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Reducing Stereotype Threat in Classrooms and Schools

Reducing Stereotype Threat in Classrooms and Schools. Francesca López & Martin Scanlan Marquette University. Goal: Examine how research on growth mindset & stereotype threat can be woven into planning & implementing TWI in your school. Objective:

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Reducing Stereotype Threat in Classrooms and Schools

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  1. Reducing Stereotype Threatin Classroomsand Schools Francesca López & Martin Scanlan Marquette University

  2. Goal: Examine how research on growth mindset & stereotype threat can be woven into planning & implementing TWI in your school.

  3. Objective: Identify specific ways to reduce stereotype threat amongst students, families, and colleagues within your school as well as within TWIN-CS. Guiding questions (action planning) What are some initial ways that we can work to reduce stereotype threat in our school community? What are our ideas about further learning that we want to pursue in these two areas of growth mindset and stereotype threat?

  4. The Minority-White Gap Prison: Blacks and Latinos vastly overrepresented College: Only 35% of Latinos are enrolled High School: 15% drop out rate; 2 X more than AA K-12 Lower standardized test scores and grades Birth-Preschool Nearly equal ability test scores

  5. Common Misunderstandings for Group Differences 1. Genetic arguments of lower innate intelligence --The Bell Curve --Biological differences in math ability 2. Poverty (lower skills and preparation)

  6. All of the traditional explanations fall short of explaining the gap, even when combined; something else must be involved… • This “underperformance” is part of a performance gap not due to gaps in skills and knowledge between groups, but something that has eluded explanation.

  7. Part One:What is stereotype threat?

  8. Intelligence is Fragile “Human intelligence is among the most fragile things in nature. It doesn’t take much to distract it, suppress it, or even annihilate it.” --Neil Postman

  9. The Fragility of Intelligence Stereotype Threat/ Identity threat (Steele & Aronson, 1995)

  10. Stereotype/Identity Threat Apprehension among members of a group of reinforcing arising from the awareness of a negative stereotype or personal reputation in a situation where the stereotype or identity is relevant, and thus confirmable In schools, primarily about intellectual ability

  11. Stereotype Threat : No Explicit Bigotry Required

  12. Stereotype ThreatAnecdotal Evidence “When I talk in class, I feel as though I’m totally on stage, like everyone’s thinking, ‘oh what’s the Black girl going to say?’ But I don’t speak up in class much anymore, so I guess it’s not a big deal.” —Stanford Undergraduate

  13. Stereotype ThreatAnecdotal Evidence “Group work was a nightmare. I could tell that no one thought my ideas were any good because I’m Latina.” —NYU Undergraduate “Everyone expects me to be good at math because I’m Asian, so I feel extra stupid because I’m not so good at math.” —NYU Undergrad

  14. “Conditional Stupidity” (video)

  15. Activity • List qualities shared by men and women Math performance amongst women rose; Math performance amongst men unchanged

  16. A) Laboratory Experiment on Stereotype Threat Method: Reducing Evaluative Scrutiny Measure: Blacks’ and Whites’ Verbal GRE Performance Steele & Aronson (1995). Journal of Personality and Social Psychology.

  17. Verbal Test Performance

  18. Verbal Test Performance ST: “The test is a test of intelligence.” NST: “This is just a general skills test—not a test of intelligence.”

  19. B) Laboratory Experiment on Stereotype Threat Method: Inducing the Relevance of Race Measure: Blacks’ and Whites’ Verbal GRE Performance Steele & Aronson (1995)

  20. Verbal Test Performance

  21. Verbal Test Performance AIR: Participants bubbled in their corresponding race NAIR: No question about race was asked

  22. C) Math Test Performanceof College Men and Women (Spencer, Steele & Quinn, 1999)

  23. Math Test Performance Of College Men and Women(Spencer, Steele & Quinn, 1999) Women and men matched on math ability per SAT. Control group took math test; NGD group was told, “We have not seen gender differences on this particular test.”

  24. Additional Studies Finding Performance Effects • Latinos taking verbal tests • Elderly taking short-term memory tests • Low SES Students taking verbal tests • Blacks and Miniature Golf • Women taking tests of Political Knowledge, Driving, Chess • White males taking tests of social sensitivity • White Males Taking Math Tests

  25. E) Educational Testing Service Field Study: Asking About Gender before or After Before Taking AP

  26. ETS Field Study:Asking Gender Before Taking AP Calculus (Stricker, 2002). Journal of Applied Social Psychology.

  27. Educational Testing Service Study:AP Calculus Test IB: Students bubbled in gender PRIOR to exam IA: Students bubbled in gender AFTER exam

  28. Danaher and Crandall (2008)Reanalysis of ETS Study “Women benefited substantially on the calculus test when demographics were asked after testing rather than before. This simple, small, and inexpensive change could increase U.S. women receiving AP Calculus AB credit by more than 4,300 every year.”

  29. General Conclusions from 300 Studies • One need not believe the stereotype is true to feel the pressure to disprove it (heart rate study), but believing appears to increase ST • ST can affect even those students with lots of ability and lots of confidence in their abilities, from any group, in any setting • Stereotype threat can arise as a function of grouping alone, integrated groups trigger it • Underperformance mediated by stress and anxiety, reduced working memory capacity, and reduced self-regulation capacity • Stereotype threat influences GPA as well as immediate performance

  30. Stereotype Vulnerability: Risk Factors for Underperformance Acceptance of the stereotype as maybe true Expectations of prejudice Belief that tests are biased against minorities; mistrust High levels of academic engagement--Caring

  31. From Vulnerability to Inability "No circle is more vicious than the one having to do with intelligence. Children who may be only a little behind their peers to begin with tend to avoid those things that could have made them a little smarter. As a result they fall further and further behind. Meanwhile the kids who started out a little ahead are doing push-ups with their brains.” Judith Rich Harris

  32. Chronic Stereotype Vulnerability Can lead to Lower Ability • Avoidance of Challenge/practice • Academic Self-concept/Ambiguity • Disidentification/Disengagement • Lower Ability

  33. Part Two: Reducing Stereotype Threat

  34. Key Strategies • Foster expansive notions of intelligence and growth mindset • Normalize experiences of difficulty • Promote awareness of stereotype threat • Provide “wise criticism” in formative feedback

  35. 1) Foster expansive notions of intelligence and growth mindset “The mind is much more like a muscle than we’ve ever realized… it needs to get cognitive exercise. It’s not some piece of clay on which you put an indelible mark.” James Flynn, intelligence expert, 2007

  36. Questions Are you an entity theorist? Or an incremental theorist? Do you believe ability is fixed; you either have it or you don’t? OR Do you believe ability is malleable; you can change it with effort?

  37. Experiment What if you were led to believe ability is malleable? Would it reduce effects of stereotype threat? Method: Framing test as a measure of a fixed or a malleable ability Measure: Blacks’ and Whites’ Test Performance

  38. Results • 7th grade students taught about incremental theory of intelligence showed significant positive effect on math scores when compared to control group

  39. Implications How can you foster expansive notions of intelligence and growth mindsets • Amongst: • Students • Colleagues • Parents • Others • Within: • Implementation Team • School • TWIN-CS

  40. 2) Normalize experiences of difficulty Middle School: A field Intervention: Question: Can psychological intervention raise test scores of minority students? • Method: mentoring study; attitude change • Conditions: • Malleability of intelligence • Role Models: senior students who stress the normality of early difficulty • Control (drug abuse message) • Measure: Texas Assessment of Academic Skills (TAAS)

  41. 7th Grade Girls’ Math TAAS Good, Aronson & Inzlicht (2003) Journal of Applied Developmental Psychology.

  42. 7th Grade Girls’ Math TAAS Good, Aronson & Inzlicht (2003) Journal of Applied Developmental Psychology.

  43. Implications How can you normalize experiences of difficulty? • Amongst: • Students • Colleagues • Parents • Others • Within: • Implementation Team • School • TWIN-CS

  44. 3. Promote awareness of stereotype threat Question: Can understanding Stereotype threat reduce its effects? Method: Forewarning about ST or Test Anxiety Measure: Blacks’ Test Performance a week later

  45. African American’s GRE Performance

  46. African American’s GRE Performance

  47. Implications How can you promote awareness of stereotype threat • Amongst: • Students • Colleagues • Parents • Others • Within: • Implementation Team • School • TWIN-CS

  48. 4. Provide “wise criticism” in formative feedback Writing study: • The question was: How does a white teacher give critical feedback that can be trusted and motivating? • African American and White college students, matched on language and writing ability. • They all had to write an essay, and assigned to one of three conditions

  49. Condition 1: • Unbuffered criticism: typical evaluation “Your essay needs work in several areas”

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