A Cognitive-Developmental Approach to Racial Stereotyping and Reconstructive Memory in Euro-American Children

To examine the role of cognitive skill and racial stereotyping in Euro‐American children's processing of race‐related information, 75 Euro‐American children, aged 4–9 years, were asked to recall stories that were either consistent with or inconsistent with cultural racial stereotypes. In 6 trai...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inChild development Vol. 64; no. 5; pp. 1507 - 1518
Main Authors Bigler, Rebecca S., Liben, Lynn S.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Oxford, UK Blackwell Publishing Ltd 01.10.1993
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Summary:To examine the role of cognitive skill and racial stereotyping in Euro‐American children's processing of race‐related information, 75 Euro‐American children, aged 4–9 years, were asked to recall stories that were either consistent with or inconsistent with cultural racial stereotypes. In 6 trait stories, a Euro‐American main character encounters both a Euro‐American and an African American child. A negative trait is attributed to either the African American (stereotypic story) or the Euro‐American child (counterstereotypic story). In 6 social relationship stories, main characters interact with neighbors, friends, or married couples, portrayed either intraracially (stereotypic) or interracially (counterstereotypic). Individual difference measures were used to assess subjects' racial stereotyping and their classification skill (ability to sort stimuli along multiple dimensions). As predicted, lower degrees of racial stereotyping and the ability to classify persons along multiple dimensions were associated with better memory for counterstereotypic stories. Implications for intervention programs aimed at reducing racial stereotyping are discussed.
Bibliography:istex:47EFFB83F29ABBDFD3853883AE3EFFBACCF4630E
ArticleID:CDEV1507
ark:/67375/WNG-ZF5FHSR3-D
The authors wish to thank the staff and children of the Penn State Child Development Laboratory, the St. Cloud State University Child Care Center, and the St. Cloud State University College of Education Summer School Program, and especially the respective directors of those centers—David Estes, Debra Carlson, and Joan Bigler—for their generous cooperation. We also appreciate the help of Layli Phillips in writing and illustrating the stimulus stories, and finally, we thank three anonymous reviewers for their helpful comments on an earlier version of this manuscript. Portions of this work were presented at the biennial meeting of the Society for Research in Child Development, April 1989.
ISSN:0009-3920
1467-8624
DOI:10.1111/j.1467-8624.1993.tb02967.x