Abstract
We investigated associations among three parent socialization practices (racial/cultural socialization, adoptive communicative openness, LGBT family socialization) and related child outcomes (social competence, understanding of adoption) among 96 lesbian, gay, and heterosexual adoptive parent families with school-age children (Mage = 8 years). No socialization practices differed as functions of child sex or parental sexual orientation. Parents in transracial (versus same-race) adoptive families reported higher racial/cultural socialization and lower adoptive communicative openness. Higher racial/cultural socialization was associated with higher LGBT family socialization; the latter was also associated with higher adoptive communicative openness. Although no parent-reported socialization practices were associated with children’s understanding of adoption, child-reported LGBT family socialization was correlated with greater understanding. Moreover, when simultaneously considering parent-reported socialization, higher child-reported LGBT family socialization statistically predicted greater social competence. These findings provide insights about how socialization practices relate to one another and to preadolescent child outcomes among adoptive families representing diverse identities.
Acknowledgements
We are appreciative to all of the adoptive families who were willing to share their stories and made this research possible. An earlier version of this paper was presented at the Society for Research on Child Development biennial meeting and the National Council on Family Relations annual conference.
Notes
1 We use the term, identity-based socialization, to describe any form of socialization related to identity, such as racial/ethnic identity, adoptive status, and/or sexual orientation.
2 Although socialization may occur in many ways (e.g., children are socialized related to identity by teachers in schools), we refer here to parent socialization (unless noted otherwise).
3 Our understanding of racial/cultural socialization here is enculturation, a form of racial/cultural socialization that focuses on children’s cultural heritage and encouraging ethnic pride that has shown to be adaptive and positive for youth (Lee et al., Citation2006; Vonk et al., Citation2010).
4 Although there is not one “ideal” definition of a transracial adoption, we consider families in our study to have completed a transracial adoption if children have at least one parent of race different from their own (Marr, Citation2017).