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characteristics of stigma
concealability, origin, peril/danger
concealability
is it visible?
is sharing an option or not?
origin
is it controllable?
peril/danger
is danger associated with group membership?
stereotype threat
when people are at risk of confirming a negative stereotype of their group it interferes with performance
"threat in the air"
well known stereotypes tend to linger in people's minds and therefore show up in their lives
How does mentioning that a certain gender/race has been shown to do better on a test create stereotype threat for minorities?
They activate negative stereotypes about the targeted group's abilities, leading individuals to worry that their performance will confirm the stereotype, which in turn harms their actual performance.
stereotype lift
awareness of positive expectations can actually improve performance on tasks
downward social comparison
comparing ourselves to people who are worse than we are with regard to a particular trait or ability
ego depletion
a temporary reduction of one's self-control after exerting self control
social identity threat
Individuals believe they will be personally negatively evaluated due to their association with a devalued group, and they may lose confidence and performance effectiveness.
consequences of social identity threat on academic performance
reduced cognitive resources and performance
worse social relationships
less self-confidence
disengagement
coping strategy
disconnecting self worth from a domain
disidentification
coping strategy
devaluing an entire domain
behavioral compensation
coping strategy
people change their behavior to try to actively disconfirm stereotypes
strategies to reduce social identity threat
identity safe enviornments - decor, representation
mentorship and role models that disconfirm stereotypes
growth mindset messaging - emphasizing ability over innate talent
keeping instructions on tests as neutral as possible
example of an environmental cue that might exacerbate social identity threat for individuals in underrepresented groups
a faculty panel where male professors are the only speakers
personal group discrimination discrepancy
the tendency for members of disadvantaged groups to downplay personal discrimination in their own lives, but recognize it in their peers
tokenism
when a single member of a minority group is present in an office, workplace, or classroom and is seen as a representative of that minority group rather than as an individual
cross race identification bias
the tendency for people to be more accurate at recognizing members of their own racial group than of other groups
peripheral cues
factors that are irrelevant to a decision but are used to make a decision nonetheless
gender polarization
assumption that gender-related traits are bipolar
masculine is the opposite of feminine
women are wonderful effect
the global category "women" is viewed more positively than the global category "men" on traditional evaluative measures
stereotype content model
a model proposing that the relative status and competition between groups influence group stereotypes along the dimensions of competence and warmth
low competence, high warmth examples:
disabled people, children
low competence, low warmth examples:
welfare recipients, drug addicts, immigrants
high competence, high warmth examples:
rich people, your own ingroup
high competence, low warmth examples:
jewish people, asian people
emotions associated with low competence and high warmth:
pity
emotions associated with low competence and low warmth:
contempt, disgust
emotions associated with high competence and high warmth:
admiration
emotions associated with high competence and low warmth:
envy
glass ceiling
represents an invisible barrier that prevents women from advancing to the highest levels of leadership within an organization
glass escalator
describes the phenomenon where men in traditionally female-dominated field, such as nursing or teaching, experience accelerated career advancement compared to women
glass cliff
refers to the tendency for women to be promoted to leadership positions during times of crisis or when the organization is facing challenges, where the likelihood of failure is higher
hyper masculinity
Men are expected to be strong and tough
Not feminine
precarious masculinity
the idea that manhood is more difficult to earn and easier to lose than womanhood
dual cues
occurs when an individual is presented with a single identity cue (i.e. biased statement) that activates both gender based and race based concerns simultaneously
identity safety
A psychological state in which individuals feel that their social identity will not be devalued, threatened, or dismissed in a given
context.
primary finding from Chaney et al., 2021
Women of color can experience identity-threat related to both gender and race, even if the person they're interacting with ONLY expresses sexism OR racism.
why are heterosexual men more negative towards gay men than heterosexual women?
Heterosexual men expect other men to display masculine characteristics and reject feminine characteristics, and they penalize those who do not.
According to the Crenshaw TedTalk we watched for Tuesday, what is intersectionality?
A framework that examines how multiple social identities (e.g., race, gender, class) interact to shape experiences of privilege and oppression
In his book, The Broken Ladder, what does Payne identify as a common psychological response to feeling lower in social hierarchy?
Increased risk-taking
kinsey scale
0 to 6 scale of sexuality
0 being solely heterosexual
6 being exclusively homosexual
gay marriage / adoption attitudes over time
increasing over time:
1999 - 38%
2002 - 46%
2009 - 54%
2012 - 61%
hate crimes on LGBT over time
has increased since 2005
sexual orientation hypothesis
expectation that feminine men are gay and masculine women are lesbians
why do men have more negative attitudes towards sexual minorities?
gender belief system rigidity
greater punishment for gender non conforming behavior
higher status of masculine gender role
need for closure and attitudes towards LGBTQ
high NFC = more negative attitudes towards bisexuals, but not gay men and lesbian women
NFC works above and beyond political conservatism and perspective taking
how did antigay bias change in states that did not LOCALLY legalize gay marriage after the supreme court legalized it NATIONWIDE
before the nationwide legalization and while it was still locally illegal, bias was decreasing steadily.
after nationwide legalization, bias increased.
reparative therapy
therapy to change sexual orientation; also called sexual reorientation or conversion therapy
terror management theory
a theory of death-related anxiety; explores people's emotional and behavioral responses to reminders of their impending death
young people cope by distancing themselves from older people
media depictions of ageism
rarely shown in print media or television
when they are, they are generally portrayed positively
when they are shown in the news or documentaries, the focus is usually negative
patronizing speech
change in conversational strategies to reflect age stereotypes
simplifying speech
using demeaning tone
superficial conversation
elder speak
extreme patronizing talk, the tendency to use baby talk in conversations with older people
high voice pitch
slower speech rate
shorter utterances
effects of self-stereotyping for older people
stereotype threat affecting performance on memory tests
higher levels of loneliness
shorter life expectancy
disability
a mental or physical impairment that substantially limits one or more major life activities
pwd's
Persons with Disabilities, facing societal challenges.
extent of stigma for PWD's depends on...
concealability
aesthetically appealing
controllability
potential of danger