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I started a study about college networks of friends and connections because I felt that friendships are one of the most overlooked and crucial aspects influencing students' success. In my work, I found three network types — tight-knitters, compartmentalizers and samplers — which each came with particular benefits and potential costs.
In 2004, I interviewed 82 students at "MU," a pseudonym for a large public four-year university in the midwestern United States, about their friendships.
This was a diverse group of students — white, black, and Latina/o men and women of different class backgrounds, who were involved in a range of campus organizations (including some who were not in any organizations). Each of these students named between three and 60 friends.
I collected information about each friend and the connections between each friend — thus mapping the network of friendships.
I categorized each student into one of the three network types. As shown in the figures below, the tight-knitter's network resembles a ball of yarn, the compartmentalizer's network a bow tie and the sampler's network a daisy.
A tight-knit network
Janice M. McCabe
Let's first look at "tight-knitters."
The tight-knitters have one densely woven friendship group, where nearly all of their friends know each other. One tight-knitter I met was Alberto, a Latino man whose friendship group included hometown friends and the new friends he made at MU. He referred to them as a "family."
His friends helped him cope with some racist incidents on campus. Alberto talked with his friends about these incidents, for example, discussing times that professors and peers made what Alberto called "derogatory" and "offensive" comments about Latinos.
In Alberto's case, his tight-knit group of friends provided both academic and social support: they studied together, provided emotional support around academics and engaged in stimulating intellectual conversations.
However, not all tight-knit networks provide similar support. Some could also distract students. I found that for half of tight-knitters, friends were more of a distraction than a helping hand. For example, they distracted each other from attending class and from studying. As Latasha explained, she could be trying to study, but seeing a friend sleeping makes her tired, and she ends up sleeping instead.
Behavior was most contagious in tight-knit networks — both the academically helpful behaviors of Alberto’s friends and the distracting behaviors of Latasha’s friends spread easily. I found tight-knit networks had the potential to have the most powerful impact on academic and social outcomes.
A network of clusters
Janice M. McCabe
A second group that I called "compartmentalizers" had networks divided into two to four clusters, where friends knew each other within clusters but rarely across them.
For example, Mary, a white middle-class student "compartmentalized" her friends into two clusters — friends from home and friends from MU — who provided different types of support.
Mary felt supported socially by her hometown friends, but the friends in her sorority also provided some emotional support regarding academics. Her main source of academic support, however, came from acquaintances, not friends, who met in class, shared notes and quizzed each other before exams. Unlike tight-knitters who only had one group of friends providing multiple types of support, compartmentalizers had multiple groups with each providing different types of support.
In general, compartmentalizers came from more advantaged backgrounds, experienced greater ease on campus and succeeded in college with less support from friends as compared to those with other network types.
One challenge of this network type was keeping up with each cluster. For example, Jim told me, "I'm worried that if I don't hang out with my friends enough, they're gonna stray away from me." He felt that he'd already "lost contact" with his hometown friends, and he was struggling to keep up with his schoolwork along with his two clusters of MU friends.
Individual friendships
Janice McCabe
A third network category, "samplers" collected friends one by one from a variety of places, such as campus organizations, classes and workplaces, resulting in friends that were less connected to one another.
While many tight-knitters and compartmentalizers found friends helping them thrive academically and socially, samplers achieved academic success independently.
One sampler I met was Steve, a black man from a working-class background. Steve formed individual friendships at events, food courts and other campus locations. Like many students of color I interviewed, Steve described experiencing race-based isolation on campus.
However, like other samplers, Steve rarely discussed these isolating experiences with friends and remained isolated. Steve also felt lonesome in his academic pursuits. Despite having many friends and being involved on campus through a range of student organizations, Steve felt alone socially and academically at MU.
Samplers' friends did not distract them from their academic study, although a question I had was: Could they have been more successful with help from friends?
After college
What happens to these friendship networks once students leave college?
Five years later, I interviewed the same students again to find out what happened to them and their friendship networks once they left college. By the time I spoke with them, most participants had been out of college for one to four years and were 23-27 years old. I was curious about how many friendships remained over this five-year period and whether the network types remained as well.
Friendship networks during college mattered for both of these aspects – whether specific friendships and network types lasted after college.
In terms of network types, generally, compartmentalizers remained compartmentalizers, and tight-knitters remained tight-knitters. Only one sampler, however, remained a sampler after college – which suggests that a mismatch with MU rather than some constant personality trait or friendship preference that distinguish samplers from the other network types.
Paralleling these general trends, Alberto remained a tight-knitter, Mary remained a compartmentalizer and Steve became a tight-knitter. With a tight-knit network, Steve felt socially supported and no longer on his own after college.
There was much turnover in friends, with only about 25 percent remaining friends over this five-year period. In other words, if someone named 20 friends in college, only five of those remained in their after-college network.
Tight-knitters kept the most friends over this five-year period (30 percent remained in their network, compared to 23 percent for compartmentalizers and samplers). The cohesive ties tight-knitters crafted during college generally resulted in less change in their networks. Not surprisingly, tight-knit ties were more likely to be ties that last.
Considerations for each type
Friends matter for students' academic and social success. As the examples of Alberto, Mary and Steve show, each network type comes with particular benefits as well as drawbacks during college and beyond.
Students need to be aware of their networks and how that is helping or hindering them.
For example, tight-knitters should be particularly conscious of whether their friends pull them up rather than push them down academically. Compartmentalizers should be mindful of the number of clusters in their network; they should consciously prioritize which ones should get the bulk of their time, so that important friendships and academics do not suffer. Samplers should understand that friends can be valuable sources of help, and they might be able to actively create a supportive community of friends.
Other than this, students should also remember that it's not just their friends, but how their friends are connected to each other, that also matters.
Written by Janice M. McCabe, Associate Professor of Sociology, Dartmouth College; Author of “Connecting in College: How Friendship Networks Matter for Academic and Social Success."
This article was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article.