Publication | Closed Access
Gender, ethnic, and body type biases: The generality of prejudice in childhood.
164
Citations
54
References
1994
Year
EthnicitySocial PsychologyDiscriminationRacial PrejudiceEducationSocial CategorizationBody Type BiasesPsychologySocial SciencesRaceDevelopmental PsychologyGender IdentityGender StudiesBiasStereotypesPrejudiceUnconscious BiasNegative BiasEthnic DiscriminationSocial IdentityBehavioral SciencesChild PsychologyChild DevelopmentGender StereotypeSocial BiasClear BiasesSociologyEnglish Canadian
From a very young age, children show signs of prejudice. However, it is not clear whether those who are the most biased in one domain (e.g., gender) are also the most biased in other domains (e.g., ethnicity). This study addressed the issue using multiple measures of prejudice (negative bias) in 3 domains: gender (male, female), ethnicity-language (French Canadian, English Canadian), and body type (overweight, normal weight). The flexibility of attitudes (i.e., the belief that people from different categories can possess similar traits) was also assessed. A total of 254 children (127 boys, 127 girls) in kindergarten to Grade 6 participated. Children demonstrated clear biases against groups to which they did not belong, although attitudes became more flexible and prejudice declined somewhat with age. There was little predictive power across domains; that is, there was no evidence that prejudice represents a general characteristic that differentiates children.
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