“…First, there is empirical evidence that children across different races tend to endorse a “White is good” approach toward their social preferences (e.g., Alejandro‐Wright, ; Clark & Clark, ; Cross, ; Dunham et al., ; Johnson, ; Neto & Paiva, ; Spencer, ; Spencer & Markstrom‐Adams, ; “Study: White and Black Children,” ) and perhaps priming a biracial child's White identity leads toward a stronger endorsement of this view. Second, minority children have lower overall preferences for their own racial group (Aboud, ; Dunham et al., ; Morrison, ; Spencer & Markstrom‐Adams, ). In comparison to children who belong to the majority race, they more strongly believe that peers from racial out‐groups can be friends, often due to parent and family socialization at home (Margie, Killen, Sinno, & McGlothlin, ).…”