Teachers' attitudes towards ethnic minority students: Effects of schools' cultural diversity

被引:52
作者
Glock, Sabine [1 ]
Kovacs, Carrie [2 ]
Pit-ten Cate, Ineke [3 ]
机构
[1] Berg Univ Wuppertal, Sch Educ, Inst Educ Res, Gaussstr 20, D-42119 Wuppertal, Germany
[2] Johannes Keppler Univ Linz, Linz, Austria
[3] Univ Luxembourg, Luxembourg, Luxembourg
关键词
cultural diversity; ethnic minority students; explicit attitudes; implicit attitudes; stereotypical beliefs; IMPLICIT ASSOCIATION TEST; SELF-EFFICACY; STEREOTYPICAL EXPECTATIONS; PREJUDICED ATTITUDES; AUTOMATIC ACTIVATION; EXPLICIT ATTITUDES; SOCIAL COGNITION; RACIAL MINORITY; ACHIEVEMENT; CONTACT;
D O I
10.1111/bjep.12248
中图分类号
G44 [教育心理学];
学科分类号
0402 ; 040202 ;
摘要
Background Research exploring mechanisms driving inequalities in school systems has found that biased teacher judgements contribute to observed disadvantages for ethnic minority students. Teacher judgements may be driven by explicit and implicit attitudes. Aims The current research explored the effect of cultural diversity at schools (actual or imagined) on teachers' attitudes towards ethnic minority students. Samples One hundred and five preservice teachers (90 female) with a mean age of 26.20 years (teaching experience: 57.55 weeks) participated in Study 1. Two hundred and thirty-one teachers (159 female) with a mean age of 41.00 years (teaching experience: 12.92 years) participated in Study 2. Method Cultural diversity was operationalized via a fictive description of a school (Study 1) or via the actual proportion of ethnic minority students at the school (Study 2). An Implicit Association Test assessed implicit attitudes towards ethnic minority students. Explicit attitudes were assessed via questionnaire. Results Preservice teachers imagining a more culturally diverse school held more negative implicit attitudes towards ethnic minority students than those imagining a less diverse school. In contrast, in-service teachers actually working in more diverse schools held less negative implicit attitudes towards minority students. Preservice teachers associated teaching in culturally diverse schools with increased effort, whereas in-service teachers actually working in culturally diverse schools reported more enthusiasm towards teaching ethnic minority students. Conclusions This research shows the challenge and the negative stereotypes preservice teachers associate with culturally diverse schools, while in-service teachers' negative associations may be buffered by the actual experience of working with ethnic minority students.
引用
收藏
页码:616 / 634
页数:19
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