Abstract
The present study tests the hypothesis that friend selection similarity increases after the transition into middle school but only for those attending schools with an expanded pool of similar others who could potentially serve as friends. Participants included 456 (247 girls, 209 boys) students (ages 10–15) attending public primary and middle schools in Florida (USA) and Lithuania. In Florida, 40.2% were European American, 26.5% were Hispanic-American, 22.6% were African American; the remainder had other backgrounds. Most Lithuania students were ethnic Lithuanian. Florida and Lithuania primary school students attended classes with the same 22–24 classmates. Florida middle school students attended classes with a rotating group of students, drawn from 78 to 89 potential classmates. Lithuania middle school students attended classes with the same 21–30 classmates. Participants completed peer nomination surveys twice during a single academic year, from which 344 (Florida
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