because I helped them on their homework, and that’s why they graduated on time. Seeing that made me so angry and sad at the same time knowing that my brothers could have done it, but just they didn’t believe in them because they couldn’t see themselves going to college. (ID538)
I think that whenever I go back home, and I start telling them about all this stuff that had been going on and how it’s sort of affecting us right now, they kind of start questioning their own lives, and they are like, it’s kind of sad to say that a good amount of my friends didn’t pursue higher education back home, so then when I tell them about all these issues that had been occurring and how it affects our subpopulation, they’re like aww damn maybe I should go back and prove myself. (ID508)
I want to be someone that people in the Latino community look up to. I think one of my traits is helping people out when they need it because I have people that help me out at times, too. As a person, as a professional, I would want to help those in need and help my community out. (ID540)
Beyond wanting to give back to their community, students mentioned how the courses they took redefined their career path and their commitment to giving back: “It definitely did make me want to see what I can do more with my career and how I can advocate to help more communities of color with lower socioeconomic status to even create more mental health awareness”. (ID548)
I mostly aspire that whatever career I have that I’m helping others, helping my community, and I’m happy for the most part. Because it’s not all about the money. I wouldn’t mind being a teacher. I actually consider being a professor after my Chicana/o Studies class. I was just like this is really interesting, and just being a professor and moving these students and just teaching them and leaving a good impression on them. (ID535)
8. Discussion
9. Limitations and Future Directions
10. Conclusions and Implications
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Mireles-Rios, R.; Garcia, N.M.; Castro, I.M.J.; Hernandez, M.; Cerda, R. Racial Micro-Affirmations: Latinx Close Friendships and Ethnic Identity Development. Educ. Sci. 2024, 14, 737. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci14070737
Mireles-Rios R, Garcia NM, Castro IMJ, Hernandez M, Cerda R. Racial Micro-Affirmations: Latinx Close Friendships and Ethnic Identity Development. Education Sciences. 2024; 14(7):737. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci14070737
Chicago/Turabian StyleMireles-Rios, Rebeca, Nichole Margarita Garcia, Isaac M. J. Castro, Monica Hernandez, and Rodolfo Cerda. 2024. "Racial Micro-Affirmations: Latinx Close Friendships and Ethnic Identity Development" Education Sciences 14, no. 7: 737. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci14070737
APA StyleMireles-Rios, R., Garcia, N. M., Castro, I. M. J., Hernandez, M., & Cerda, R. (2024). Racial Micro-Affirmations: Latinx Close Friendships and Ethnic Identity Development. Education Sciences, 14(7), 737. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci14070737