“[T]he stereotype threat
that goes with certain social identities in school and on tests can
dramatically affect intellectual performance….” (p. 67)
The benefits [of reducing stereotype threat] are sizable,
reliable, and often long-lasting. And
the interventions themselves are low cost and relatively easy to do….
establishing trust through demanding but supportive relationships, fostering
hopeful narratives about belonging in the setting, arranging informal cross-group
conversations…, representing critical abilities as learnable, and using
child-centered teaching techniques.” (p. 181)
“[P]eople have to be
able to trust that, despite the relevance of a bad stereotype about their
group, they won’t be judged by it, that their goodness as human beings will be
seen. Trust like that is hard to come
by…. When interactions between people from different backgrounds have learning
from each other as a goal, it eases the potential tension between them, giving
missteps less significance. Trust is
fostered.” (p. 209)
Join
me in a virtual Diversity Book Club. In
this and upcoming posts, I’ll summarize books and provide classroom applications
and resources for teachers interested in building welcoming and inclusive
environments in their classrooms and schools.
We begin with Claude M.
Steele’s Whistling Vivaldi: How
Stereotypes Affect Us and What We Can Do (Norton, 2010).
Summary
Readable and recognizable, Claude M. Steele’s Whistling Vivaldi illuminates a human condition people encounter in any diverse society: stereotype threat.
Readable and recognizable, Claude M. Steele’s Whistling Vivaldi illuminates a human condition people encounter in any diverse society: stereotype threat.
· We know (and worry
about) what others will think about us based on what groups we belong to or identities
we have such as racial, economic, gender, age, nationality, religious, and more.
· Our concern about what
others may think about us and whether we will confirm their negative
stereotypes about “our type of person” affects what we do and often detracts
from our performance.
In school settings, with which we are most concerned, we may see female students drop out of advanced math classes, Black students in predominantly White classrooms may do poorly on standardized tests, and White students in predominantly Black environments offer opinions they think are expected rather than sincerely held, for example.
Steele
offers numerous examples of the research that identified and named stereotype
threat. He also offers practical
suggestions, some of them mediated by the work of his colleague Carol Dweck,
whose book Mindset, I heartily
recommend. Dweck’s work centers on
growth versus fixed mindsets: learning to learn from our mistakes and/or
relative weaknesses rather than seeing them as fixed and unchangeable liabilities.
Classroom & School
Applications & Resources:
After his account of numerous experiments identifying and attempting to ameliorate stereotype threat, Steele offers numerous practical recommendations to which I have added suggestions and resources for classroom teachers:
After his account of numerous experiments identifying and attempting to ameliorate stereotype threat, Steele offers numerous practical recommendations to which I have added suggestions and resources for classroom teachers:
1.
Demand
high standards from all students and tell them you expect them to meet these
expectations. This can diminish the stereotype
threat some students experience by interrupting their own negative narrative
that teacher/peers deem them less able than students of different groups. (See discussion, p. 163.)
2.
Affect
the negative narrative or feeling of stereotype threat by sharing a different
narrative. One example is that of junior
and senior class students at an elite university sharing their feelings of
being frustrated, unworthy, inept, and unwelcome during their freshman
year. They explain to incoming freshmen
that they have overcome these feelings, achieved at a high level, made friends,
and used the resources at the school to good purpose. In an independent school in which students
from underserved communities may experience stereotype threat, for example, fostering
a mentorship relationship of upper level students with middle and lower school
students might be helpful. (See pages
165-166.)
3.
Affect
negative narratives by fostering discussions among many different kinds of
students in which they share their fears and hopes. In this way, all students see that everyone
feels nervous at a new school, that some people share some of the same values,
and that many people share the same hopes.
(See p. 167.)
4.
Teach
all students, and particularly those facing stereotype threat (Black students
in predominantly White classrooms, for example) that human intelligence is
expandable and that we learn, grow, and build our intellectual skills by
learning from our mistakes and failures.
One experiment invited Stanford students to write letters with such
information to “ostensible minority elementary students.” Students in upper grades in independent
schools could write real letters to students in lower grades, or sixth graders
could write to rising fifth graders, for example. (See pages 168-169.)
5.
Invite
students to affirm their most important personal or family values and explain
their importance. This exercise was part
of an experiment in a seventh grade classroom.
Black students who affirmed their values showed continued improvement in
academic performance over Black students who did not do this exercise. Students in our sixth grade English classes
write about personal and family values, and we see benefit for all students as
they contribute to building of a caring, warm, and supportive environment. (See details on pages 174-175.)
6.
Make
the classroom a mistake-making, growth-oriented place. Overtly discuss growth versus fixed
mindsets. Learning is the goal that
brings all students together and mitigates students’ perceptions of stereotype
threat. “When interactions between people
from different backgrounds have learning from each other as a goal, it eases
the potential tension between them, giving missteps less significance. Trust is fostered.” (See p. 209). Doing this early in the year and as I begin
each new project, I attempt to foster just such an environment of
encouragement, risk, and learning with each other. Further, after we complete long-term
projects, we openly discuss our obstacles and how we faced them.
7.
Make
the school/classroom a safe place for all by fostering: “positive relationships
with students; more child-centered teaching; use of [our] diversity as a
classroom resource rather than following a strict strategy of colorblindness;
teacher skill, warmth, and availability…”
(See page 180.) To assist this
process, teachers can share their identity-related experiences of facing
stereotypes, for example, thus allowing students to see us as human and like
them. Read
Shane Safir’s post about identity workshops to foster identity-safe classrooms: https://www.edutopia.org/blog/fostering-identity-safety-in-classroom-shane-safir. It includes a terrific workshop tool!
8.
To
help students feel safe to tackle unsafe topics I use the “Circles of Culture”
exercise explained in a previous blog.
Taking time to create a caring place for daring conversations makes all
the difference in the student (and teacher) experience and forges our bonds as
a community of readers, writers, and upstanders, ready to build a welcoming and
inclusive community in and out of school. This is relevant teaching and
learning: today and every day. (Sample questions: In which of your circles of
culture do you find safety/refuge?
Why? In which of your circles of
culture do you find discomfort or lack of safety? Why?)
Read more: http://thinkcareact.blogspot.com/2016/07/creating-caring-classroom-community_6.html
9. Teachers
in early childhood and elementary grades may find Michele Borba’s Unselfie a useful resource. Read a summary and find classroom
applications in my August 2016 post: http://thinkcareact.blogspot.com/2016/08/teaching-empathy-book-review-of.html
10.
Have
a study group read Whisling Vivaldi at your school.
Use chapter discussion questions prepared Deb Hoskins, Ph.D., University of Wisconsin at
La Crosse: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1P5jUtn461RgPra1sN0UkOj9LzfaSqpYKNw4JvGcubgc/edit
11. For an academic reference for your work on
reducing stereotype threat utilize the website created by two social science
professors, Steve Stroessner and Catherine Good: http://www.reducingstereotypethreat.org
12. Host a showing and discussion of the movie Hidden
Figures at your school, or read and discuss the book Hidden Figures: The
American Dream and the Untold Story of the Black Women Mathematicians who
Helped Win the Space Race: (Background story and movie trailer here) http://www.popularmechanics.com/space/rockets/a24429/hidden-figures-real-story-nasa-women-computers/
Dr.
King’s vision is oft-quoted, “I have a dream that my four little children will
one day live in a nation where they will not be judged by the color of their
skin but by the content of their character.” But the reality is that people do
judge others based on race, ethnicity, gender, age, and other features. And fear of such judgement does affect performance. Stereotype threat is a real force to reckon
with in our classrooms. We can use such
resources as Claude Steele’s Whistling Vivaldi to make our classrooms ones in
which each student—and teacher—thrives.
Susan
Gelber Cannon, January 2017
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