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Margarita Azmitia

Margarita Azmitia   
    Title:  Professor
    Research Area:  Developmental
    Email:  azmitia@ucsc.edu
    Phone:  (831) 459-3146 Office
    Office:  369 Social Sciences 2
    Office Hours:  Office Hours Held in Social Sciences II, Room 211. Monday 1-2PM; Friday 9-10AM

Education History 

Ph.D., University of Minnesota
B.A., M.A., University of North Carolina at Greensboro

Courses Taught 
PSYC-10-01 - Intro Develop Psych

Research Focus 

Margarita Azmitia's principal areas of interest are the social and cultural contexts of development. She is pursuing three lines of research: the contribution of children's and adolescents' friendships and peer acceptance to cognition and self-esteem, the contribution of family and peers to minority students' academic achievement, adjustment, and identity development, and the role of collaboration in the development of scientific understanding.

Several of Azmitia's projects have involved studying children's, adolescents', and young adults' collaborative problem solving, particularly as it occurs in the context of scientific tasks or reasoning. She has also carried out observational and interview studies of children and adolescents' interactions with friends and classmates at school to gain a better understanding of the everyday dynamics of these relationships and their relation to school engagement and self-esteem.

In the last few years, she has been studying how early and late adolescents manage important life transitions, and in particular, the transition to adolescence and middle school and the transition into adulthood and college. This work is particularly focused on similarities and differences in how ethnic minority and majority and low-income and middle/upper income adolescents manage these transitions and how their families, friends, and schools either provide support or challenge their adjustment, goals, and identity negotiations. Concerning identity, her work examines how adolescents and young adults negotiate their ethnic, gender, and social class identities in the academic and personal contexts of their lives.

Interests 

How culture, peers, family, and schools provide a context for children's and adolescents' development. Special emphasis on how close relationships influence the educational pathways and identity development of ethnically and socioeconomically diverse populations.

Selected Publications 

Azmitia, M., Ittel, A., Radmacher, K. A. Narratives of friendship and self in adolescence. In New Directions for Child and Adolescent Development, 2005.

Azmitia, M. and Brown, J. R. Latino immigrant parents' beliefs about the “path of life” of their adolescent children. In Contreras, J., Neal-Barnett, A., & Kerns, K. (Eds.). Latino Children and Families in the United States: Current Research and Future Directions (pp. 77-101), 2002. Westport, CT: Praeger .

Azmitia, M. and Crowley, K. Reflections on the social context of scientific understanding. In Crowley, K.; Schunn, C. D.; and Okada, T. (Eds.), Designing for Science: Implications from Professional, Instructional and Everyday Science, Mawah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, 2002.

Azmitia, M. and Cooper, C.R. Good or Bad? Peer influences on Latino and European American adolescents' pathways through school, Journal of Education for Students Placed at Risk, 2001, 6, 45-71

Azmitia, M.; Lippman, D.; and Ittel, A. On the relation of personal experience to early adolescents' reasoning about best friendship deterioration and dissolution, Social Development, 1999, 8, 275-291.

Azmitia, M., Kamprath, N., and Linnet, J. Intimacy and conflict: On the dynamics of boys' and girls' friendships during middle childhood and adolescence. In L. Meyer, M. Grenot-Scheyer, B. Harry., H. Park, and I. Schwartz (Eds.) Understanding the Social Lives of Children and Youth. Baltimore, MD: P.H.: Brookes Publishing Co., 1998.