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Stereotypes of Blacks in Four Generations. 1933195119671982Superstitious84A%6%Lazy751&%Ignorant38$%Happy-go-lucky38'%Musical263G)%Ostentatious26%%5%Very Religious24%8#%Stupid22%4%1%. Stereotypes of Jews in Th
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1. Stereotypes -A Brief History Dramatic Decrease in Expression of Stereotypes
Katz & Braly (1933) and replications
Survey Results
Despite this evidence subtler forms of stereotyping still evident
Sagar & Schofield - Pencil poking study
Word, Zanna, & Cooper (1974) - interview study
Darley & Gross (1983) - SES and performance
Rogers & Prentice-Dunn - Insult study
Dovidio & Gaertners Aversive Racism Explanation
Helping Study
Inadmissable Evidence Study
2. Stereotypes of Blacks in Four Generations 1933 1951 1967 1982
Superstitious 84% 41% 13% 6%
Lazy 75% 31% 26% 13%
Ignorant 38% 24% 11% 10%
Happy-go-lucky 38% 17% 27% 15%
Musical 26% 33% 47% 29%
Ostentatious 26% 11% 25% 5%
Very Religious 24% 17% 8% 23%
Stupid 22% 10% 4% 1%
3. Stereotypes of Jews in Three Generations 1933 1951 1967
Shrewd 79% 47% 30%
Mercenary 49% 28% 15%
Industrious 48% 29% 33%
Grasping 34% 17% 17%
Intelligent 29% 37% 37%
Ambitious 21% 28% 48%
4. Survey Results Indicating Prejudice
5. Rogers & Prentice-Dunn (1981)
8. Recent Models Devine (1989) - The argument
Study 1 - everyone knows the stereotype
Study 2 - everyone automatically activates the stereotype
Study 3 - low prejudice people but not high prejudice people control the application of the stereotype
Does everyone automatically activate the stereotype?
Lepore & Brown (1997) - category does not automatically activate the stereotype for all people
Fazio et al. (1995) - there are reliable difference in how people automatically activate the stereotype
9. Stereotype Activation Do people automatically activate stereotypes?
It depends on what you mean by automatic; without awareness yes; without intention, yes; without effort, no
Gilbert & Hixon (1991)
Spencer, Fein, Wolfe, Fong, & Hodgson (1998); Study 2
It depends on peoples motivation - when motivated to stereotype effort is not needed either
Spencer, Fein, Wolfe, Fong, & Hodgson (1998); Studies 1 & 3
10. Gilbert & Hixon
12. Stereotype Inhibition Activation of another stereotype can lead to stereotype inhibition
Macrae, Bodenhausen, & Milne (1995)
When motivated to inhibit stereotypes they are inhibited
Sinclair & Kunda (1998)
13. Stereotype Application Can people control their use of stereotypes - this is actually trickier than you might think
Macrae, Bodenhausen, Milne, & Jetten (1994) - stereotypes on the rebound
Motivated application of stereotypes
Fein & Spencer (1997)
Study 1 - self-affirmation and stereotype application
Study 2 - negative feedback and stereotype application
Study 3 - feeling better about yourself after stereotyping
14. Fein & Spencer (1997) - Study 1
15. Fein & Spencer (1997) - Study 2
17. Fein & Spencer (1997) - Study 3 Self-Esteem Change
18. The Targets Perspective -Attributional Ambiguity Stigma and Self-Esteem
The findings
The explanations
Attributions to prejudice
Disengagement
Within group comparisons
Crocker, Voelkl, Testa, & Major (1991) - Blinds up/Blinds down study
Major, Spencer, Schmader, Wolfe, & Crocker (1997) - Priming bias leads to disengagement
20. Targets Perspective -Stereotype Threat What is stereotype threat?
Its relation to academic performance
Steele & Aronson (1995)
Study 1 - the effects of test diagnosticity
Study 2 - relation to stereotype activation and avoidance
Study 3 - the effect of the subtle priming of race
Spencer, Steele, & Quinn (1998) - stereotype threat and womens math performance
Stereotypic commericals and womens math performance
Steele, Spencer, Hummel, Schoem, & Nisbett (1998) - stereotype threat in the real world
22. Steele & Aronson (1995) -Study 1
23. Steele & Aronson (1995) -Study 2
24. Steele & Aronson (1995) -Study 2
25. Steele & Aronson (1995) -Study 3
26. Spencer, et al. (in preparation)
27. Steele, et al. (1998)
28. Changing Stereotypes The Contact hypothesis
The evidence is now in that it works
Factors that make it work better
between group friendships are particularly important
endorsement of integration by authorities
no inter-group competition
equal status among students
The Robbers Cave Studies
Jigsaw Classroom and Superordinate Goals
Subtyping as a limit on the effectiveness of contact
Kunda & Oleson (1995) - using information to subtype
Kunda & Oleson (1997) - extreme people get subtyped