PLoS ONE (Jan 2021)

Proximity can induce diverse friendships: A large randomized classroom experiment.

  • Julia M Rohrer,
  • Tamás Keller,
  • Felix Elwert

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0255097
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 8
p. e0255097

Abstract

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Can outside interventions foster socio-culturally diverse friendships? We executed a large field experiment that randomized the seating charts of 182 3rd through 8th grade classrooms (N = 2,966 students) for the duration of one semester. We found that being seated next to each other increased the probability of a mutual friendship from 15% to 22% on average. Furthermore, induced proximity increased the latent propensity toward friendship equally for all students, regardless of students' dyadic similarity with respect to educational achievement, gender, and ethnicity. However, the probability of a manifest friendship increased more among similar than among dissimilar students-a pattern mainly driven by gender. Our findings demonstrate that a scalable light-touch intervention can affect face-to-face networks and foster diverse friendships in groups that already know each other, but they also highlight that transgressing boundaries, especially those defined by gender, remains an uphill battle.