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Devaluing the Race Card
ScienceNOW Daily News ^ | 31 August 2006 | Yudhijit Bhattacharjee

Posted on 09/01/2006 10:12:42 PM PDT by neverdem

The life of African-American middle-school students can be pretty stressful. From the moment they step into the classroom, some must contend with not only coursework but also the anxiety that performing badly might confirm negative stereotypes. That fear can itself lead to poor performance, researchers have known for a while; now they've come up with a simple antidote: getting students to reflect on their sense of self-worth by writing a personal essay about what they value.

Geoffrey Cohen, a psychologist at the University of Colorado, Boulder, and his colleagues tested the strategy among 243 seventh graders at a northeastern U.S. school that had a roughly 50:50 ratio of African-American and white students. Each student was asked to complete a 15-minute writing assignment that included a page with a list of values such as one's relationships with friends, athletic ability, and creativity. Students circled their top two or three values. On the next page, they wrote a few sentences explaining their choices and describing moments when they had felt the importance of the chosen values. The researchers designed a similar assignment for a control group in which students had to circle the value they thought was least important to them and explain why that value could be important to other people. The students were not told the purpose of the assignment.

At the end of the term, the researchers found that African-American students in the treatment group got significantly better grades than same-race students in the control group. Low-performing African Americans seemed to have benefited the most. The assignment didn't have any effect on white students. Overall, the intervention closed the racial achievement gap by 40%, the team reports tomorrow in Science. "The results exceeded our expectations," says Cohen. "It was remarkable."

To find out how the treatment worked, the researchers had the students complete 34 word fragments, seven of which--such as _ACE--could be completed to form either a stereotype-relevant word such as RACE or a stereotype-irrelevant word such as FACE. African-American students who got the intervention formed fewer stereotype-relevant words than did African Americans in the control group. This suggests that the intervention allowed students to distance themselves from racial stereotypes, Cohen says.

The researchers also found that African Americans in the control group did progressively worse as the academic term went on, while those in the treatment group stabilized or started improving after the intervention. "There is something about the stereotype threat that feeds off its consequence: You are stressed that you'll do badly, and so you do; then you get even more stressed and do even worse," Cohen explains. "Our intervention seems to halt this downward spiral."

"These are very exciting results," says Claude Steele, a psychologist at Stanford University in Palo Alto, California, who was among the first to show that the threat of reinforcing negative stereotypes can impair performance among minority students. "They suggest some powerful and simple ways of fixing things in American education." Cohen warns, however, against viewing the intervention as a silver bullet for improving minority-student performance. "It worked in this particular school," he says. "Whether it'll work in a predominantly minority school or at a different grade level, we can't say."


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Extended News; News/Current Events; US: Colorado
KEYWORDS: anxiety; education; health; psychology; race; science; stereotypes; stress
Reducing the Racial Achievement Gap: A Social-Psychological Intervention Science abstract
1 posted on 09/01/2006 10:12:44 PM PDT by neverdem
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To: neverdem; Victoria Delsoul

I like it!


2 posted on 09/01/2006 10:15:25 PM PDT by HitmanLV ("If at first you don't succeed, keep on sucking until you do succeed." - Jerry 'Curly' Howard)
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To: neverdem
now they've come up with a simple antidote: getting students to reflect on their sense of self-worth by writing a personal essay about what they value.

At the end of the term, the researchers found that African-American students in the treatment group got significantly better grades than same-race students in the control group.

I dono, this seems like more of the same feel-good performance-free drivel that has been going on for 30 years.

Writing an essay cures the ills of bad parenting, bad genetics, bad education and on and on....?

Naw...

3 posted on 09/01/2006 10:47:27 PM PDT by adamsjas
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To: neverdem
First sentence turned me off of the article.
"The life of African-American middle-school students can be pretty stressful".
School can be stressful for any middle school student, that is life. All stress does not revolve around skin color, no matter how many times you tell us it does.
4 posted on 09/02/2006 5:22:29 AM PDT by D1X1E
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To: adamsjas
I dono, this seems like more of the same feel-good performance-free drivel that has been going on for 30 years.

I'll second that....this feel good tripe is no replacement for plain old success. If you apply yourself you will succeed then you feel good about your success.

5 posted on 09/02/2006 5:28:25 AM PDT by Ouderkirk (Don't you think it's interesting how death and destruction seems to happen wherever Muslims gather?)
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To: neverdem

Some pretty serious selection bias in that they found a school with a student body that is half white and half black. That's a VERY unusual mix and both its white and black student groups are likely to diverge significantly from their respective norm -- the black students probably likely to be from families significantly better off (in money and intact structure) than the average, and the white students reflecting their rather significant deviation in terms of family attitudes, wealth, structure, etc.


6 posted on 09/02/2006 7:44:34 AM PDT by only1percent
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To: HitmanLV
It appears the effect of this intervention was to induce the students to identify with something positive rather than the posture of helpless racial victims, and their performance changed accordingly. There is a wealth of social psychological data reflecting that our behavior tends to correspond to those with whom we identify. I doubt it was related to performance stress, as there is no evidence that such stress differentially existed.
7 posted on 09/02/2006 7:49:44 AM PDT by hinckley buzzard
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To: neverdem
Here's the Race Card..... it is now devalued?


8 posted on 09/02/2006 7:55:24 AM PDT by bert (K.E. N.P. Slay Pinch)
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