602 Chapter
17
Social
Psychology
likely to reduce prejudice and discrimination. Situations in which contact is
relatively intimate, the individuals are of equal status, or participants must
cooperate with one another or are dependent on one another are more likely
to reduce stereotyping (Dovidio, Gaertner, & Kawakami, 2003; Tropp &
Pettigrew, 2005; Pettigrew & Tropp, 2006).
•
Making values and norms against prejudice more conspicuous . Sometimes just
reminding people about the values they already hold regarding equality and
fair treatment of others is enough to reduce discrimination. Similarly, people
who hear others making strong, vehement antiracist
statements are subse-
quently more likely to strongly condemn racism (Czopp & Monteith, 2006;
Ponterotto, Utsey, & Pedersen, 2006; Tropp & Bianchi, 2006).
•
Providing information about the targets of stereotyping . Probably the most direct
means of changing stereotypical and discriminatory attitudes is education:
teaching people to be more aware of the positive characteristics of targets of
stereotyping.
For instance, when the meaning of puzzling behavior is
explained to people who hold stereotypes, they may come to appreciate the
actual signifi cance of the behavior (Isbell & Tyler, 2003; Banks, 2006; Nagda,
Tropp, & Paluck, 2006).
•
Reducing stereotype threat. Social psychologist Claude Steele suggests that many
African Americans suffer from
stereotype vulnerability, obstacles to performance
that stem from their awareness of society’s stereotypes regarding minority
group members. He argues that African-American students who receive
instruction from teachers who may doubt their abilities and who set up special
remedial programs to assist them may come to accept society’s stereotypes and
believe that they are prone to fail (Aronson & Steele, 2005; Nussbaum &
Steele, 2007).
Such beliefs can have devastating effects. When
confronted with an academic
task, African-American students may fear that their performance will simply confi rm
society’s negative stereotypes. The immediate consequence of this fear is anxiety that
hampers performance. But the long-term consequences may be even worse: Doubting
their ability to perform successfully in academic environments, African Americans
may decide that the risks of failure are so great it is not worth the effort even to
attempt to do well.
Ultimately, they may “disidentify” with academic success by
minimizing the importance of academic endeavors (Steele, 1997; Stone, 2002).
However, Steele’s analysis suggests that African Americans may be able to over-
come their predicament. Specifi cally, schools can design intervention programs to
train minority group members about their vulnerability to stereotypes and provide
them with self-affi rmation that reinforces their confi dence
in their abilities and
thereby inoculates them against the fear and doubt triggered by negative stereotypes
(Cohen et al., 2006; Wilson, 2006).
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