PDA

View Full Version : Religious Students Have Few Interracial Friendship


nhboy
04-01-2012, 05:09 PM
Link to original article. (http://www.secularnewsdaily.com/2012/03/29/religious-students-have-fewer-interracial-friendships/)

"Using data from the National Longitudinal Study of Freshmen (NLSF), Julie Park, an educationalist at the University of Maryland, has investigated how inter-racial friendships and religious affiliation interact. The NLSF was an annual survey of White, Black, Latino, and Asian American students from 28 selective institutions that ran from 1999 to 2004.

During their fourth year of college, students were asked to “think of the four people at [your college] with whom you have been closest during your college years.” They were also asked to list the race/ethnicity of each of the friends.

What she found was that the most religious students (based on self-reported religiosity, their frequency of religious service attendance, and their religious observance) also had the fewest friends from other races.

What’s more, Protestant or Jewish (but not Muslim, Hindu or Buddhist) students also had the fewest mixed-race friendships. That’s probably because these are the two major religious groups.

These two effects were independent – so the most mono-cultural people were the most religious Protestants and Jews. This held even after controlling for a bunch of other factors, including the racial diversity of the college, the diversity of their previous school, and the race of the student.

And on top of all this, belonging to a religious club reduced the chances of inter-racial friendship still further! That wasn’t the case with other clubs (except explicitly ethnic clubs – and even here the effect was smaller than for religious clubs).

Now, the interesting thing about these three factors – religiosity, religious denomination, and membership of a religious club – isn’t that they weren’t highly correlated. That means that they seem to have independent, additive effects. Park concludes that:"

Starman3000m
04-01-2012, 09:06 PM
Link to original article. (http://www.secularnewsdaily.com/2012/03/29/religious-students-have-fewer-interracial-friendships/)

Was there a survey of non-religious students who were asked to list their four (4) closest friends throughout college?

Quick survey for all non-religious people: Think of your four (4) closest friends you had (have) in college and take into account their ethnicity. Did (do) you hang around with four individuals, each from varying ethnicity, that you consider your four closest friends?

vraiblonde
04-01-2012, 10:40 PM
Perhaps they should force persons of color to attend religious colleges and belong to religious clubs. Then persons of non-color could have an opportunity to meet them and make friends based on common interests.

libertytyranny
04-02-2012, 09:19 AM
I am thinking it probably has to do with the fact that most students who would readily define themselves as religious likely have friends at church..and since churches tend to be quite segregated, that doesn't surprise me :shrug:

Starman3000m
04-03-2012, 09:34 AM
I am thinking it probably has to do with the fact that most students who would readily define themselves as religious likely have friends at church..and since churches tend to be quite segregated, that doesn't surprise me :shrug:

The survey is making this out to be a "religious" thing by the implication that religious folk tend to be more segregated than non-religious folk.

However, when it boils down to reality, prejudice and segregation is a human nature condition that affects a good percentage of all people; religious or not. Just sayin... :whistle:

vraiblonde
04-03-2012, 09:47 AM
The survey is making this out to be a "religious" thing by the implication that religious folk tend to be more segregated than non-religious folk.

However, when it boils down to reality, prejudice and segregation is a human nature condition that affects a good percentage of all people; religious or not. Just sayin... :whistle:

Yes. People of all colors do it. Even if everyone were the same race and religion, people would find a reason to self-segregate.

Starman3000m
04-03-2012, 10:49 AM
Yes. People of all colors do it. Even if everyone were the same race and religion, people would find a reason to self-segregate.

Yep! Happens in all societies - all countries.

McGinn77
04-05-2012, 01:15 PM
Was there a survey of non-religious students who were asked to list their four (4) closest friends throughout college?

Quick survey for all non-religious people: Think of your four (4) closest friends you had (have) in college and take into account their ethnicity. Did (do) you hang around with four individuals, each from varying ethnicity, that you consider your four closest friends?

This wasn't a study of religious people, it was a study of all students that were asked to include their religious beliefs. The comparison means that non-religious students were included is implicated.

BTW: 2 white, 1 black, 1 asian


SEO by vBSEO 3.6.0 ©2011, Crawlability, Inc.