Publication | Closed Access
Coping With Ethnic Stereotypes in the Academic Domain: Perceived Injustice and Psychological Disengagement
332
Citations
35
References
2001
Year
EthnicityEthnic StereotypesDiscriminationEducational PsychologyRacial PrejudiceEducationEthnic Group RelationPsychologySocial SciencesRacePerceived InjusticeAcademic PerformanceAfrican American StudiesStereotypesEthnic StudiesPrejudicePsychological DisengagementMinority StressEthnic DiscriminationRacial EquityGreater DiscountingSocial IdentityApplied Social PsychologyHigher EducationCultureAcademic Domain
Psychological disengagement is the defensive detachment of self‐esteem from a particular domain. In the academic arena, disengagement can result from devaluing academic success or discounting the validity of academic outcomes. We review evidence for ethnic differences in these two processes of psychological disengagement and present results of a multiethnic study examining perceived ethnic injustice and academic performance as predictors of devaluing and discounting. Among African American students, beliefs about ethnic injustice (but not academic performance) predicted greater discounting and devaluing. Among European American students, poor academic performance (but not beliefs about ethnic injustice) predicted greater devaluing and discounting. Among Latino/a students, beliefs about ethnic injustice were associated with greater discounting, whereas poorer academic performance was associated with increased devaluing.
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